CRP to apply for mining licence this year
CRP to apply for mining licence this year, after wealth
of data gathering
Chatham Rock Phosphate (CRP) plans to apply for a mining licence in June and a marine consent in September after gathering a wealth of information during 48 days surveying on the Chatham Rise this summer.
The information, targeted at the Rise’s significant phosphate resource, also contributes significantly to the store of public good information used by scientists to understand New Zealand’s oceanic environment.
The 100 m Dorado Discovery, based in New Zealand since December has conducted four research surveys for CRP, using a range of high tech equipment. The surveys collected geophysical data in December, bottom samples in February, environmental data in March and geotechnical data in April. CRP’s last cruise ended today and the mammoth job of resource modelling, environmental assessment and geotechnical analysis now begins.
CRP chief executive Chris Castle said the trips have generated a massive amount of data. “Following the four trips to Chatham Rise, there is now available a wealth of geophysical data and remote operated vehicle (ROV) observations, as well as a great variety of sea floor samples including box cores, vibrocores and grab samples.
“Based on geophysical and environmental data, CRP will be able to tie it all together and optimise the mining efforts. The project has all it needs to move forward.”
Mr Castle paid tribute to the work done by the project team, and the scientists, engineers and other technical staff gathered from the United States, Netherlands, Germany and New Zealand who worked under immense time pressure. “Our team put together these trips in just a few weeks; it normally takes months or even years.”
“Our focus now is on undertaking the necessary analysis and preparing the reports required for the two key consents we need,” Mr Castle said. “We plan to begin production in 2014.”
The data and samples acquired by the four cruises will be used for:
·
The application for the mining licence
· The
environmental impact assessment report required to accompany
the application for a marine (environmental) consent
·
Refinement of the design of the phosphate recovery and
on-board separation systems
· Acceleration of the rock
phosphate beneficiation studies presently under way
·
Further design work in respect of the on-board glauconite
separation systems
· New fertiliser market
development.
“The project continues to maintain
considerable momentum. We have a strong focus on setting
objectives and achieving ongoing milestones. We have met
all our key deadlines so far and we are determined to keep
delivering on our goals.”
Boskalis project leader Gerard Van Raalte said the data gathering this summer is invaluable for designing the undersea and onboard extraction equipment and separation techniques.
“We are also results orientated and so we are working very well with the CRP team.”
December cruise:
The survey mapped 715 km2
of the sea floor with multi-beam swath bathymetry (seafloor
topography) data and 199 km2 with side-scan sonar data. It
collected 263 km of sub-bottom seismic reflection data and
magnetic data. The survey collected information about the
shape and character of the sea floor and the properties of
the shallow sediments that will help understand the
distribution of the phosphate resource. The data guided
planning for subsequent surveys, assisted the development of
mining technology and strategy, and contributed to the
identification of priority areas for the first few years of
mining. The ship recovered two oceanographic moorings that
had collected current and turbidity data, now downloaded for
processing and analysis.
The new detailed bathymetry data show the irregularity is primarily the result of underlying geology and iceberg scours up 15 m deep, 400 m wide and tens of km long. The data obtained are valuable for the detailed design of the dredging operations.
February
cruise:
The survey collected 50 precisely located grab
samples, bringing more that 35 tonnes of sediment back to
analyse nodule content and distribution and test separation
techniques. The bulk sediment also brought in considerable
environmental data that contributed to the March
environmental survey. The project team conducted four ROV
dives (the first ever on the Chatham Rise) to inspect the
sea floor before and after grab sampling and to test the
physical properties of the sediment, as well as expanding
the geophysical mapping of the sea floor.
March
cruise:
The team surveyed 13 of the environmental areas
identified by NIWA (eight target mining areas and five
reference areas outside mining zones) and collected more
than 77 km of ROV video transects, recording more than 150
hours (or 700 Gb) of video and 62,000 observations from the
video transects as well as 17,000 still photos. In
addition, the cruise collected 130 box cores from 38 sites,
3 km2 of high-resolution bathymetry and backscatter data and
more than 500 km2 of regional bathymetry data. The ROV
stopped on 12 occasions to take biology samples or close-up
photos. The sampling and photography will enable detailed
assessment of animals that live on the seafloor.
April
cruise:
The cruise, with Boskalis engineers on board,
involved the first investigation that specifically focused
on properties of the seafloor as they relate to design and
construction of a mining machine. Four ROV dives tested the
geotechnical properties of the sand and chalk, including how
hydraulic jets could loosen the sediment without creating
high turbidity before the phosphate and associated sediment
can be pumped on board for separation. Cone Penetration Test
(CPT) measurements were done at 129 sites, collecting
information about sediment strength, hardness, friction and
porewater pressure. Fifteen short vibrocores returned 12.6 m
of sediment. A vibrocorer uses vibration to work the core
tube into the seabed as distinct to a corer that relies on
gravity alone for penetration into the sediments. The
cruise took four box core samples for environmental and
geotechnical
analysis.
ends