Allotment of Shares and Options

Dear Chatham Rock Phosphate shareholder,

This announcement has just been released to NZX.

Best regards,

Chris Castle

CEO

Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited

Email: chris@crpl.co.nz

Cell: +64 21 558 185

Skype: phosphateking

www.rockphosphate.co.nz

 

14 January 2014

Allotment of Shares and Options

Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited (NZX: CRP) advises that it has today issued 672,217 ordinary shares at an issue price of $0.31 per share and 336,110 CRPOB options to qualified investors. This allotment has raised approximately $210,000 of new capital for CRP. 

Chris Castle

Chief Executive

Email: chris@crpl.co.nz

Screen Shot 2014-01-15 at 7.52.18 am.png

NZX Announcement: Chatham Rock Phosphate appoints London corporate advisers for capital raising

Dear Chatham Rock Phosphate Shareholder,

This announcement has just been released to NZX.

Regards,

Chris Castle

Managing Director

Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited

Email: chris@crpl.co.nz

Cell: +64 21 558 185

Skype: phosphateking

www.rockphosphate.co.nz

 

Media Release

24 December 2013

Chatham Rock Phosphate appoints London corporate advisers for capital raising

Chatham Rock Phosphate has appointed London corporate finance advisers Wimmer Financial to manage an international capital raising over coming weeks.

The financing, by private placement, is likely to be determined by a book build process managed in conjunction with Wimmer Financial.   The offering, for qualified investors, is likely to be the final capital raising required before CRP is fully permitted.

“As our project is well advanced in all other respects we see the granting of the second permit we require - the environmental or “Marine” consent - as a game changer for us,” according to Managing Director Chris Castle. 

He says an opportunity to invest on the same terms (including options) is unlikely to occur again.

“The recently granted mining permit, the first to be granted under new legislation, faced very rigorous scrutiny indeed. The success of this application bears tribute to the undeniable merits of the project.”

Mr. Castle said the project’s key merits include:

·         Chatham holds a strategic, multi-million tonne organic rock phosphate deposit uniquely positioned to access Asian and Australasian fertiliser markets

·         It has a 20 year mining licence

·         It has recently applied for new prospecting licences both east and west of its existing licence areas that could significantly increase the scope of resources.

Chatham is seeking NZ$6 million (net) to fund the environmental consent and corporate costs until Q3, 2014 when the environmental Marine Consent is expected to be granted. 

Edison Research presently values Chatham shares at NZ$2.04 on un-risked basis. 

Wimmer Financial is an international corporate advisory firm based out of London, UK, specialising in natural resources (mining, oil & gas, alternative energy) and real estate, with global reach through a network of close partners and clients all over the world.

Contact Chris Castle on 021 55 81 85 (mobile) or chris@crpl.co.nz

Contact Per Wimmer, CEO of Wimmer Financial LLP on (+44) 207 432 7501 (office) or

(+44) 77 88 75 76 77 (mobile) or Per.Wimmer@WimmerFinancial.com

Wimmer Logo.jpg

NZX Announcement : Mining Permit Granted

Dear Chatham Rock Phosphate shareholder,

This announcement has just been released to NZX. See also attached the NZPaM release.

Regards,

Chris Castle

Managing Director

Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited

Cell: +64 21 558 185

Skype: phosphateking

Web: www.rockphosphate.co.nz

 

6 December 2013

NZX Market Announcement

CRP Mining Permit Granted

New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals today announced that CRP has been granted a mining permit in respect of its phosphate project on the Chatham Rise. The permit is the first granted under the amended Crown Minerals Act which came into force on 25 May this year.

The approval of a Mining Permit for Chatham Rock Phosphate to extract rock phosphate from the seabed in the Exclusive Economic Zone is a significant milestone for New Zealand as well as the company and the industry, Managing Director Chris Castle said today.

CRP applied for permission to extract New Zealand’s major phosphate resource under the previous legislation last year and the application was transferred to the new regime, designed to operate in conjunction with the EEZ legislation which applied from June.

“This is our most important milestone to date,” Mr Castle said.  “It means we’re half way to being permitted, so the permit significantly derisks the company.”

Mr Castle said the approval also demonstrates the mining industry’s important contribution to the wider economy. The project will make New Zealand $900 million richer and contribute $250 million a year in exports and import substitution.

Chatham Rise rock phosphate can be used as an ultra-low cadmium direct-application fertiliser.  It has been proved as effective as processed fertiliser and reduces run-off effects on New Zealand waterways by up to 80%.  As a local source it will provide fertiliser security for New Zealand, can be blended with other forms of fertiliser to reduce cadmium levels in processed fertilisers and reduce New Zealand’s transport-related carbon footprint and costs.

Mr Castle said CRP’s remaining final milestone is a Marine Consent, which will be applied for early next year.  The other key risk-factors already substantially satisfied were quantifying the resource, designing the extraction techniques and identifying markets.

CRP has used the time while the Mining Permit application was considered to significantly improve its Marine Consent application.

“We’ve gathered a lot of new information with a particular focus on the best ways we can answer the key questions interested parties want to know.  We’ve talked to a lot of people and they’ve given us a lot of insights into their potential concerns.   We’ve also had sections of our Environmental Impact Assessment peer reviewed by overseas experts who have suggested improvements.

“We feel confident we can satisfy those concerns and demonstrate the environmental impacts of our operations will be minor and localised.  We’ve also thought carefully about mitigation and monitoring and are continuing to talk to anyone with an interest in the project.”

For further information please contact:

Chris Castle

Managing Director

Phone: 021 55 81 85

Email: chris@crpl.co.nz

 

NZPaM CRP announcement.jpg

NZX Announcement

Dear Chatham Rock Rock Phosphate shareholder,

This announcement was released to NZX a few minutes ago.

Regards,

Chris Castle

CEO
Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited
P.O. Box 231, Takaka 7142
Mobile: +64 21 558 185
chris@crpl.co.nz
Skype: phosphateking
www.rockphosphate.co.nz

Allotment of Shares and Options

Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited (NZX: CRP) advises that it has today undertaken placements at $0.30 per share and at $0.292 per share.

74,627 ordinary shares were issued at an issue price of $0.30 per share to a qualified investor. This investment is on the terms of the current private capital raising offer announced to the market on 9 September, being:

•         CRP agrees an amount of shares to be subscribed for by an investor in aggregate.

•         Half of the shares are subscribed for at an issue price of $0.30 per share (Tranche One).

•         The investor commits to subscribing for the balance of the shares at $0.35 per share within 2 weeks of the Company being granted a mining licence in respect of its Chatham Rise phosphorites project (Tranche Two).

•         For every two shares subscribed for under Tranche One and Tranche Two, one option (CRPOB) is also allotted to the investor.

Accordingly this represents a $50,000 committed investment with $23,000 paid for the shares allotted today and $27,000 to be paid for Tranche Two.

In addition two contractors of the Company (CRP-OCS Consulting Limited and Robin Falconer Associates Ltd) have each received 51,370 shares under Contracts for Service at $0.292 per share. These shares represent partial payment for services. Pursuant to those contracts for service the issue price of NZ$0.292 per share reflects the 20 day volume weighted average price of a share on the NZAX market to 30 September 2013.

Chris Castle

Chief Executive

Email: chris@crpl.co.nz 

Share Graph.JPG

Open letter to Gareth Hughes, Green MP

Dear Chatham Rock Phosphate shareholder,

This letter has just been sent to Green MP Gareth Hughes, filed with NZX and sent to the media.

Regards,

Chris Castle

CEO
Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited
P.O. Box 231, Takaka 7142
Mobile: +64 21 558 185
chris@crpl.co.nz
Skype: phosphateking
www.rockphosphate.co.nz

17 September 2013 

Open letter to Gareth Hughes, Green MP

Dear Gareth

I was very disappointed to see you had aligned yourself publicly with the bottom trawling industry in a news item on TV3 at the weekend.

In our briefing to you last year you indicated you had not reached any conclusion about the merits of our project. I would have thought that you would make an informed decision, including discussion of your concerns with us, before going public for the sake of a TV sound bite.

You have publicly said you are not against mining per se and will evaluate each project on its merits. We wonder how much faith to put in that statement if the evaluation is based on so little consultation and so few facts.   If you have ruled out this mining project as well as countless others, are there any you do support?

We’re astonished you have formed such a negative opinion about our project given the compelling potential environmental and economic benefits it offers and its minimal environmental impacts.

To remind you:

1. Chatham Rise rock phosphate, as an ultra-low cadmium direct-application fertiliser, has proven to be as effective as processed fertilisers while reducing run-off effects on New Zealand waterways by up to 80%. 

2. This resource provides fertiliser security for farming by providing a local alternative source.  Most rock phosphate used to make fertiliser now is imported from Morocco.

3. Moroccan rock phosphate is high in cadmium, involves high transport costs and has a significant carbon footprint.

4. New Zealand is predicted to be $900 million richer as a result of our new industry and we’ll be generating annual exports or import substitution of $300 million, plus supporting farming, our biggest earner.

5. By area, the economic value of the phosphate resource is 500 times greater than fishing; it is expected to yield $9.1 million per km2. In contrast, bottom trawling yields less than $20,000 per km2.

So while our operations will have some environmental impacts, they also offer very significant environmental and economic benefits.

The TV3 news item noted your alliance with the fishing industry is an unlikely one.  I agree, given bottom trawling’s massive environmental impacts and lack of environmental oversight.

Our proposed mining operation is subject to a rigorous environmental evaluation and monitoring process. The story that should be getting your attention is not the potential environmental impact of our project, but the freedom of the fishing industry to devastate as much of our EEZ as they like (currently about 50,000 km2 per year, or 385,032 km2 or 9.3% of the EEZ since 1989) with no environmental oversight or monitoring.

We wouldn’t consider extracting phosphate nodules from a very limited area of the Chatham Rise if we expected it to cause more than very minor environmental impacts. Our operations will lift the top 30cm of sandy silt and redeposit 85% of it on the same area of seabed after extracting the nodules. Modelling indicates the material returned will not be widely dispersed, and the sediment that doesn’t immediately settle will rapidly dilute to insignificant levels.

Our draft environmental impact assessment (EIA), supported by more than 30 expert reports, has identified no long-term impacts on key spawning, juvenile and young fish habitat. Any potential impacts are predicted to be confined to our limited extraction areas, and are short-term, reversible, and of low environmental risk. 

But while bottom trawling – ploughing vast tracts of the EEZ seabed decade after decade - requires no environmental consents, our project needs a mining licence and a marine consent. These cost millions of dollars, require years of research, consultation and official process, and involve full public scrutiny.

Chatham’s planned 15-year extraction project will touch a total of 450 km2, far less than 1% of the Chatham Rise.  In contrast, over the same period fishing will bottom trawl 750,000 km2, about three times the size of New Zealand.

Year after year, weighted nets scrape about 50,000 km2 of seabed, with bottom-dwelling animals disturbed or destroyed – mostly repeatedly so areas never have the chance to regenerate.  Up to 3,000 km2 of new territory is disturbed annually - an environmental impact 100 times greater than predicted for phosphate extraction.  Each year we plan to touch just 30 km2.

Scientific research shows that hoki spawning is concentrated on the West Coast of the South Island and in Cook Strait, and juvenile growth occurs over the entire 189,000 km2 rise. The annual fish trawl footprint on just the Chatham Rise during the 2009-10 fishing year was 19,051 km2.

The Deep Water Group members therefore already know they can continually disturb the ecosystem of 10% of the Chatham Rise area without harming juvenile fish stocks.  Chatham’s extra annual 30 km2 are likely to have no significant additional effect on the hoki fishery.

In summary, fishing destroys the benthic habitats of 100 times the area of previously untouched sea floor every year than we plan to, and every year fishing stops regeneration on an area of seafloor almost 2,000 times greater than our planned area of impact.

Thanks partly to Chatham’s $20 million investment, the rise’s benthic environment is now one of the best-known parts of our marine territory, and this information can now inform resource and environmental management decisions, possibly including modifying the location of benthic protection areas.  We’ve spent three years collecting data on oceanographic conditions (tides, currents, turbidity), benthic life, and analysing the impacts of disturbances on the seafloor and in the water column so we can design a mining system and operational plan that minimises environmental impacts and protects areas of benthic habitat.  

Rather than being of environmental concern, ours is a project of national significance offering significant economic and environmental benefits.

A word or two about BPAs

Benthic Protection Areas were promoted by the fishing industry, for the fishing industry, and were specifically designed to avoid fishing areas, especially those relating to bottom trawling. BPAs include a representative sample of benthic habitats, spread geographically to ensure adequate latitudinal and longitudinal variation.  The map shows how they avoid bottom- trawling areas.

BPAs were designed without regard for New Zealand’s other important natural resources such as rock phosphate or massive sulphides. 

BPAs were implemented to protect benthic biodiversity, not fish spawning grounds or nurseries, though that may be a side benefit for some species.

BPAs are only covered by fisheries legislation.  They do not relate to other legislation covering other ocean activities, such as the newly enacted EEZ legislation, which expressly excludes any direct reference to BPAs. Consideration of the relative importance of BPA’s will be part of the environmental impact assessment process managed by the Environmental Protection Authority.

The fishing industry also used the introduction of the BPAs to substantially reduce its monitoring costs, even though establishing BPAs made no difference to its ability to bottom trawl in the vast majority of the EEZ.  In recognition of the contribution BPAs would make to marine protection, the government agreed any research relating to the potential effects of bottom trawling on the benthic environment or its biodiversity should be two-thirds Crown funded and one-third industry funded.

Chris Castle, Managing Director Chatham Rock Phosphate

Attached: graphic showing the fish bottom trawl footprint of the EEZ prior to establishing the BPAs

Map.JPG

Allotment of Shares and Options

9 September 2013

Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited (NZX: CRP) advises that it has today undertaken placements at $0.30 per share and issued further CRPOB options.

CRP is presently undertaking a private capital raising offer to qualified investors which has the following key features:

  • CRP agrees an amount of shares to be subscribed for by an investor in aggregate.
  • Half of the shares are subscribed for at an issue price of $0.30 per share (Tranche One).
  • The investor commits to subscribing for the balance of the shares at $0.35 per share within 2 weeks of the Company being granted a mining licence in respect of its Chatham Rise phosphorites project (Tranche Two).
  • For every two shares subscribed for under Tranche One and Tranche Two, one option (CRPOB) is also allotted to the investor.

CRP is pleased to advise that it has entered investment agreements with qualified investors whereby a total of approximately $900,000 in new capital has been committed under this offering structure. As a result CRP is today allotting the Tranche One component of this amount representing approximately $400,000 in new capital.

Chris Castle

Chief Executive Officer

Email: chris@crpl.co.nz

   

Class of security:                           Ordinary shares

 

                                                      Options (CRPOB)

     

ISIN:                                               NZWENE0003S0

 

                                                      NZCRPE0001S3

     

Number issued:                              1,364,008 ordinary shares

 

                                                       682,004 options

     

Issue price:                                     $0.30 per ordinary share

     

Payment in cash:                            Yes

     

Fully paid:                                        Yes

     

Percentage of class:                        0.97% of shares

 

                                                        45.44% of options

     

Purpose of the issue:                       For working capital purposes towards   permitting of                                                         the Chatham Rise phosphorites project

     

Authority for the issue:                     Board resolutions

     

Date of issue:                                   9 September 2013

     

Total number of securities on issue

  following allotments:                        141,633,184 ordinary shares

 

                                                         2,182,938 options

 

 

Media Release: Low impact and high value; seabed rock phosphate is of national significance

3 September 2013 

Chatham Rock Phosphate today refuted the misinformation media campaign being run by the Deep Water Group and questioned fish trawling’s environmental record.

In media articles George Clement of the Deep Water Group has described Chatham’s proposal to extract rock phosphate as a potential environmental “catastrophe”.

“Such descriptions could be applied to fishing, when you think about the vast area of sea floor trawling disturbs,” Managing Director Chris Castle said.

"Chatham's planned 15-year extraction project will touch a total of 450 km2, far less than 1% of the Chatham Rise. Mr Clement estimates that's about sevent times the size of Wellington harbour.

“In contrast, over the same period fishing will bottom trawl 750,000 km2, about three times the size of New Zealand. Year after year, weighted nets scrape 50,000 km2 of seabed, with bottom-dwelling animals disturbed or destroyed.  Up to 3000 km2 of new territory is disturbed annually - an environmental impact 100 times greater than predicted for phosphate extraction.”

Mr Castle said Chatham has talked to the DWG for three years. 

“We’ve given them huge amounts of information, scientific reports and models showing temporary and very localised impacts on adjacent sea floor and water column. At their request we paid for an independent review of the modelling.  They expressed cautious support for our project for most of that period. Recently the attitude of some members has changed, with no willingness to discuss their concerns.

“We wouldn’t consider extracting phosphate nodules from the Chatham Rise if it caused more than very minor environmental impacts.”

He said Chatham’s operations simply lift the top 30cm of sandy silt and redeposit 85% of it carefully on the same seabed after extracting the nodules – the net effect is selected areas of seabed are lowered about 5cm. Modelling indicates the material returned will not be widely dispersed, and the sediment that doesn’t immediately settle will rapidly dilute to insignificant levels.

“Our draft environmental impact assessment (EIA), supported by 30-plus expert reports, has identified no long-term impacts on key spawning, juvenile and young fish habitat. Any potential impacts are confined to our limited extraction areas, and are short-term, reversible, and of low environmental risk. “

He also notes the fundamentals of Chatham’s proposed method are routinely used in dredging around the world.  The only new aspect is undertaking this work at 400m. The operations will be intermittent (3 days in every 10 day cycle) and spread among geographically separate locations within the licence area.

“But while bottom trawling – ploughing vast tracts of the EEZ seabed decade after decade - requires no environmental consents, our project needs a mining licence and a marine consent. These cost millions of dollars, require years of research, consultation and official process, and involve full public scrutiny.

“The annual fish trawl footprint on just the Chatham Rise during the 2009-10 fishing year was 19,051 km2.  As hoki spawning and growth occurs over the entire 189,000 km2  Rise, DWG already know they can continually bottom-trawl 10% of the area without harming juvenile fish stocks, so Chatham’s extra annual 30 km2  is of little significance.”

Mr Castle said New Zealand is predicted to be $900 million richer as a result of the new phosphate industry and Chatham will be generating annual exports or import substitution of $300 million, plus supporting farming, our biggest earner.

By area, the economic value of the phosphate resource is 500 times greater than fishing; expected to yield $9.1 million per km2. Bottom trawling yields less than $20,000 per km2.

“The benthic protection areas, of which the fishing industry is so proud, were established to preserve areas of sea floor not already affected by bottom trawling. They were determined without considering the economic importance of resources such as rock phosphate.

“Thanks partly to Chatham’s $20 million investment, the Rise benthic environment is now one of the best known parts of our marine territory, and can now inform resource and environmental management decisions, possibly including modifying those benthic areas.

“We’ve spent three years collecting data on oceanographic conditions (tides, currents, turbidity), benthic life, and analysing the impacts of disturbances on the seafloor and in the water column so we can minimise impacts and protect areas of benthic habitat.”  

Mr Castle said this project is important to provide fertiliser security for farming.  Most rock phosphate used to make fertiliser now is imported from Morocco. It’s high in cadmium, involves high transport costs and has a significant carbon footprint.

Chatham Rise rock phosphate, as an ultra-low cadmium direct-application fertiliser, has proven to be as effective as processed fertilisers while reducing run-off effects on New Zealand waterways by up to 80%. 

Rather than being an “environmental catastrophe”, it’s a project of national significance offering significant economic and environmental benefits.

For further information contact Chris Castle on 021 55 81 85 or email chris@crpl.co.nz

 

Media Release: Edison maintains unrisked valuation above $2, assesses fundraising efforts

Media Release

Edison Group has kept a unrisked valuation above $2 for Chatham Rock Phosphate in its latest update in which it examines the company’s ongoing efforts to raise the last of the capital it needs to start producing rock phosphate from the seabed on the Chatham Rise.

The unrisked $2.04 valuation is not much changed from that earlier in the year, but Edison has raised its risk assessment on the basis of a slowing in regulatory approvals and Chatham raising only part of the capital it still needs, in the recent Initial Public Offering.

Edison notes that “explicit positive sentiment received by CRP from government authorities in April, informing that its mining permit application would be treated with priority, has yet to bear fruit”.

“Uncertainty has weighed on investor confidence, which was an undertone to a weak result from a recently completed public capital raising.”

Edison estimates Chatham needs $7 million to fund its pre-development work, of which half are costs associated with the environmental consenting process.

“CRP has launched a further offer to professional investors that, if successful, and combined with an assumed early part-exercise of a significant tranche of success-related share options by an existing cornerstone investor, should serve to meet its remaining pre-commissioning capital needs.”

The non-retail linked offer is for up to 5 million shares at 32c to raise $1.6 million followed by a further 5 million shares at 35c to close two weeks after the grant of a mining licence to raise a further $1.75 million. The new shares will have a 2-for-1 70c option exercisable within three months of the marine consent being granted.

Edison says the extended approval processes have added a delay of six months to the timelines the company was targeting until a couple of months ago.

“We now consider it more likely that a distinct two-stage investment decision will unfold, with the stages reflecting the sequenced granting of a mining permit and marine consents.

The first stage would likely see contract miner Boskalis commit to an initial capex programme involving low-risk, transferable equipment that could be redeployed in the event of further delay or worse. The main commitment would come following the project receiving marine consents, probably in mid 2014, which would act as a trigger for Boskalis to commit the substantial spend to procure and fit out the mining vessel.

To see the report go to www.rockphosphate.co.nz/investors

For further information please contact Chris Castle on 021 55 81 85

 

Chatham Rock Phosphate to focus on Mining Licence

10:38am, 5 Aug 2013 | GENERAL

Media Release

Chatham Rock Phosphate to focus on Mining Licence

5 August 2013 
Chatham Rock Phosphate’s board has resolved to focus on the receipt of its Mining Licence approval before it submits a final Marine Consent application, Managing Director Chris Castle announced today. 
“We believe it is critical we receive the licence before we spend significant more resources – in both time and money - on the Marine Consent process,” he said. 
“Chatham applied for a Mining Licence in September 2012 and was advised in April the application was being treated as a matter of priority. New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals said the information we had provided regarding the mineral resource and its financial and technical capability had not raised any concerns. 
“Following the passing of the Crown Minerals Act NZP&M identified some areas of work it had not completed, including Iwi consultation. It has also asked Chatham for some more technical information. 
“We are working closely with officials to ensure they receive all of the information they need to rapidly progress our application.” 
Mr Castle said the additional time required for the Mining Licence will enable Chatham to further enhance the Marine Consent application. 
“We understand that it is regarded as pretty complete as far as the Environmental Protection Authority is concerned. But we think it can be improved further. In particular we have received some new data from a recent NIWA cruise we have co-funded.. We have also had some sections of our Environmental Impact Assessment peer-reviewed by our overseas experts and they have suggested some improvements. 
“On that basis we are going to push the pause button and wait until we have received the Mining Licence before we submit our final Marine Consent application. 
“At this stage we have no set time line but we envisage receiving the Mining Licence in a matter of weeks and will then proceed to submit our new further improved Marine Consent.” 

Allotment of Shares and Options

18 July 2013

Chatham Rock Phosphate’s Initial Public Offer of shares and options has raised $1.58 million.

The offer, under a simplified disclosure prospectus, closed last Friday and the company’s share registry processed late applications over the following few days.  New shares and options under the offer were allotted today.

Chief executive Chris Castle said while it was disappointing not to reach the target of $4 million, the offer achieved a good result given that it was non-brokered.

“It has successfully increased the profile of Chatham, including among institutions and the farming and rural communities.  We are delighted to welcome a further 120-plus new investors into Chatham Rock Phosphate.”

Mr Castle said he is continuing discussions with institutions and a number of professional investors both locally and overseas that have expressed interest in Chatham.

The capital raised will allow Chatham to work towards achieving further milestones and de-risking over the coming months, which would enable capital in future to be raised at higher prices.  “That would mean Chatham could minimise dilution of existing shareholder interests.

Chatham Rock Phosphate has now raised a total of $23.5 million of the estimated $30 million needed before production is expected to commence in 2015.

“Most of that funding has been sourced in the very difficult market conditions prevailing in the resources sector for the last 18 months.

With respect to our Mining Licence application, processes related to the new Crown Minerals Act have proven to be a bit more complex than initially anticipated.  Our application remains a priority and is being actively progressed by New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals.

“With an existing market capitalisation of $50.4 million we expect to be able to progressively raise the last $6.5 million as we require it.”

Full particulars of the allotment are set out below

For further information contact Chris Castle on 021 55 81 85 or chris@crpl.co.nz

   

Class of security: Ordinary shares

     

ISIN: NZWENE0003S0

     

Number issued: 4,502,817 ordinary shares

     

Issue price: $0.35 per ordinary share

     

Payment in cash: Yes

     

Fully paid: Yes

     

Percentage of class: 3.32%

     

Purpose of the issue: For working capital purposes

     

Authority for the issue: Board resolutions

     

Date of issue: 18 July 2013

     

Total number of securities   on issue following allotments: 140,075,226 ordinary shares

 
   

Class of security: Options (CROB

     

ISIN: NZCRPE0001S3

     

Number issued: 1,500,934

     

Exercise price: $0.70 per option to receive   one ordinary share

     

Payment in cash: Yes

     

Fully paid: Yes

     

Percentage of class: 100%

     

Purpose of the issue: For working capital purposes

     

Authority for the issue: Board resolutions

     

Date of issue: 18 July 2013

     

Total number of securities   on issue following allotments: 1,500,934 Options