News

News

Article by Josh Chiat and Stockhead

Gina Rinehart is back in action, this time to revive one of Australia’s longest delayed iron ore projects.
 
Rinehart and her company Hancock Prospecting signed a development agreement this week to lead a bankable feasibility study on the Hardey project in the West Pilbara owned by the API Joint Venture.
 
The deal comes off the back of market chatter about the revival of the project, which was shelved due to falling iron ore prices during the downturn.
 
With prices climbing back above US$126/t overnight and sitting above long term averages, it has brought the APIJV back into focus.
 
Under the terms of a development agreement signed this week, Hancock will lead the development and operation of the project subject to a final investment decision.
 
The APIJV is 50% owned by Aquila Resources, an entity 85% owned by China’s Baowu, the world’s largest steelmaker and 15% by Mineral Resources (ASX:MIN) which bought its stake off Aurizon this year.
 
The other 50% is held in a JV between America’s AMCI and Korea’s POSCO, which owns 12.5% of Gina’s flagship miner Roy Hill Holdings.
 
Rinehart said the window was opening to develop the long-dormant Hardey project.
 
“The Hardey project has waited years for the right window to proceed to development,” she said.
 
“We have an outstanding group of partners, and we believe that now is the right time for the Hardey project to be progressed.”
 
The deal raises the prospect that incremental tonnes to expand Australia’s iron ore industry and increase seaborne supply could come not from the majors but the emerging mid-tier.
 
Hancock is studying expansion plans in the form of new developments at its Atlas Iron business, while MinRes is plotting a rapid expansion over the next few years by developing two hubs at the Port of Ashburton and its Marillana and Othalmia JVs with Brockman Mining (ASX:BCK).
 
MinRes also paid $200 million cash up front and $200 million deferred for Red Hill Iron’s (ASX:RHI) 40% stake in the RHIOJV, 60% of which is owned by the APIJV.
 
Despite weakness in futures markets, benchmark 62% iron ore fines rose US$2.96/t to US$126.35/t overnight according to Fastmarkets MB.
 
58% discounted fines however were down US$2.02 to US$94.69/t, while 65% Brazil premium fines were up US$0.20 to US$143.20/t.
 
Iron ore miners enjoyed bullish trading conditions on the final day before the Christmas holidays, sending the materials index 0.73% higher along with heavy support for lithium stocks.

 

Ground Breakers: Iron ore tops US$126/t as Gina Rinehart signs deal to develop stranded iron ore mines

25.12.2021

Rinehart and her company Hancock Prospecting signed a development agreement this week to lead a bankable feasibility study on the Hardey project in the West Pilbara owned by the API Joint Venture.“The Hardey project has waited years for the right window to proceed to development,” she said. “We have an outstanding group of partners, and we believe that now is the right time for the Hardey project to be progressed.”

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Rinehart wakes iron ore’s sleeping giant

24.12.2021

Gina Rinehart has signed an agreement for the “sleeping giant” of iron ore to be exported over the Roy Hill railway and port infrastructure with first shipment set for 2023. Ms Rinehart committed her company, Hancock, to lead and run the project in a signing ceremony with the joint venture partners this week. Gina Rinehart: “We have an outstanding group of partners, and we believe that now is the right time.”

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Gina Rinehart inks agreement for long-awaited Australian Premium Iron project

24.12.2021

Under the development agreement, Mrs Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting will undertake a bankable feasibility study. If given final investment approval by the joint venture partners, Mrs Rinehart’s majority owned Roy Hill will develop and operate the project. “The Hardey project has waited years for the right window to proceed to development,” Mrs Rinehart said in a speech at the venture’s signing ceremony. “We have an outstanding group of partners, and we believe that now is the right time for the Hardey project to be progressed.”

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Prospect Awards finalists exhibit mining’s best

22.12.2021

The Roy Hill iron ore mine has been selected after it delivered a record equivalent annual run rate of 60 million tonnes in the June quarter of 2021. This was despite a range of restrictions that hampered the wider industry, including inclement weather, COVID-19 restrictions and a skills shortage. New programs at Roy Hill included a new autonomous haulage system, a new crusher and overland conveyor system, and the continuation of the award-winning Wet High Intensity Magnetic Separator (WHIMS).

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Roy Hill Annual Christmas Party

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December 2021.

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Rinehart backs carbon tech play

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A TECHNOLOGY that uses renewable energy-powered electrolysis at low temperature to convert carbon dioxide into reusable carbon and oxygen has been backed by Gina Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting. Called Carbelec, the technology is being developed by researchers at the University of Melbourne. Those researchers claim the technology could be a game changer for steel makers.

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Iron ore miners and bankers keep budget afloat

15.12.2021

Iron ore miners and the nation’s banks are carrying the federal budget, with corporate tax figures revealing the assault on big technology companies is failing to deliver huge increases in revenue.Total tax from the mining sector increased to $25 billion in 2019-20, making it the most valuable to the federal budget. Most of it came out of iron ore producers such as Rio, BHP and Fortescue as the iron ore price lifted strongly. In 2015-16, miners paid $6.3 billion.

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Roy Hill maintains MACA’s momentum

15.12.2021

Roy Hill has signed MACA to a $70 million mining services contract at its namesake iron ore operations in Western Australia’s Pilbara region. The contract has marked a significant milestone for MACA, taking its contract pipeline to $3 billion. “MACA is very pleased to be able to continue working with Roy Hill at its world-class iron ore operation, having commenced civil works at the project earlier this year,” Sutton said.

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MACA scores Roy Hill gig

15.12.2021

MACA has secured a 12-month mining services contract worth $70 million at the Roy Hill iron ore mine in Western Australia’s Pilbara, owned by Hancock Prospecting, Marubeni Corporation, POSCO and China Steel Corporation. "Our team has a long-standing relationship with Roy Hill, starting with first mining at the Roy Hill project, and MACA is proud to be an ongoing part of this operation," he said. "This project will be undertaken utilising existing fleet, contributes to MACA's secured mining work in hand for 2022-23 and further secures our strong position in the Pilbara region."

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