Otago Daily Times

Leaked report sheds light on mining scheme

The prospect of an open pit diatomite mine in Middlemarc­h has caused division, and many are concerned about the effects of hundreds of trucks, mine dust, and the loss of Foulden Maar (MAAR), a ‘‘preeminent’’ fossil cache. There are also corporate links t

- SIMON HARTLEY

A LEAKED investment report has finally shed light on a proposed $470 million proposal to mine diatomite from a Middlemarc­h property.

Controvers­y on the effects of mining of Foulden Hill has abounded, centred on massive trucking movements, mining dust and the potential loss of what is considered to be a ‘‘preeminent’’ fossil site.

The scene appears set for a looming showdown — corporatio­n versus community.

Australian and Malaysiano­wned Plaman Global has been silent on the proposal since June last year, awaiting a crucial, overdue decision from the Overseas Investment Office.

Plans for community engagement have since ground to a halt.

However, in a report by investment bankers Goldman Sachs, leaked to the ODT, some of Plaman’s proposed deals with businesses, councils and the lobbying of government are revealed.

Goldman Sachs also outlines how Plaman’s majority shareholde­r, Malaysian company Iris Corporatio­n — which is closely linked to controvers­ial palm oil plantation developmen­t — should be removed as a shareholde­r, so its applicatio­n will be ‘‘viewed positively’’ by decisionma­king ministers.

Goldman also reveals how a former minister has been bought in to lobby the Government to expedite the decisionma­king progress ‘‘to assist with securing the approval as soon as possible’’.

APROPOSAL to mine diatomite near Middlemarc­h for the next almost 30 years appears to have stalled as feasibilit­y studies and regulatory hurdles take their toll.

However, while there has been no public informatio­n release since June last year, there has been no shortage of behindthes­cenes activity: ministers being lobbied, business deals quietly struck as corporates prepare to take on the community.

A confidenti­al report was leaked this week to the ODT, authored by investment bankers Goldman Sachs as a Confidenti­al Informatio­n Memorandum.

It appears to have been prepared for wouldbe investors in Plaman, specifical­ly on the diatomite project, with a 112page level of detail more akin to an initial public offering to float a company on the sharemarke­t.

In February 2014, Plaman Resources Ltd was registered with the Companies Office in New Zealand, with a majority 50.95% stake owned by Iris Corporatio­n, a listed Malaysian company with links to supplying the controvers­ial Malaysian palm oil industry.

Iris Corporatio­n remains the majority shareholde­r.

Plaman general manager

New Zealand Craig Pilcher was contacted this week for comment, but declined an interview, after the board took legal advice.

He would only say Plaman directors George Manolas and Panayiotis Plakidis, both of Sydney, were ‘‘disappoint­ed’’ the confidenti­al document had been leaked to the media.

Goldman Sachs’ report talks of detaching Iris Corporatio­n as a shareholde­r to ‘‘remove any link’’ with the controvers­ies surroundin­g palm oil plantation­s.

‘‘The removal of Iris Corporatio­n Berhad as a shareholde­r of Plaman Global as a key part of the corporate reorganisa­tion will be viewed positively by the [New Zealand] ministers, since it removes any link between the Foulden Hills project and the potential use of Black Pearl as a fertiliser for palm oil plantation­s, which has been identified as a sensitivit­y for the local community’’, the Goldman report said.

Black Pearl is the trademarke­d brand given to the Foulden Hills’ diatomite

by Plaman.

Other forms of diatomite have long been preferred as fertiliser for the palm oil industry, which clears fells and burns large swathes of humid rainforest­s to establish plantation­s; often displacing local inhabitant­s.

Goldman Sachs’ also noted former Labour Party minister Clayton Cosgrove, whose political career ended in September 2017, has been engaged as a ‘‘government relations adviser to secure approval’’ for the mine as soon as possible.

‘‘Clayton has outstandin­g relationsh­ips with the ruling Labour Government and is doing everything possible to ensure a decision is made by the relevant ministers as soon as possible,’’ Goldman Sachs said.

Goldman Sachs went on to say Plaman has also considered how to defend any potential Environmen­tal Court challenge, which could delay the project.

‘‘Any appeal to the Environmen­t Court is likely to come from a small number of local residents, who are not well resourced and will not have comprehens­ive technical reports to the same extent at Plaman Global would have’’, Goldman Sachs said.

Crucial to Plaman Global’s plans is its applicatio­n to the Overseas Investment Office, made in May last year, which is still considerin­g whether Plaman can buy an adjoining farm.

The existing proposal covers 174ha of land, but with OIO approval to buy the neighbouri­ng property, that would increase by a further 432ha.

It would appear the project can only be commercial­ly feasible if full production forecasts can be met; anything less would mean the project would be overcapita­lised and likely not viable.

MILTON, south of Dunedin, is now earmarked for a

$36.8 million processing plant on 30ha, following an ‘‘offer from Calder Stewart and Port Otago’’ to locate there, and ship the mineral through Port Chalmers, although Milton developmen­t also requires OIO consent.

A Milton plant could be constructe­d over late 201920

and commission­ed by early 2020, and production could get under way by January 2022.

Another developmen­t is a proposal for Plaman to complete a capital raising and list on the stock exchange in 2020, to ‘‘fully fund’’ the Foulden Hills project.

Last year, Goldman Sachs lent Plaman a $US20 million ($NZ29.9 million) ‘‘bridging loan’’.

That loan is until May next year, so Plaman can repay or refinance, and is structured so the first $US50 million ($NZ74.7 million) raised in a private placement would be retained by Plaman, and any further cash going towards repayments to Goldman Sachs, the report said.

‘‘This gives Goldman Sachs a strong incentive to ensure that the first private placement capital raising is of sufficient size to repay the bridge loan,’’ the report said.

The 21 ‘‘key target countries’’ for Black Pearl included China, Brazil, Indonesia, the Philippine­s, Vietnam and Thailand.

AUSTRALIAN­OWNED Plaman bought the mine at Foulden Hill near Middlemarc­h in 2015 for more than $A5 million

($NZ5.35 million), with an estimated 27year mine life and

containing 33 million tonnes of diatomite. The mine would eventually be rehabilita­ted as a ‘‘pit lake’’in 2048.

It is claimed the Black Pearl is a globally rare form of ‘‘black diatomite’’ and the mineral would be processed into a 100% organic, highvalue stock food additive, reducing antibiotic usage, stimulatin­g animal growth and improving gastrointe­stinal health.

Plaman told the ODT in June last year it was throwing open public consultati­on on the proposal, but nothing happened and informatio­n dried up — other than letters to the newspaper criticisin­g truck use and the chalklike dust created by featherwei­ght diatomite.

The report noted under ‘‘consenting overview’’ that there would have to be ‘‘ongoing dust suppressio­n’’ but, given its remote location, the effects of noise and vibration would not create operationa­l issues.

Consents for a variety of operations would be required from the Otago Regional Council, Dunedin City Council and Clutha District City

Council.

The report described the Dunedin council as ‘‘promining’’, because it has given multiple consents to neighbouri­ng Oceana Gold, and said council had provided ‘‘letters of support’’ for the project, highlighti­ng job creation, the investment report said.

Another report excerpt said ‘‘Management does not expect any significan­t social or community issues at Foulden Hill.’’

Plaman was still planning ‘‘a series of community consultati­on events’’.

Between 201517, Plaman had completed 40 either core or diamond drill holes, totalling more than 3km, at Foulden Hill.

P❛ The removal of Iris Corporatio­n Berhad as a shareholde­r of Plaman Global as a key part of the corporate reorganisa­tion will be viewed positively by the [New Zealand] ministers, since it removes any link between the Foulden Hills project and the potential use of Black Pearl as a fertiliser for palm oil plantation­s, which has been identified as a sensitivit­y for the local community Investment bank report by Goldman Sachs

LAMAN Resource Ltd, trading as Plaman Global, has opted for a production base in Milton, as opposed to near Bluff, and to export through Port Chalmers, instead of Southport at Bluff.

Several transport industry sources were contacted, but none would be identified.

It was understood that instead of hundreds of trucks taking the raw material to Milton, Plaman had undertaken a feasibilit­y study into railing the diatomite to Milton, from Middlemarc­h through the Taieri Gorge; but with no final decision made.

The report said a roading proposal would result in trucks operating 24 hours a day on the 98km from Foulden Hill to Milton, each carrying 37tonne loads of diatomite.

Public concerns have been raised about the future of the site’s fossil contents, but

Plaman last year said there would be no restrictio­ns on geologists’ visits, other than usual health and safety requiremen­ts.

Fossils were first discovered at Foulden Maar (volcanic crater lake) in 1875, compressed into the thin layers of diatomite, which is several metres thick.

Since 2003, 100 new species of insects have been found, 30 different flowers and hundreds of specimens of two fish species, and there were estimates half of the fossil species were now extinct.

Initial annual mining was expected to start at 100,000 tonnes and move to 500,000 tonnes in four to five years, shipped through Port Chalmers in either containers or on bulk carrier ships.

A total of more than

$470 million is estimated to get the project to full quarrying and production levels, of 500,000 tonnes per year, selffunded through cash flow generation once production began, the report said.

‘‘Large scale chimerical production’’ of Black Pearl was expected in early 2022, with an expected full year earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on of $US130 million

($NZ194.4 million).

By 2024, production would be ramped up to 500,000 tonnes annually, with 2025 Ebitda of $US780 million

($NZ1.16 billion)

The cost of mining, cartage, processing and exporting was estimated to be $513 per tonne in 2022 easing down to $407 by 2025.

Revenue in 2022 was estimated at $216 million, rising to just over $1 billion by 2025.

The Sachs report said Plaman had ‘‘agreed terms’’ last November 2018 to lease and acquire land to construct its processing facilities in Milton, which was 152kms closer to Foulden Hills than the Bluff Awarua location, ultimately saving cartage costs by $70 per tonne.

The Milton plant would crush, granulate and dry the raw diatomite.

At the end of last year, there were 13 commitment­s by overseas buyers to trial Black Pearl.

The Sachs report stated ‘‘Plaman controls the world’s only known commercial­ly viable supply of Black Pearl, and therefore its pricing can be maintained — and potentiall­y increased — over the long term’’.

Goldman Sachs’’s report said there was ‘‘rapidly growing demand’’ for natural feed ingredient­s in the US and Europe, its target markets initially poultry and pork.

A Plaman has another diatomite permit, near Hindon, which could be suitable for commercial production.

 ?? PHOTO: CRAIG BAXTER ?? Divisions in the area . . . The sleepy township of Middlemarc­h.
PHOTO: CRAIG BAXTER Divisions in the area . . . The sleepy township of Middlemarc­h.
 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Australian­owned Plaman bought a diatomite mine at Foulden Hill near Middlemarc­h in 2015 for more than $A5 million ($NZ5.35 million).
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Australian­owned Plaman bought a diatomite mine at Foulden Hill near Middlemarc­h in 2015 for more than $A5 million ($NZ5.35 million).

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