Tuesday, 23 April 2024

Announcement

GENERAL: CRP: Second halted phosphate shipment highlights NZ supply risk

22 May 2017 08:32NZX
Chatham says another halted phosphate shipment highlights NZ supply risk

WELLINGTON New Zealand - Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited (TSXV: "NZP" and
NZAX: "CRP" or the "Company") notes the halting of a second phosphate
shipment from the Western Sahara is intensifying the supply risk for New
Zealand farmers.

Chatham Chief Executive Chris Castle said today the need for New Zealand to
secure its own low cadmium and ethical phosphate resource is highlighted by
news Panama authorities have detained Moroccan phosphate shipment from the
Western Sahara after the Polisario independence movement claimed the cargo
had been transported illegally.

The detention of the vessel carrying phosphate rock cargo from Morocco''s OCP
for Canada''s Agrium is the second tanker stopped this month by a Polisario
legal challenge, a new tactic the independence movement has been using in its
conflict with Morocco. The first shipment was detained in South Africa.

Western Sahara has been disputed since 1975, when Morocco claimed it as part
of the kingdom and the Polisario fought a guerrilla war for the Sahrawi
people''s independence.

Both New Zealand fertiliser manufacturers source a large part of their
phosphate rock supply from that area, so the implications for farmers and the
economically important agriculture sector are serious.

Mr Castle said the company''s Chatham Rise resource is not only an ethical
source but it also has among the lowest known levels of cadmium.

"New Zealand needs to use its own source of ethically-produced,
environmentally-friendly phosphate rock rather than importing product from a
disputed territory.

"Phosphate is essential for the production of food and we can''t afford supply
disruptions.  This underlines the strategic value of our deposit.

Mr Castle said Chatham''s product is also better for the environment as it
binds to the soil and dramatically reduces run-off to waterways.

He said the rock from Morocco is used to make New Zealand''s predominant
fertiliser superphosphate, which results in high levels of run-off with
resulting pollution to our waterways and can also be detrimental to soil
health over the long term.
"The solution to supply and environmental problems is the use of Chatham rock
phosphate as an organic direct application fertiliser not processed with
chemicals.

"We can deliver a secure and sustainable local supply of low-cadmium
phosphate that will also reduce fertiliser run-off into waterways, produce
healthier soils and shrink fertiliser needs over time," Mr Castle said.

The Chatham Rise resource represents one of New Zealand''s more valuable
mineral assets and is of huge strategic significance because phosphate is
essential to maintain high agricultural productivity.

Chatham proposes to extract up to 1.5 million tonnes a year of phosphate
nodules from the top half metre of sand on identified parts of an 820km2 area
on the Chatham Rise, 450km off the west coast of New Zealand, in waters of
400m.
"Our environmental consenting process has established and independently
verified that extraction would have no material impact on fishing yields or
profitability, marine mammals or seabirds."

Chris Castle - +64 21 55 81 85 or chris@widespread.co.nz

About Chatham Rock Phosphate

Chatham Rock Phosphate, a publicly listed company, was granted a mining
permit in 2013 to develop New Zealand''s only significant source of
environmentally friendly pastoral phosphate fertiliser and is now preparing
for a revised environmental consent application.

Local and international investors have contributed more than $37 million to
develop the project''s financial viability, environmental benefits and
impacts, technical and logistical requirements, local and international
product uses.

In progressing plans to submit a new application we are working with
government officials to seek improvement in the permitting process and iwi,
academic, industry and central government input to ensure New Zealand can
benefit from an environmentally superior phosphate source.

Chatham is listed on NZAX, the Toronto Stock Exchange and in Frankfurt. These
multiple listings provide a more useful share-trading platform for overseas
shareholders and facilitate the capital raising needed for the consenting
process and beyond.

Neither the Exchange, its Regulation Service Provider (as that term is
defined under the policies of the Exchange), or New Zealand Exchange Limited
has in any way passed upon the merits of the Transaction and associated
transactions, and has neither approved nor disapproved of the contents of
this press release.
End CA:00301456 For:CRP    Type:GENERAL    Time:2017-05-22 08:32:08
Views: 183
Chatham Rock Phosphate
 0.3000 Change:
0.00
0.00%
 
Open:0.3000 
High:0.3000 
Low:0.3000 
Volume:0 
Last Traded:07/02/18 09:07:51 
Bid:0.1000 
Ask:0.3000 
52-Wk High:0.7000 
52-Wk Low:0.0060