Australian iron ore major Fortescue Metals Group (ASX: FMG) said on Friday it would re-evaluate an expansion plan at one of its iron ore mines in the Pilbara region, after an Indigenous group said the project threatened sacred sites, including a 60,000 year old rock shelter.
Fortescue’s decision comes after fellow miner Rio Tinto (ASX, LON, NYSE: RIO), the number one iron ore producer, blew up in May a 46,000-year-old sacred indigenous site in Western Australia.
While the company has apologized for the decision, chief executive officer Jean-Sebastien Jacques revealed on Friday it had other options, but rejected them.
Rio’s boss acknowledged that the move allowed the company to access about 8 million tons of high-value iron ore. The world’s second largest miner recorded about $4.6 billion in profits from its iron ore unit in the first half of the year.
In light of the global uproar Rio’s blasting caused, Fortescue has asked the government to delay a decision on a heritage exemption request, which is part of a mine expansion plan. The project would threaten sites of cultural significance to the Wintawari Guruma people.
CEO Elizabeth Gaines said in a call with analysts that the company’s primary objective was to avoid cultural heritage damage.
Solar ambitions
The company is also gearing up to test whether it can run its Pilbara-based Christmas Creek iron ore mine on solar, alone, during the day
Alinta Energy, the miner’s partner in the project, says it is confident the goal can be achieved.
The solar farm is part of a major project that will extend the Alinta transmission line that runs from the Newman gas generator to Roy Hill mine by another 65km to Christmas Creek and Cloudbreak.
More to come…