Iron ore mining in Western Australia


Iron ore mining in Western Australia, in the 2018–19 financial year, accounted for 54 percent of the total value of the state's resource production, with a value of A$78.2 billion. The overall value of the minerals and petroleum industry in Western Australia was A$145 billion in 2018–19, a 26 percent increase on the previous financial year.
Western Australia's iron ore output for 2020–21 was 838.7 million tonnes, the second-highest figure after 2017–18. The bulk of Western Australian ore went to China, which imported 82% of 2021 production, followed by Japan and South Korea, with 6% each. The state has the world's largest reserves of iron ore with 29% of the world's iron ore, followed by Brazil with 19%, Russia with 15% and China with 12%.
In 2020–21 the Western Australian Government received A$9.8 billion in royalties from the iron ore mining industry in the state. The remaining life of the Pilbara iron ore fields has been estimated as 65 years from 2021.

History

Australian Iron and Steel had leases for the iron ore deposit on Cockatoo Island, in Yampi Sound, and later secured leases over deposits on the neighbouring Koolan Island. The company bought a schooner, Geraldton, carried out survey work on Cockatoo Island in 1929 and 1930, and built some accommodation buildings and a reservoir on the island in 1932. The housing was deserted by May 1934. Cecil Hoskins tried to obtain financial support from Japanese mining interests to develop the Yampi Sound ore deposits—some of the ore was to be exported to Japan—but discussions apparently broke down in early 1935. After the end of the Second World War, the company, now a BHP subsidiary, began developing the deposit on Cockatoo Island, and its first ore shipment was in 1951.
Iron ore mining also took place at Wundowie and later at Koolyanobbing, to feed the Wundowie charcoal iron blast furnaces, from 1948 to 1981. Koolyanobing also supplied ore to a BHP owned blast furnace at Kwinana, from 1968 to 1982. Since that time, apart from a short-lived direct reduced iron plant, at Port Hedland, no iron has been smelted in Western Australia, and almost all ore mined has been exported.
While the Pilbara iron ore deposits were known, such as the Mount Whaleback deposit discovered in 1957 by Stan Hilditch, it was not until 1960, when the Australian government lifted the embargo on iron ore exports that it had put in place because of concerns the mineral was in short supply, that mining began in earnest. Up until the mid-1960s, iron ore production in Western Australia, and Australia as a whole, was negligible, in the range of less than 10 million tons a year. By the mid-1970s, this figure had reached 100 million tonnes, with the majority coming from Western Australia. Production slightly declined in the 1980s, but it improved in the 1990s, reaching 150 million tonnes for the country by 1997 and 200 million tonnes by 2003.
The first mine in the Pilbara, the Goldsworthy mine, was developed in 1965 by Mount Goldsworthy Mining Associates, a joint venture between the British-owned Consolidated Goldfields (Aust) Pty Ltd, Cyprus Mines Corporation of Los Angeles, and Utah Construction & Mining Company of San Francisco. A private railway line, the Goldsworthy railway, as well as port facilities at Finucane Island, Port Hedland, were also constructed. On 1 June 1966, the first shipment of iron ore from the Pilbara left on board Harvey S. Mudd.
BHP's operations in Newman date back to 1968, when the Mount Whaleback mine was opened, the biggest single open-pit iron ore mine in the world. A new town, Mount Newman, was constructed, as well as a 426 kilometre railway line, the Mount Newman railway. The first train left Mount Newman on 1 January 1969 and the first shipment of Newman ore left port on 1 April 1969 on board of Osumi Maru. Newman remained a "closed" company town until 1981.
Rio Tinto's iron ore operations in the Pilbara began in 1966, with the Mount Tom Price mine opened that year, becoming the company's first mine to open in the Pilbara.

Overview

Exploration

In 2008–09, expenditure for exploration in iron ore in Western Australia increased by 33 percent compared to the previous financial year, 2007–08. The A$560 million spend on iron ore exploration accounted for 45 percent of all mineral exploration expenditure in the state.

Production

The bulk of iron ore production in Western Australia comes from the Pilbara region of the state. A number of mines however are also located in the Mid West and Kimberley regions as well as in the Wheatbelt.
The big two producers, Rio Tinto and BHP, accounted for 90 percent of all iron ore production in the state in 2008–09, with the third-biggest producer being the Fortescue Metals Group.
Rio Tinto operates twelve iron ore mines in Western Australia, BHP seven, Fortescue two; all of those are located in the Pilbara region.

Railways

Pilbara region

The three largest iron ore producers operate private rail networks to transport ore from their mines to ports on the coast.
BHP operates the Goldsworthy railway and the Mount Newman railway, both terminating at Port Hedland.
Rio Tinto operates the Hamersley & Robe River railway, formed in a 2001 merger of the Hamersley and Robe River railways. The two lines terminate at Cape Lambert and Dampier.
FMG's Fortescue railway, a relative newcomer, started operation in 2008. The line terminates at Port Hedland. Before deciding to construct its own line, FMG applied to the National Competition Council, on 15 June 2004, to use part of the Mount Newman railway and also part of the Goldsworthy railway.
In June 2010, the Australian Competition Tribunal ruled that FMG would be granted access to Rio Tinto's Robe River line and BHP Billiton's Goldsworthy line but not to the busier Hamersley and Mount Newman lines. Treasurer Wayne Swan suggested that several advantages would accrue from access to the rail lines by third parties. It would increase competition, reduce duplication of infrastructure, and reduce environmental damage. Atlas Iron, another junior iron ore miner, is hopeful to come to terms with BHP Billiton in regards to using some of the company's rail infrastructure, the Goldsworthy railway, in the future. BHP, in late 2010, had agreed to a joint feasibility study into how an arrangement might work.
Access to the rail networks by third parties is governed by the State Agreements Act.

Westrail region

Other mines connect to port using the state government-owned railways. Examples are Windarling Range and Koolyanobbing – from Koolyanobbing to the port of Esperance; Karara mine using the Karara railway to link to the state network at Morawa; Koolanooka using a 60 km spur line linking to the state network at Morawa; and Mt Gibson trucking to an ore loading siding at Perenjori.

Ports

In the Pilbara, iron ore is shipped from Port Hedland, Dampier and Cape Lambert. The latter two ports are exclusively used by Rio Tinto, while Port Hedland is used by BHP, FMG and Atlas Iron.
Port facilities at Port Hedland consist of Nelson Point and Finucane Island, both BHP, and Herb Elliott Port, used by FMG. In Dampier, ore is shipped from Parker Point and East Intercourse Island.
The non-Pilbara mines ship their ore out of other ports: Windarling Range ships from the port of Esperance; the Jack Hills, Koolanooka, Mungada and Mt Gibson mines ship from Geraldton.

Projects

BHP is currently spending A$1.85 billion on its Rapid Growth Project 4, aimed at increasing its annual iron ore output to 155 million tonnes. To achieve this, upgrades to both mines and port facilities are necessary. The project is scheduled for completion by 2010. As a follow-up, Rapid Growth Project 5, with a budget of A$4.8 billion, targets a further production increase of 50 million tonnes annually. Additionally to upgrades at the mines and ports, it will also include duplication of existing railway lines and is scheduled for completion in late 2011. The Jimblebar mine is part of another expansion project, launched in 2010 and aimed at increasing production from the Pilbara mines to 240 million tonnes of iron ore annually by 2013. The expansion of Jimlebar, together with an expansion of the inner harbour at Port Hedland and works on the duplication of rail tracks is estimated to cost A$2.15billion. The project is titled Rapid Growth Project 6.
Rio Tinto declared its intent to expand the Hope Downs mine, spending a further A$1.78 billion on its new Hope Downs 4 project, scheduled to produce 15 million tonnes of iron ore annually by 2013. Rio has commenced construction on its new Western Turner Syncline project. Rio Tinto allocated a further A$1.24 billion in early December 2010, to expand the Brockman 4 mine to 40 million tonnes per annum, from 22, as well as develop its Western Turner Syncline project, raising planned production there from 6 to 15 million tonnes, with the aim of increasing the Pilbara production to 283 million tonnes per annum by late 2013. The expansion would make Brockman 4 Rio Tinto's second-largest mine in the Pilbara. The company has also begun further construction at the port at Cape Lambert, which is scheduled to undergo a further expansion, to be completed by 2012. The new expansion is scheduled to cost A$276million. The expansion is part of a plan to raise Rio's annual production from the Pilbara from 220 to 330 million tonnes annually by 2016. To achieve this, the Cape Lambert port capacity will be expanded to handle an additional 100 million tonnes annually.
Plans by the Fortescue Metals Group to increase production from 39 million tonnes to 55 million tonnes through a US$220 million upgrade of the Cloud Break mine had to be abandoned in October 2009 because of funding difficulties through its Chinese investors. Instead, Fortescue decided to develop its Christmas Creek mine, at a cost of US$360 million, by building a mine and process plant there and linking it to its existing rail network. Christmas Creek is scheduled to produce 16 million tonnes of iron ore in its first year of operation. Fortescue plans to reach an annual production of 95 million tonnes of iron ore by 2012, downgraded from an earlier target of 120 million.
At Cape Preston, CITIC Pacific Mining is currently, as of 2010, in the process of constructing a 27.6 million tonnes per annum magnetite iron ore mine, named the Sino Iron Project.

Export

China, in 2008–09, was the main importer of Western Australian iron ore, having taken 64 percent, or A$21 billion in value. Japan was the second-most important market with 21 percent, followed by South Korea with 10 percent and Taiwan with 3. In comparison, Europe is a small market for ore from the state, having taken only one percent of the overall production in 2008–09.

Criticism

The iron ore mining boom in Western Australia experienced since the early 2000s has not exclusively been seen as positive. Communities in the Pilbara region have seen a large influx of residential and fly-in fly-out workers, which has seen land prices increase significantly and has negatively affected tourism as accommodation has become sparse.

Aboriginal communities

Australian Aboriginal culture in the region is deeply connected to the land and water, and the mining activities threaten the fragile desert environment of the Pilbara. Locals in the Pilbara argue that the wealth generated by the local mining industry is passing them by and they are left behind. A lack of accommodation and the unattractive nature of relocating to the "dusty outback" resulted in a majority work force of fly-in fly-out workers, depriving local towns of the benefits of a high-earning permanent population.
Mining companies in Australia have, since 1992, changed their attitude towards the local Aboriginal population. In 1992, the Australian government began to recognise the land rights of the Indigenous Australians, opening an opportunity for the latter to engage in negotiations with mining companies to press for compensation and for assistance in preserving cultural artifacts. However, some Aboriginals feel short-changed, given the enormous profits made from mining, and also consider the financial benefits and employment opportunities as insufficient compensation for the destruction caused to their habitat.
Aboriginal mining companies have been able to secure contracts with the big international mining companies. In 2007, BHP Billiton awarded a A$300 million contract to Ngarda Civil and Mining, an Aboriginal-owned company, to manage the Yarrie mine, the largest ever mining contract awarded to an Aboriginal company. As part of the five-year contract, BHP Billiton planned to increase the number of Aboriginal workers at the mine to 70, out of a total of 90 workers. The managing director of Ngarda, Brian Taylor, saw this contract as a positive step, moving Aboriginal people in the region away from government welfare and into permanent employment. Aboriginal Western Australians, in 2007, suffered from an unemployment rate of 14 percent in the state, compared to 3.3% for the general population. Of the 12,000 people employed by BHP Billiton in its Pilbara operations in 2010, 700 were Indigenous. Rio Tinto also, as of 2010, employs 700 indigenous workers in its Pilbara operations, comprising 6 percent of its overall work force. FMG, under the leadership of Andrew Forrest, is driving a national program which aims to find 50,000 jobs for Indigenous workers in Australia. Companies like BHP, FMG and Rio Tinto have programs aimed at increasing the number of Aboriginal employees in their operations. Indigenous Australians in Western Australia in 2001 accounted for 3.1% of the population.
Companies however lack an understanding of Aboriginal culture, which requires young men to be sent to the bush for up to six weeks to hunt and learn about their culture. Companies are often unwilling to award their Indigenous employees this time off to be able to perform these important traditions.

Safety

Since the late 1960s, when the Department of Mines began categorising fatalities by commodity, until 2010, 86 work-related fatalities have occurred in the iron ore mining industry in Western Australia.

List of active mines

This is a list of major active iron ore mines in Western Australia in 2022–23, according to the Department of Mines, Industry Regulation and Safety. To qualify for the department's official list of principal mining projects an operation has to either have mineral sales valued at more than $5 million, or, for operations where such figures are not reported, have a minimum of 50 employees:
MineOwner 1ShireCapacity 2Opening yearCoordinates 3
Miralga Creek mineAtlas IronShire of East Pilbara22022
Mt Webber mineAtlas IronShire of East Pilbara92014
Sanjiv Ridge mineAtlas IronShire of East Pilbara42021
Area C mineBHPShire of East Pilbara552003
Jimblebar mineBHPShire of East Pilbara141989
Newman WestBHPShire of East Pilbara381968
Newman EastBHPShire of East Pilbara12
South Flank mineBHPShire of East Pilbara802021
Yandi mineBHPShire of East Pilbara411992
Iron Ridge mineFenix ResourcesShire of Cue1.252021
Christmas Creek mineFMGShire of East Pilbara162009
Cloud Break mineFMGShire of Ashburton282008
Eliwana mineFMGShire of Ashburton302020
Firetail mineFMGShire of Ashburton272013
Kings Valley mineFMGShire of Ashburton402014
Queens Valley mineFMGShire of Ashburton2022
Roy Hill mineHancock ProspectingShire of East Pilbara602015
Karara mineKarara Mining LimitedShire of Perenjori82010
Iron Valley mineBCI Minerals Shire of East Pilbara82014
Koolyanobbing mineMineral ResourcesShire of Yilgarn82018
Wonmunna mineMineral ResourcesShire of East Pilbara52021
Koolan Island mineMount Gibson IronShire of Derby–West Kimberley0.42007
Brockman 2 mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton8.71992
Brockman 4 mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton222010
Channar mineRio Tinto, Sinosteel Shire of Ashburton201990
Eastern Range mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton202004
Gudai-Darri mineRio TintoShire of East Pilbara432022
Hope Downs mineRio TintoShire of East Pilbara302007
Hope Downs 4 mineRio TintoShire of East Pilbara152014
Marandoo mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton151994
Mesa A mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton252010
Mesa J mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton71994
Mount Tom Price mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton281966
Nammuldi mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton6.62006
Paraburdoo mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton201972
Silvergrass mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton102017
West Angelas mineRio TintoShire of East Pilbara29.52002
Western Turner mineRio TintoShire of Ashburton2021
Yandicoogina mineRio TintoShire of East Pilbara521998
Blue Hills mineSinosteel Midwest CorporationShire of Perenjori12021
1 Majority-owner and operator shown only2 Capacity is the production capacity of the mine, not actual annual production, and is in million tonnes of iron ore per annum3 Coordinates of the main processing facility

List of inactive and exhausted mines

This is a list of former iron ore mines in Western Australia:
MineOwnerLocationRegionOpening yearClosing year
Cockatoo Island minePluton ResourcesCockatoo IslandKimberley1995 2015
Goldsworthy mineMount Goldsworthy Mining AssociatesGoldsworthyPilbara19661982
Jack Hills mineMitsubishi CorporationJack HillsMid West20062012
Koolanooka mineSinosteel MidwestMorawaMid West2010 2013
Nimingarra mineBHP BilitonGoldsworthyPilbara19882007
Shay Gap mineMount Goldsworthy Mining AssociatesShay GapPilbara19731993
Tallering PeakMount Gibson IronMullewaMid West20042014
Wundowie mineCharcoal Iron & Steel Industry WundowieWheatbelt19481951
Yarrie mineBHPYarriePilbara19932014

Statistics

Annual statistics for the Western Australian iron ore mining industry:
Subject1990199119921993199419951996199719981999
Production 106.27107.67111.64111.73119.69133.13132.90141.29149.74141.02
Production value 2.252.652.952.992.872.792.923.163.933.97

Subject2000200120022003200420052006200720082009
Production 151.2161.8164.6188.2202.0233.2242.6257.6291.0316.5
Production value 3.724.915.215.195.338.3012.715.722.033.6
WA Royalty Receipts 2852722903305347748301,5181,7012,394
Employees9,1039,28911,18412,58513,72716,20318,38723,18526,05127,537

Subject2010201120122013201420152016201720182019
Production 385.0397.6454.4512.6623.5718.8748.1793.0839.4790.6
Production value 35.357.660.856.475.254.448.864.362.181.8
WA Royalty Receipts 3,7853,5354,3445,2265,4484,0263,6004,7084,4764,884
Employees33,34543,00855,32360,84458,25758,09353,22953,22153,71659,525

Subject2020202120222023
Production 836.8838.7844.4861.3
Production value 104.6154.7137.1125.1
WA Royalty Receipts 7,8029,79710,8489,400
Employees 52,32160,48859,72461,203
Employees 65,45476,15078,974