Otago Daily Times

TIWAI STUDY FUNDED

- HAMISH RUTHERFORD

AUCKLAND: Cabinet has agreed to give Environmen­t Southland $300,000 for a study of the condition of the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter, amid signs the Government has doubts about what smelter owner Rio Tinto will do when it closes.

In January, Rio Tinto, which owns about 80% of the smelter, announced a deal with its electricit­y provider Meridian Energy which would extend the smelter’s life until at least the end of 2024.

The deal has generally been seen as a delay of Tiwai Point’s likely closure, rather than securing its operation long term, with Transpower investing in network upgrades to help distribute the electricit­y used by the smelter to the rest of the country.

Meridian had said in October it had offered the smelter ‘‘well in excess’’ of $60 million a year in savings, while Forsyth Barr estimated the saving might have been more than $80 million.

While Labour had committed to trying to strike a deal to extend the life of the smelter — using the carrot of cutting its transmissi­on pricing — it promised any deal would require commitment­s about remediatin­g the site.

Environmen­t Minister David

Parker said the deal reached with Meridian was so good that the cleanup talks did not progress, and the Government had no clarity about the site’s state.

‘‘At the end of the negotiatio­ns in respect of a transition for the smelter, we’re left blind as to what the state of the site is,’’ Dr Parker said.

‘‘Given that the risk here to the Crown is potentiall­y hundreds of millions of dollars, we want to know what’s necessary.’’

In late 2020, Cabinet approved a payment to Environmen­t Southland to conduct a study on the state of Tiwai Point as it, unlike central government, had power to enter the site under the Resource Management Act.

While New Zealand’s Aluminium Smelter had indicated it was conducting a closure study, Dr Parker said the Government had not seen the material.

‘‘We don’t know how thorough they will be,’’ Dr Parker said.

‘‘Nor do we know the state of the soils and substrate are under these potlines that have been used for all these decades. There hasn’t been very thorough monitoring of groundwate­r.’’

Rio Tinto had not specified what the cleanup would entail, Dr Parker said.

‘‘We’ve had no undertakin­gs from them as to what they’ll do, other than the generalise­d statement that they will meet their obligation­s at law.

‘‘They won’t say what their obligation­s at law are . . . nor have they said what the state of the site is.’’

Earlier this week, Rio Tinto and the Government struck a deal to remove ouvea premix, an aluminum dross byproduct which can emit poisonous gas if it gets wet, from a site in Mataura which is prone to flooding.

Dr Parker said negotiatio­ns with Rio Tinto about the cleanup had been ‘‘pleasant’’ but the experience of Mataura negotiatio­ns were in his mind.

‘‘The right things are said, but the experience we’ve had at the Mataura site is that they [Rio Tinto] stand pretty much at their legal rights as they see them, and we’ve got a duty to protect the public interests, not just private rights.

‘‘They’ve contested their legal obligation­s with respect to Mataura dross, pretty vigorously.’’

Dr Parker said Rio Tinto had expertise in closing smelters ‘‘but so did the operators of the Tui oil well, and that didn’t end well for the Government’’.

Owned for years by a consortium including New Zealand Oil and Gas, the Tui field was sold to Malaysian company Tamarind Taranaki in 2017.

While the former owners sold the field with cash meant to be for Tui’s decommissi­oning, when a well to extend the life was dry, Tamarind collapsed into liquidatio­n, leaving the cost of the cleanup to the Crown.

Rio Tinto declined to make anyone available for an interview about Dr Parker’s comments.

On the day the deal with Meridian was announced to extend the life of the smelter, New Zealand’s Aluminium Smelter chief executive Stew Hamilton said a major project was under way to examine the state of the site, but also consult with stakeholde­rs about what would happen when the smelter was closed.

It included more than 300 bore holes being drilled to test the condition of the site. Mr Hamilton conceded that in advance of the work, the company was not in a position to say exactly what state the site was in.

In a statement, a Rio Tinto spokeswoma­n maintained the work to examine the site would be thorough and involved extensive consultati­on.

‘‘Rio Tinto takes its operating and closure responsibi­lities very seriously and is currently conducting an extensive closure study to understand any environmen­tal impacts on the Tiwai Point site.

‘‘This process is a lengthy one, involving the expertise of several independen­t environmen­tal scientists . . . and includes extensive consultati­on with officials, our local community and Ngai Tahu as mana whenua.’’

Environmen­t Southland chief executive Rob Phillips said Dr Parker had asked it to help assess the extent of remediatio­n needed once the smelter closed.

‘‘We will be increasing our monitoring events and groundwate­r sampling, which will help form the basis for determinin­g the scope of the remediatio­n needed, Mr Phillips said.

‘‘The funding . . . will go towards engaging external expertise to support and review this plan. This will be ongoing, and we are keeping the minister updated.’’ — The New Zealand Herald

 ?? PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON ?? Uncertaint­y . . . New Zealand’s Aluminium Smelter chief executive Stew Hamilton acknowledg­ed in January that the company did not know the exact state of the Tiwai Point smelter.
PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON Uncertaint­y . . . New Zealand’s Aluminium Smelter chief executive Stew Hamilton acknowledg­ed in January that the company did not know the exact state of the Tiwai Point smelter.

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