Chatham Rock Phosphate Raises $325,000 under Share Purchase Plan

13 February 2012

The Chatham Rock Phosphate share purchase plan closed on 3 February 2012. Under the Plan, 72 eligible shareholders have subscribed for 1,624,492 shares in total raising approximately $325,000 at the issue price of $0.20 per share. The Board is very pleased with this outcome given the timing of this offer and thanks shareholders for their continued support of the company.

In addition to the allotment of shares under the share purchase plan, Chatham Rock Phosphate has also undertaken placements today of 986,110 shares to qualified investors at an issue price of $0.20 per share.

Full particulars of these allotments are set out below.

On behalf of the Board,

Chris Castle
Managing Director

Email: chris@widespread.co.nz

Class of security:  Ordinary Shares
ISIN:  NZWENE0003S0
Number issued:  2,610,602
Issue price:  $0.20 per share
Payment in cash:  Yes
Fully paid:  Yes
Percentage of class:  5.16%
Purpose of the issue:  Funds raised will be applied as announced to the market on 1  December 2011.
Authority for the issue:  Board resolutions
Date of issue:  13 February 2012
Total number of securities on issue following allotments:  53,217,538 ordinary shares

 

Chatham Rock Phosphate welcomes new neighbour

8 February 2012 

Chatham Rock Phosphate today welcomed news that another company has been recently granted an exploration permit to explore rock phosphate reserves on the Chatham Rise.

The L&M Group, which has a wide range of petroleum exploration and onshore mining interests, has been granted a permit by New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals to explore seafloor phosphate deposits over a wide area to the west, south and east of the marine phosphate permit held by CRP (see diagram below).

L&M holds 90 per cent of Chatham Phosphate Ltd, with the balance held by veteran geoscientist Roger Gregg.

CRP managing director Chris Castle said he was delighted another company recognised the potential of the area. 

“It reinforces the enormous potential value we see in the area, which is being constantly confirmed as we gather new technical data. Chatham holds a large area which has more unknowns but which could have real prospectivity for both rock phosphate and glauconite. ”

Mr Castle noted Chatham chairman Geoff Loudon has had a distinguished career in the mining industry and is widely recognised as an astute investor.

“CRP has done a huge amount of work over the past couple of years that would be of benefit to Chatham.  There are many potential synergies that can be achieved, particularly relating to environmental monitoring and scientific research.”

CRP is a New Zealand owned and operated company established to explore and extract this country’s only significant rock phosphate resource, located on the seabed in sandy silt 400 metres below the surface and 450 km east of Christchurch on the Chatham Rise and expects to apply for a mining licence during 2012.

Chatham Rise rock phosphate can offer benefits that include a reduced carbon footprint through much lower transport costs, fewer run-off effects on farmland when using it as a direct-application product and low cadmium content.

“We would like to welcome Chatham to what is an exclusive neighbourhood, and one we believe will achieve a growing value.  We look forward to talking with them to explore ways we can cooperate and share knowledge.”

Chris Castle     

021 55 81 85 or
chris@widespread.co.nz

 

crp.jpg

Bulk sample testing by Chatham Rock Phosphate

Simon Hartley — 3 February 2012

Seabed mineral explorer Chatham Rock Phosphate (NZAX: CRP) is this week beginning tests at sea on bulk sampling equipment on the seafloor of the Chatham Rise.

Chatham Rock is in the second half of its four-year prospecting licence and plans to spend $US2 million ($NZ2.47 M) on its next round of exploration and data acquisition, with the aim of gaining a mining licence within the next 24-months.

Managing director Chris Castle said the research vessel Dorado Discovery was due to reach the Chatham Rise on Monday to test the bulk sampling equipment which it plans to use later this year.

“The test samples gathered over the next several days will help to ground-truth the electronic information recently gathered during an 11-day scientific cruise for Chatham Rock Phosphate before Christmas,” Castle said.

The Dorado Discovery's owners, Nasdaq-listed Odyssey Marine, had purchased a clamshell bucket to use alongside other scientific equipment and machinery on the vessel and had built a special handling frame which can take seabed samples of about 1.3 cubic metres.

Permit agency New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals has approved the testing.

Chatham Rock's permit covers 4,726 sq km over the central Chatham Rise, 450 km east of Christchurch. It intends to extract shallow seabed deposits of rock phosphate; in a depth range of 375m-425m and replace $300 M of imports.

Castle said the data and images collected from the December voyage involved “the most significant research work undertaken” at the Chatham Rise since the German vessel Sonne's visit in 1981; a New Zealand-German joint venture to evaluate the phosphate's commercial viability.

This Friday, subscriptions close in a recently extended share purchase plan to its 255 shareholders, hoping to raise several hundred thousand dollars, which is part of a total $US5 M being sought including separate, offshore, private placements.

News associated with companies mentioned in this article

Chatham Phosphate Ltd (24 articles)

 

Chatham Rock Phosphate goes for second prospecting term

23 January 2012

Chatham Rock Phosphate has advised New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals that it wishes to proceed with the second term of its prospecting licence.

The four-year licence was granted in February 2010 for two two-year terms.

CRP has met all the conditions of the work programme for the first term of the licence and a range of other activity is now planned with the additional aim of applying for a mining licence well before the end of the second term..

“We’ve achieved a huge amount over the past two years and we want to keep up the momentum so we can progress towards a mining licence as soon as possible,’ Managing Director Chris Castle said.

CRP plans to spend at least $US2 million over the next two years to complete the following:

  • Bathymetric mapping and data analysis
  • Developing a digital terrain model for mine planning
  • Detailed geophysics data processing and analysis
  • Sample collection and analysis for exploration, testing by fertiliser companies, the beneficiation study and mining design
  • Developing a three-dimensional model of the resource
  • Starting mine feasibility studies and conceptual mine planning
  • Continuing to develop an understanding of the environment through collection of baseline data
  • Updating digital database.

The work programme will be financed from capital raised on New Zealand and international financial markets.

CRP’s share purchase plan is open until Friday 3 February, enabling shareholders to invest up to $15,000.

In addition the company has reactivated planning towards its Initial Public Offering on an overseas stock exchange to raise enough capital to fund the company though the mining system design, engineering development and mine planning and development stages.

Mr Castle said the progress achieved over the past two years demonstrated the determination and enthusiasm of a highly skilled project team with a wealth of technical and commercial experience.

“This project now has significant momentum and has generated a lot of interest among investors, scientists, media and a wide range of stakeholders.” 

Among the highlights of work achieved over the past two years were:

  • Forming a strong business alliance with engineering design and logistics company Royal Boskalis Westminster
  • Commissioning a study (with the support of New Zealand Trade and Enterprise) by Bateman Advanced Technologies and Mintek to assess whether beneficiation (to raise phosphorous and lower calcium carbonate levels) is feasible, thus reducing transport costs and improving processing versatility
  • Extensive stakeholder engagement and consultation
  • Literature review and data compilation
  • Digitising relevant technical data and developing a database
  • Underwater radiometric geophysical evaluation
  • Sediment sampling
  • Environmental baseline data collection
  • Current and turbidity sensor data collection
  • Environmental planning

About Chatham Rock Phosphate

CRP holds an offshore prospecting permit of 4,726 km2 on the central Chatham Rise, in New Zealand territorial waters, 450 km east of Christchurch that includes significant shallow seabed deposits of rock phosphate.
Establishment of a rock phosphate industry in New Zealand territorial waters has a significant number of economic, environmental and market benefits.

The economic benefits include

  • Import substitution of up to $300 million annually  
  • Possible exports to near markets  
  • Reduced commodity and foreign exchange risk for fertiliser manufacturers and farmers  
  • Development of a new NZ industry with generation of additional income
  • Security of supply (most rock phosphate is imported from North Africa and the Middle East)  

The environmental benefits include

  • Local product is much lower in cadmium and uranium than imported product
  • Much lower carbon footprint than imported product  
  • As a direct application fertiliser, CRP has less run off than super-phosphate, is applied less frequently, and is a more effective, slower acting product    
  • Extraction will occur in accordance with International Marine Mining environmental guidelines

The market benefits include

  • Much cheaper source than Morocco  
  • Nominally 25+ years security of supply  
  • Known extraction costs could enable less volatile price contracts,  which will benefit fertiliser companies, farmers and agriculture outputs  generally
  • Environmental considerations are essential and CRP has an ongoing wide-ranging programme of consultation with fishing, conservation, Maori and other interest groups around these matters.

Chris Castle
Managing Director
021 55 81 85 or chris@widespread.co.nz

 

NZX Announcement - Valuable information gained from Chatham research cruise

17 January 2012

The information gathered during the pre-Christmas cruise by Chatham Rock Phosphate scientists will guide the development of a mining strategy, managing director Chris Castle said today.

GNS scientist Ray Wood oversaw the 11-day cruise to CRP’s licence area 450 km east of Christchurch and has begun analysis of the information collected.

“The survey collected information about the shape and character of the sea floor and the properties of the shallow sediments that will help understand the distribution of the phosphate resource.” 

“The quality of images gathered using the latest equipment shows incredible detail.”

“Maps showing the variability of the sea floor characteristics will be particularly useful as guides for subsequent voyages that will study the benthic habitats in the licence area and the physical properties of the sediments.”

The survey mapped 715 km2 of the sea floor, considerably more than the 250 km2 in the planned survey blocks.  Bad weather meant that 199 km2 of side-scan sonar data and 263 km of sub-bottom seismic and magnetic data were collected, somewhat less than planned.  

The moorings deployed earlier in the year to measure water currents and collecting other environmental baseline data were recovered and the data downloaded for processing and analysis.

Mr Castle said the combined dataset from the cruise should be sufficient to guide the development of mining technology and strategy, and identify priority areas for the first few years of mining.

Mr Wood said one of the most exciting features discovered were what appear to be iceberg furrows ranging from several hundred metres to more than 5 km long, hundreds of metres wide and 10 metres deep.  There are also numerous circular and oval depressions several hundred metres wide of unknown origin.

Mr Castle said combining the valuable information already held from the Valdivia and Sonne cruises of the 1970s and 1980s with the new data using more modern technology collected on the latest cruise means CRP is building a very rich information resource to continue the momentum of the project.

The data gathered are also helpful in improving the geologic context of the resource and for mapping glauconite concentrations.   Glauconite is another potentially valuable by-product contained within the sandy-silt that houses the rock phosphate resource.
CRP will spend the next few months undertaking more detailed analysis of the information and using the results to contribute to mining technology design, which is another thread of work underway.

Meanwhile CRP is putting the finishing touches to its application to New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals to outline the work programme for the second two-year term of its mineral prospecting licence. 

CRP will further advance its knowledge of the resource, the environmental baseline and the geotechnical properties of the deposit for engineering purposes as part of its focus of proceeding quickly towards applying for a mining licence – hopefully during 2012.

Chris Castle
Managing Director, Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited
021 55 81 85 or chris@widespread.co.nz

 

Chatham Rock Phosphate - Capital Raising Update

The recent postponement of the overseas IPO means that Chatham Rock Phosphate has an immediate need to raise money. Private placement finance is being targeted but the summer holiday break has caused delays in finalising these arrangements.

For this reason, and to give existing shareholders another opportunity to participate, it was resolved to proceed with the current Share Purchase Plan now, even though it's holiday time. It has now been resolved to extend the closing date for the Share Purchase Plan to 3 February 2012.

CRP has 255 shareholders and a subscription from each would enable the Company to retain some momentum while the process to raise money by means of private placements continues. The maintenance of this momentum would also assist in the private placement negotiations. This is why we negotiated the recent equity financed deal with Odyssey Marine to collect the data discussed in our news release of 19 December.

As an existing shareholder in CRP you have provided tangible support in the past. I'm particularly pleased that at recent prevailing share prices every shareholder who has taken up shares in the company in the various financings undertaken since its inception five years has an investment that is worth substantially more than cost.

You will recall that CRP shares were valued (by two independent valuers) at 70.6 cents in March 2011 ($34 million for the company).

Since then there have been a number of encouraging developments:

  • The  market price of rock phosphate ex Casablanca has moved from $160/t to  $202.50/t.  
  • Market  development work has identified a range of potential buyers for our rock  phosphate both in New Zealand and overseas.  
  • Mid  2011 exploration work identified further previously unknown resources in the  only two areas CRP tested. The same work lead to the discovery of what appear  to be significant glauconite resources in CRP's licence  area.  
  • University  research CRP funded in neighbouring areas of the Chatham Rise has led to the  identification of much higher concentrations of glauconite. This also has  potential to be recoverable by CRP as a by-product.  
  • CRP  has received tangible government encouragement to commission research and  scoping studies into beneficiating its rock phosphate. If successful this  would be expected to lead to higher prices and greater market  penetration.  
  • CRP  has acquired 6 months of environmental baseline data from two moorings on the  Rise.  
  • CRP  selected Boskalis in the dredging company beauty parade and has subsequently  contracted them to proceed with design of the mining and separation  plant.  
  • CRP  has agreed terms re equity funding stage one of a survey cruise by Odyssey  Marine (at CRP's option) CRP has engaged two fertiliser scientists to provide  independent advice on the characteristics of our rock and its utility and  value to fertiliser companies..  
  • CRP  has virtually completed the various documents and processes required for an  overseas listing including an independent technical report, the prospectus and  share-broker due diligence.  
  • CRP  has identified new directors with the required relevant skills to join the  Board upon the overseas listing.  
  • CRP  has in the last few weeks acquired significant new data about the rock  phosphate deposit which will assist in optimising phosphate extraction and system design.

On the basis of this progress during the last nine months it could realistically be argued that the company valuation has increased.

However at the recent share price of 20 cents the present market value of the company is only $10 million and while disappointing in one sense, this offers an opportunity to shareholders to increase their shareholding in the company at this attractive entry point.

Any subscription you decide to make in the range from $500 to $15,000 will be welcome. The share purchase plan will now close on 3 February and we will have the ability (but not the obligation) for the next three months to place any shortfall that eventuates on the same terms and conditions. As we are proposing to reactivate the overseas IPO as soon as market conditions improve this may present an attractive second opportunity to qualified investors.

Your support of the company in the past and hopefully again during this period is appreciated.

Please feel free to contact me on 021 558 185, or by email to chris@widespread.co.nz if you wish to discuss this further.

Regards and all the best for 2012,

Chris Castle
Managing Director

About Chatham Rock Phosphate

Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited holds an offshore prospecting permit covering an area of 4,726 km2 on the central Chatham Rise. The permit area, which is in New Zealand territorial waters, is located 450 km east of Christchurch and includes significant shallow seabed deposits of rock phosphate. The initial term of the permit is two years with rights to either extend the prospecting permit or apply for a mining licence.

Establishment of a rock phosphate industry in New Zealand territorial waters has a significant number of economic, environmental and market benefits.

The economic benefits include

  • Import substitution of up to $300 million  annually  
  • Possible exports to near markets  
  • Reduced commodity risk for fertiliser manufacturers and  farmers  
  • Reduced foreign exchange risk for fertiliser manufacturers and  farmers  
  • Development of a new NZ industry  
  • Generation of additional income for the local economy    
  • Security of supply (most rock phosphate is imported from North  Africa and the Middle East)  

The environmental benefits include

  • Local product is significantly lower in cadmium and uranium than  imported product  
  • Much lower carbon footprint than imported product  
  • If applied as a direct application fertiliser, CRP has less run off  than super-phosphate, is applied less frequently, and is a more effective,  slower acting product    
  • Extraction will occur in accordance with International Marine  Mining environmental guidelines

The market benefits include

  • Much cheaper source than Morocco  
  • Nominally 25+ years security of supply  
  • Known extraction costs could enable less volatile price contracts,  which will benefit fertiliser companies, farmers and agriculture outputs  generally

Environmental considerations are essential and CRP has an ongoing wide-ranging programme of consultation with fishing, conservation, Maori and other interest groups around these matters.

 

New images captured on Chatham Rock Phosphate voyage

Never before seen images have been taken of the Chatham Rise seafloor, during the just-completed scientific survey voyage by Chatham Rock Phosphate.

A range of scientific data were gathered by scientists on board Odyssey Marine’s 100 m Dorado Discovery vessel during a 11 day voyage to the Chatham Rise to undertake geological and environmental survey work. The vessel returned to Wellington at the weekend.

The data and images gathered involves the most significant research work undertaken of the Chatham Rise since the German vessel Sonne’s major cruise in 1981 as part of efforts by a New Zealand-German joint venture to evaluate the commercial viability of the area’s rock phosphate deposits.

Chatham Rock Phosphate holds an exploration licence over 4276 sq km, 450 km east of Wellington, at shallow depths on the Chatham Rise and in New Zealand territory.  The exploration permit is for two years with further priority rights to extend the permit or apply for a mining licence.

Odyssey’s vessel “Dorado Discovery” is specially set up for marine mineral exploration and has been undertaking such work in the SW Pacific for the last 15 months. The Chatham Rock Phosphate work is focusing on underwater surveys with sophisticated multi-beam sounders to map the seabed topography and a special instrument package that contains a magnetometer, sediment sounder and side-scan sonar.

The deep-tow package is being towed at a water depth of 350m 1 kilometre behind the vessel and will provide images of the seafloor for geological and environmental studies, as well as mapping the nature of the sediment in the top few metres of the seabed.

The $US1.2 million voyage involves Odyssey Marine potentially converting cruise costs to equity in Chatham Rock Phosphate.

Some images, emailed back to New Zealand are attached and can be viewed at www.rockphosphate.co.nz.

Dr Robin Falconer, principal scientist of CRP, who was on the Sonne cruise, is very excited by the latest information. “It provides a quantum step in resolution of seabed features compared with the existing 30 year old data. We have only some small samples of data sent by email. The original data will be even better,” said Dr Falconer.

“Figure 1 is an image of the bathymetry; i.e. seafloor topography. The blue areas are deeper than the red. You can see the new detail we now have, as the surrounding “fuzzy” colour is the old data. The new data shown covers a strip about 15km long. We can now see features smaller than 1m in height and a few metres across and dramatic features like the big wedge shapes on the left (western) side. They are almost certainly iceberg plough marks made as icebergs drifted up from the south and ploughed into the seafloor. The big scours are up to 300m wide and 10m deep. Some of the big scours clearly overlap as a new iceberg ploughs over an earlier scour. Elsewhere there are many smaller scours, which may be less distinct because they are older.

“Figure 2 shows a black and wide perspective view of the same bathymetry. The coloured lines superimposed are the magnetic profiles that were obtained with the deep tow instrument package. The colour codes reflect different magnetic anomaly levels. The data need processing for full interpretation but the anomalies may be related to variations in the amount of glauconite sand on the seafloor. Glauconite (which we are investigating as a second fertiliser product) is quite magnetic as it contains iron in addition to the valuable potassium. In fact magnetic separation is what we would probably use when we were separating it onboard the mining vessel.

“Figure 3 is a sidescan image from the deep tow instrument package when it was being towed just 50m above the bottom 1 kilometre behind the ship. Sidescan is a sideways-looking sonar that highlights seabed texture and terrain. The figure is a mosaic of several tracks and the uniform area is several kilometres extent. It indicates smooth seafloor sharply separated from rougher or coarser seabed. The coarseness may be patches of phosphate nodules at the seafloor and there will be some seafloor terrain too. Sidescan data may also be valuable for identifying variations in the amount of biota on the seafloor when calibrated with photography on future surveys. “

Netherlands dredging company Boskalis will use the data to refine its already completed preliminary design of the phosphate recovery system. It will also form important baseline data of the environment.
The survey is focusing on the 200 sq km of sea floor already identified as the most prospective area within CRP’s prospecting licence.

Other 2011 activity

The pre-Christmas voyage caps a busy year for CRP, which has also involved:

  • Interim capital raising efforts to maintain the project’s momentum, including a share purchase plan, following a decision to delay an Initial Public Offering because of poor international market conditions
  • A visit to New Zealand by Boskalis environmental expert Gerard Van Raalte to meet a range of government and other stakeholders
  • The signing of a service agreement with Boskalis to undertake a number of projects that collectively comprise phase one of the planned work programme. These projects include design engineering, logistics studies and preliminary design work and environmental studies including turbidity assessments.

The first term of the work programme has involved reviewing and analysing technical data, studying environmental impacts, assessing the project economics and designing an exploration programme as well as engineering design.  Significant focus has also gone into working with stakeholders.

CRP is currently compiling a progress report to New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals, which highlights achievements of the past two years of the company’s exploration activity.  Activity has included:

  • A review of relevant scientific literature and reports
  • Digitisation of technical data
  • Development of a sample database
  • Evaluation of radiometric geophysical techniques
  • Deployment of current meters and turbidity sensors
  • Sediment sampling
  • Environmental baseline data collection including oceanography and habitat.

The year ahead

Detailed planning is underway for the coming year’s technical work programme. CRP’s current key focus is developing a continuing programme for 2012 with a view to applying for a mining licence in the second quarter.

Fundraising

The recent postponement of the overseas IPO means that CRP has an immediate need to raise money. Private placement finance is being targeted but the summer holiday break is certain to cause delays in finalising these arrangements.

For this reason, and to give existing shareholders another opportunity to participate, it was resolved to proceed with the current Share Purchase Plan now, even though it’s holiday time.

CRP has 255 shareholders and a subscription from each of you would enable the Company to retain some momentum while the process to raise money by means of private placements continues. 

The maintenance of this momentum would also assist in the private placement negotiations. This is why we negotiated the recent equity financed deal with Odyssey Marine to collect the data discussed above.

Your support of the company during this period is appreciated.

Regards

Chris Castle
CEO – Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited

Download the Chatham Rock Phosphate Christmas Update PDF

 

Chatham Rock Phosphate Announces Survey Agreement with Odyssey Marine Exploration, Inc.

6 December 2011

We are pleased to advise that Chatham Rock Phosphate has today executed a charter agreement with Odyssey Marine Exploration, Inc. (Odyssey) under which Odyssey will undertake site investigation work for Chatham Rock Phosphate in its offshore permit area on the Chatham Rise. Reaching this agreement is an important milestone as it is expected to provide very significant additional data for the Chatham Rise project.

Details of the Ship Charter

Odyssey’s vessel “Dorado Discovery” will be departing soon from Auckland for 11 days and for a further period in January. The “Dorado Discovery”, 100m in length, is specially set up for deep-sea marine mineral exploration and has been undertaking such work in the SW Pacific for the last 15 months. The forthcoming Chatham Rock Phosphate work, to be undertaken 450km east of the South Island, will focus on underwater surveys with sophisticated multi-beam sounders to map the seabed topography and a special instrument package that contains a magnetometer, sediment sounder and sidescan sonar.

The deep-tow package will be towed at a water depth of 350m one kilometre behind the vessel and will provide images of the seafloor for geological and environmental studies as well as mapping the nature of the sediment in the top few meters of the seabed.

Odyssey provides and operates the vessel and equipment with Chatham Rock Phosphate managing the work program. The data will be used by our partner, Netherlands dredging company Royal Boskalis Westminster, to refine their already completed preliminary design of the phosphate recovery system. The data will also form important baseline data of the environment.

The survey will focus on the 200 square kilometres of sea floor which is already identified as the most prospective area within CRP’s 4726 square kilometre prospecting licence.

Equity Conversion Rights

The cost to Chatham Rock Phosphate for the work being undertaken in December is estimated at USD$1.2 million. Under the agreement these costs will accrue and bear interest before being satisfied as follows:

  • Payment in Cash: Chatham Rock Phosphate may pay all or part of these costs in cash on or before 1 March 2012 provided it gives Odyssey seven days notice in writing of its intention to do so.
  • Conversion by Odyssey: Following 1 March 2012 or, on receipt of the notice specified above where the costs are eligible for conversion, Odyssey may elect to convert all or part of the costs to ordinary shares of Chatham Rock Phosphate.
  • Conversion by Chatham Rock Phosphate: At any time prior to 1 March 2012, Chatham Rock Phosphate may give notice to Odyssey to convert all or part of the costs to ordinary shares of Chatham Rock Phosphate on 1 March 2012. If Chatham Rock Phosphate makes this election, it must also issue one option to Odyssey for every 1.5 shares that are converted. The options issued on this event would be exercisable into ordinary shares on the basis of one option for one share, have an exercise price that is 150% of the conversion price and a term of two years during which they must be exercised.

The conversion price, whether the conversion is elected to occur by Odyssey or Chatham Rock Phosphate will be $0.20 per share. However, if Chatham Rock Phosphate issues shares at a lower price on or before 1 March 2012 the conversion price may then reduce. 

This is a positive development for Chatham Rock Phosphate as it allows us to maintain momentum with our work programme whilst undertaking our current capital raising efforts. We are also very gratified by the interest shown by Odyssey in our company.

On behalf of the Board,

Chris Castle
Managing Director
Email: chris@widespread.co.nz

About Odyssey

Odyssey Marine Exploration, Inc. is engaged in deep-ocean exploration and is the world leader in the field of deep-ocean shipwreck exploration. The Company is publicly traded on the NASDAQ Capital Market under the symbol OMEX.

Odyssey utilizes innovative methods and state of the art technology on both their own and leased vessels to conduct advanced survey, sampling and recovery operations in the world’s deep oceans. The Company’s latest discovery, the SS Gairsoppa shipwreck was discovered nearly 4700 meters deep.

Odyssey has fielded one of the world’s most sophisticated deep ocean mineral exploration systems on the 330 foot vessel the Dorado Discovery and is taking a lead in developing technology for marine mining exploration. The company owns a significant stake in Neptune Minerals, a company focused on discovering and commercializing high-value mineral deposits from the ocean floor and has provided proprietary deep-ocean expertise and equipment to Neptune under contract. Odyssey recently concluded a 100 day charter for Neptune Minerals which documented several new discoveries of SMS deposits with assay results indicating substantial incidence of high grade gold, silver, zinc and copper ore. Odyssey also provides deep-ocean contracting services to governments and companies around the world.

Additional information about Odyssey Marine Exploration is available at  www.shipwreck.net

About Chatham Rock Phosphate

Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited holds an offshore prospecting permit covering an area of 4,726 km2 on the central Chatham Rise. The permit area, which is in New Zealand territorial waters, is located 450 km east of Christchurch and includes significant shallow seabed deposits of rock phosphate. The initial term of the permit is two years with rights to either extend the prospecting permit or apply for a mining licence.

Establishment of a rock phosphate industry in New Zealand territorial waters has a significant number of economic, environmental and market benefits.

The economic benefits include


  • Import substitution of up to $300 million annually
  • Possible exports to near markets
  • Reduced commodity risk for fertiliser manufacturers and farmers
  • Reduced foreign exchange risk for fertiliser manufacturers and farmers
  • Development of a new NZ industry
  • Generation of additional income for the local economy   
  • Security of supply (most rock phosphate is imported from North Africa and the Middle East) 

The environmental benefits include

  • Local product is significantly lower in cadmium and uranium than imported product
  • Much lower carbon footprint than imported product
  • If applied as a direct application fertiliser, CRP has less run off than super-phosphate, is applied less frequently, and is a more effective, slower acting product  
  • Extraction will occur in accordance with International Marine Mining environmental guidelines

The market benefits include

  • Much cheaper source than Morocco
  • Nominally 25+ years security of supply
  • Known extraction costs could enable less volatile price contracts, which will benefit fertiliser companies, farmers and agriculture outputs generally


Environmental considerations are essential and CRP has an ongoing wide-ranging programme of consultation with fishing, conservation, Maori and other interest groups around these matters.

Download article as word doc

 

Capital Raising Programme and Share Purchase Plan

1 December 2011

Further to the preliminary announcement released last week, Chatham Rock Phosphate has determined to undertake a capital raising programme over the next two to three months. The company needs to raise capital to avoid delays in our work programme and maintain operational momentum.

The intention of this programme is to raise $2 million to $5 million through a combination of a new share purchase plan offer and through undertaking private placements with qualified investors. The share purchase plan will offer existing shareholders the opportunity to subscribe for up to $15,000 of new shares at an issue price of $0.20 per share. The record date for the plan is 9 December 2011.

The issue price of $0.20 per share is the current market price of shares on the NZAX market. However the issue price represents a 26% discount to the volume weighted average price of Chatham Rock Phosphate shares over the last three calendar months ($0.271).

Capital raised will be applied:

Towards continuing progress with our work programme pending the offshore IPO being undertaken.
To fund further work towards the offshore IPO.

As mentioned in our preliminary announcement, in view of continuing adverse market conditions and the forthcoming year-end holidays the board of Chatham Rock Phosphate resolved to defer its proposed offshore initial public offering until 2012. The purpose of the IPO is to fully fund CRP through to a mining licence grant and commencement of production. Although it remains a priority to secure full funding for the project we consider it in the best interests of our shareholders to delay seeking full funding for now. This will allow time for markets to hopefully recover and allow Chatham Rock Phosphate more time to investigate the feasibility of extracting glauconite, in addition to rock phosphate, from our permit area.

On behalf of the Board,

Chris Castle
Managing Director
Email: chris@widespread.co.nz

Download the Capital Raising Programme and Share Purchase Plan word document

Download the Notice of Event Affecting Securities

 

Boskalis expert meets Chatham Rock Phosphate project stakeholders

An environmental expert from the world’s largest dredging company is in Wellington meeting a wide range of people involved in the Chatham Rock Phosphate project.

Gerard van Raalte is the Boskalis leader of the CRP project. Boskalis is CRP’s technical partner, contracted to design an extraction process for the rock phosphate resource on the Chatham Rise seabed, 450 km east of Christchurch.

Mr Van Raalte is a senior expert at Hydronamics, the in-house engineering company of Boskalis, and has a special focus on the environmental aspects of dredging and marine infrastructure design.   Among projects he has worked on recently are development of ports in Abu Dhabi and other Middle East countries, and Melbourne.

He is team leader of the Building With Nature research programme, initiated by Boskalis to gain an industry-wide insight into the impact hydraulic engineering projects have on ecosystems with the aim of achieving a sound balance between ecological, economic and social sustainability.  

The Boskalis approach has been very successful in managing potentially contentious projects in environmentally sensitive locations and it was one of the key reasons CRP selected the company as its partner.

His aims for the visit are to get completely up to speed on all environmental matters (particularly the incoming EEZ legislation), to meet all the key people, to demonstrate Boskalis's involvement in and commitment to the project and to plan how Boskalis can best be involved in future.

For further information please contact
Chris Castle 021 558 185 or
Linda Sanders 027 471 5593