June 2011 Update


In view of the significant level of ongoing activity it’s timely to provide a further project update.

Progress is being made at several levels including the financing of the project, optimising aspects of the resource recovery process, environmental aspects, market development and product enhancement.

Financing

As shareholders will be aware the immediate priority is to ensure that as many option holders as possible take advantage of their opportunity to acquire Chatham Rock Phosphate shares at 10 cents on or before 30 June 2011. At the time of writing it appears that the vast majority of options will be exercised and the funds raised will then ensure that the project retains its present momentum.

At the same time progress continues on the proposed overseas listing and associated initial public offering. The independent technical report required as a pre-requisite for the listing has been completed and drafting of the prospectus is under way. Discussions and the related due diligence process continue with several leading investment banks. We are now timetabling the IPO to take place in mid September after the northern hemisphere summer break.

Recovery Process

Following the selection of Boskalis as our preferred provider of a recovery and separation system for the rock phosphate deposit, we are now negotiating with Boskalis to undertake detailed design, production testing and associated environmental studies.

Environmental

During May 2011 we positioned oceanographic monitoring equipment within our licence area. The instruments are intended to collect information on currents, turbidity, temperature and salinity within the water column.

This data will supplement the significant body of knowledge we already hold concerning the marine environment on the Chatham Rise.  During the last year we have commissioned a number of reports (prepared by NIWA) concerning most aspects of the marine environment and these will be published in due course to facilitate informed discussion about any environmental impacts of the project.

The recent announcement of the outline of an Exclusive Economic Zone and extended Continental Shelf environmental effects bill removes a lot of uncertainty for our project as it means there would be a framework that would allow all of those with an interest to contribute to decisions about how the environmental effects of resources are administered.

Market Development

Discussions continue with a number of potential buyers, both in Australasia and further afield, for our product. We are encouraged by the progress now being made as the potential buyers recognise the merits of our initiative. As concerns grow over the certainty of supply of phosphate rock from the Middle East, its high cadmium levels, and the carbon emissions required to transport to this part of the world, the strategic value of the Chatham Rise rock phosphate resource asset can only continue to rise.

In a related initiative we are investigating the costs of beneficiating our product (a process that increases the level of phosphorous) to increase its marketability, both here and overseas. This initiative is being encouraged by a number of potential stakeholders in the project and may receive financial support from more than one quarter.

All in all, your directors are very pleased with progress.

Chris Castle
Wellington, 20 June 2011

Download this Rock Phosphate June 2011 update

 

Boskalis to undertake detailed design of offshore phosphate project in New Zealand

Papendrecht, 7 June 2011

Royal Boskalis Westminster N.V. has been exclusively selected by Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited (CRP) to undertake the detailed design of its offshore rock phosphate nodule project at Chatham Rise. Boskalis was selected following a full review of three scoping studies submitted by global dredging contractors.

Chatham Rise is located 450 km east of Christchurch and covers an area of 4,726 km2 of significant seabed deposits of rock phosphate at a depth of approximately 400 meters. The establishment of a rock phosphate industry has a significant number of economic, environmental and market benefits. The phosphate will be applied as an agriculture fertilizer, replacing current long distance imports.

The innovative project approach developed by Boskalis is based on a recovery and separation system for the phosphate nodules applying adapted and proven dredging technology. CRP will enter into discussions with Boskalis to undertake detailed design and production testing. Furthermore, Boskalis will be closely involved in associated environmental studies which are now commencing. Boskalis is looking forward to working with the CRP team over the next 12-18 months to develop a comprehensive technical, economic and environmentally extraction solution.

For additional information: http://rockphosphate.co.nz/news/archives/2011/06/02/chatham-rock- phosphate-successfully-completes-preliminary-engineering-phase-for-phosphate-project-in-new- zealand/

The Boskalis strategy is designed to benefit from the key macro-economic drivers that are fueling global demand in our selected markets: global trade, increasing energy consumption, expanding population pressures and the challenges of changing climate conditions.

This is an English translation of the Dutch press release. In the event of any disparity between the Dutch original and this translation, the Dutch text will prevail.

Royal Boskalis Westminster N.V. is a leading global services provider operating in the dredging, maritime infrastructure and maritime services sectors. We provide creative and innovative all-round solutions to infrastructural challenges in the maritime, coastal and delta regions of the world including the construction and maintenance of ports and waterways, land reclamation, coastal defense and riverbank protection. We offer a wide variety of marine services through SMIT and we have positions in strategic partnerships in the Middle East (Archirodon) and in offshore services (Lamnalco). The company holds important home market positions in and outside of Europe. Boskalis has a versatile fleet of over 1,000 units and operates in over 65 countries across six continents. Including its share in partnerships, Boskalis has approximately 14,000 employees. Boskalis celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2010.

For further information please contact:

Martijn L.D. Schuttevâer Director of Investor Relations & Corporate Communications
Telephone: +31 78 69 69 822 / +31 6 200 10 232
Telefax: +31 78 69 69 020
E-mail: m.l.schuttevaer@boskalis.nl

This press release can also be found on our website www.boskalis.com

View or download the Boskalis Press Release PDF

 

New environmental regulations provide welcome framework

Today’s announcement of the outline of an Exclusive Economic Zone and extended Continental Shelf environmental effects bill removes a lot of uncertainty, according to Chatham Rock Phosphate managing director Chris Castle.

Mr Castle said the proposal, outlined by Minister for the Environment Nick Smith today, meant there would be a framework that would allow all of those with an interest to contribute to decisions about how the environmental effects of resources are administered.

Chatham Rock Phosphate has an exploration licence to develop a rock phosphate resource on the seabed of the Chatham Rise, offshore New Zealand

“Our exploration licence process took much longer than it should have because the government officials were unsure of which rules to apply.  We expect that a clearer framework will be better for everybody.

“If the Minister’s timeframe is achieved, of having the law operating by this time next year, then we expect to be among the first companies to use the new law.

On behalf of the Board
Chris Castle

Onekaka, 2 June 2011

Download this 'New environmental regulations provide welcome framework' article

 

Chatham Rock Phosphate successfully completes preliminary engineering phase for phosphate project in New Zealand

Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited (CRP) has selected one of the worlds largest integrated dredging companies, Royal Boskalis Westminster (Boskalis) to undertake the detailed design of their rock phosphate nodule project at the Chatham Rise, subsequent to a complete review of scoping studies delivered by four of the world’s largest dredging companies ( Boskalis, IHC Merwede/D.E.M.E. and Jan de Nul), who carried out three independent extraction, upgrading and commercial delivery studies.

After CRP received these studies several months ago, they were reviewed by a panel of four independent marine dredging experts, who interacted with each study group to select the superior proposal. There was broad diversity of design and all propositions are considered technically feasible.

The Boskalis system was selected; their proposal is based on a recovery and separation system for the phosphate nodules designed around proven commercial technology. CRP is now in negotiation with Boskalis to undertake detailed design, production testing and be closely involved in associated environmental studies which CRP are now commencing. This overall phase is expected to take some 12-18 months.

The directors and management of CRP are gratified that this phase of the project attracted so much interest from the leading dredging industry companies and look forward to working with Boskalis to now complete the detailed design phase of the Project.

In selecting Boskalis, Dredging Development manager Sander Steenbrink responded that his company was delighted to be selected to work on the project. “This project is extremely interesting as it allows us to combine our engineering and R&D capabilities with our successful contracting track record in a challenging environment. We believe that this combination has resulted in a project approach which is technically viable. We are looking forward to working with the CRP team to develop a total extraction solution that is both cost effective and manages the environment, in accordance with our strict operating codes through-out the world.”

Royal Boskalis Westminster N.V.

Royal Boskalis Westminster N.V. (Boskalis) is a leading global services provider operating in the dredging, maritime infrastructure and maritime and terminal services sectors. The activities of Boskalis comprise Dredging & Earthmoving, Harbour Towage, Salvage, Transport & Heavy Lift, Terminal Services and Martime Civil Infrastructure.

Boskalis concentrates on the commodities such as oil and gas, ports, and land reclamation / coastal protection market segments. This spread gives the group a solid foundation and the flexibility to be able to take on a wide range of projects with excellent prospects for balanced growth. Demand for its services are driven by growing energy consumption, growth in global trade, growth in world population, and climate change.

The company’s main clients include oil companies, mining firms, port operators, governments, shipping companies and international project developers. Boskalis provides its clients with a broad range of services within the chain comprising design, project management, execution and continuous services.

Boskalis has around 14,000 employees and is active in over 65 countries across six continents. Its versatile fleet consists of over 1,100 vessels. Royal Boskalis Westminster N.V. is based in the Netherlands and its shares are included in the prime index (AEX) on NYSE Euronext Amsterdam.

Chatham Rise Project Background

In 2010, a consortium comprising Widespread Energy and associated company Widespread Portfolios Limited, (“the Joint Venture or JV”) was granted an offshore prospecting permit by the Crown Resources division of the NZ Ministry of Economic Development 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.. In March 2011 Widespread Energy acquired the 10% of the project then held by Widespread Portfolios and subsequently changed its name to Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited. 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 fertilizer, 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.


On behalf of the Board
Chris Castle

Onekaka, 1 June 2011

Download the CRP Boskalis Announcement

 

Exercise of CRPOA Options and Allotment of Ordinary Shares

23 May 2011

Chatham Rock Phosphate has approximately 14.1 million $0.10 options on issue which expire on 30 June 2011 and are quoted on the NZAX market under the code CRPOA.

As previously advised to the market, Chatham Rock Phosphate is encouraging the early exercise of these options to enable it to continue the work programme on Mineral Prospecting License 50270 prior to undertaking a proposed initial public offering in Canada.

Exercise forms have been received for a further 475,000 options for which ordinary shares have today been allotted. Full details are set out below.

This has taken the number of options exercised since 1 April to 2,404,000, raising $240,400 in aggregate.

On behalf of the Board,

Chris Castle Managing Director

Email: chris@widespread.co.nz
Phone: 021 55 81 85

Class of security: Ordinary Shares ISIN: NZWENE0003S0 Number issued: 475,000 Exercise price: $0.10 per share Payment in cash: Yes Fully paid: Yes Percentage of class: 1.34% Reason for the issue: Under the terms of issue of the options they may be exercised to receive ordinary shares on a 1:1 basis at any time prior to 30 June 2011 through the return of a completed exercise form and payment of the $0.10 exercise price. Authority for the issue: NZAX Listing Rule 7.3.11(b)(i) Date of issue: 23 May 2011 Total number of securities on issue following allotments: 35,930,660 ordinary shares 13,676,276 listed options

View or download the Exercise of CRPOA Options and Allotment of Ordinary Shares - 23 May 2011 PDF

 

CRP 2011 - Final Announcement for the Year ended 31 March 2011

Financial Result

Your directors submit the audited financial statements of Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited (“CRPL”) for the year to 31 March 2011. The trading result for the period was a loss of $614,000 (2010 loss $198,000). 

An analysis of the result is provided in the table below 

  Year to 31 March 2011 ($,000) Year to 31 March 2010 ($,000) Income 84 34 Administrative expenses 513 142 Exploration costs written down 83   Impairment on investments   91 Net Profit (loss) before income tax (614) (198) Income tax     Net profit (loss) after tax (614) (198)

The increased reported deficit for the year to 31 March 2011 reflected a significantly higher activity overall and substantial one-off costs relating to the year-end reconstruction. These one off costs included independent expert reports, plus additional accounting, tax, legal, share registry and NZX fees. There was also a write-down in respect of PEP 50439 relinquished during the year.

Issued capital during the period increased from 20,387,263 shares to 34,526,660.

Shareholders’ Funds increased during the period from $1,159,000 to $4,603,000.  Some of this increase was due to $1,069,000 raised in cash (less expenditure written off). However the substantial component of the increase in net assets resulted from the equity- funded acquisition for $3.4 million of the 10% of the Chatham Rock Phosphate Project previously held by Widespread Portfolios Limited. 

The acquisition of the 10% holding was based on a Chatham Rock Phosphate project valuation of $34 million that was supported by two independent valuations (Simmons Corporate Finance and McDouall Stuart Securities).

In order to be consistent with this transaction the board had resolved to revalue the project to $34 million and draft year-end financial statements were prepared on this basis.

However, during the audit process it became apparent that International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) would not permit this project revaluation. This is apparently because the Standards do not accept the revaluation of mineral properties and it’s an issue a number of Australasian mining companies have encountered since the inception of IFRS.

Due to this nonsense we now hold in our financial statements 10% of the project at acquisition cost ($3.4 million) and the other 90% at $883,000 (based on capitalised exploration and project costs).

This folly results in an absurd hybrid valuation of the project in our books of $4.283 million and in our view significantly distorts our financial statements, an outcome that IFRS was presumably intended to avoid. 

Shareholders should be aware that if we held the project at $34 million our net assets would increase to $34.3 million from the present $4.6 million. 

Investment Summary

Following the Widespread group reconstruction at the end of March 2011, Chatham Rock Phosphate is now a single project company with a sole asset, the Chatham Rock Phosphate proect. 

Until 31 March 2011, Widespread Energy held the following investments that were divested on that date:

  • Petroleum exploration permit (PEP) 38526 over the prolific oil seeps at Kotuku on the West Coast (100%)

  • An 11.8% interest in Green Gate Limited, the holder of PEP 51150 in Taranaki.

  • An investment in Akura Limited, a Fiji based private company, which holds three Petroleum Exploration Licenses in Fiji, predominantly offshore.

Highlights of the Year

Chatham Rise Rock Phosphate has had an exceptionally busy year with the operational focus on the rock phosphate project.  Considerable effort was also devoted toward raising further equity to finance the work programme. The other corporate initiative that required several months of coordinated planning and execution was the reconstruction of Widespread Energy that transformed it from an oil and gas focussed investment company into a sole purpose fertiliser sector player.

Operational Milestones

At an operational level the main objectives during the year were to complete the first 12 months work programme included in our permit conditions. These included

  • A literature review of all previous reports and studies arising from the extensive earlier exploration work programmes

  • Digitisation of all geological, geochemical and geophysical data gathered in these earlier programmes

  • Subsequent analysis of this data in order to plan future seabed sampling requirements

  • Evaluation of other possible exploration techniques including underwater radiometric surveys

  • Environmental base-line monitoring

  • A progress report to Crown Minerals.   

This programme was completed and a report submitted to Crown Minerals in December 2010, more than two months ahead of due date.

In addition to these activities CPRL undertook or commissioned the following initiatives:

  • NIWA was contracted to undertake a series of environmental studies in order to fully understand the marine environment in our licence area

  • Rockpoint Corporate Finance was mandated to complete a pre-feasibility study, an independent project valuation and comprehensive fertiliser studies

  • The Project was extensively marketed the to the share-broking community in Wellington, Taranaki and Auckland

  • A Wellington based project headquarters was established at Level 1, 93 The Terrace.

  • A new project focussed website www.rockphosphate.co.nz was established  

  • The project was presented at conferences in Russia (UMI) and Auckland (AusIMM)

  • A Waikato University research study on related aspects of Chatham Rise mineralisation was commissioned   

  • Contact was initiated with the leading international dredging companies with the aim of establishing their degree of interest in designing and operating mining systems to recover rock phosphate from the sea bed of the Chatham Rise

  • Four of these companies showed significant interest in working with Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited and in January 2011 it was announced that agreement  had been reached with three of the world's largest dredging companies to carry out two jointly funded mining concept studies. The mining concept studies were to be funded  50/50 by Chatham Rock Phosphate and the dredging companies.

  • Later in January a third mining concept study was announced

  • The three mining concept studies were completed and received by CRPL in March. All the studies confirmed that recovery of the rock phosphate nodules was considered to be feasible and achievable at a cost per tonne broadly consistent with CRPL management estimates based on other published feasibility studies.

  • The mining concept studies were then critically reviewed by four international marine mining experts engaged to assess the reports and then report whether or not they considered there were any fatal flaws in the mining systems designs.  

Capital Raised

As noted above, the company raised $1,069,000 during the year by means of private placements and a share purchase plan.

Following these issues the issued capital at balance date comprised 34,526,660 shares and 16,080,076 10c options. It is intended that no further shares will be issued by means of private placement.

The focus is now on encouraging the early conversion of the options (which expire on June 30, 2011) in order to enable the continuation of the Chatham Rock work programme on Mineral Prospecting License 50270 prior to undertaking the proposed initial public offering in Canada.

Since balance date option holders have been exercising their options. At the time of writing 2,284,000 (14.2%) had been exercised and most of the major option holders have confirmed they will be exercising their options in the next few weeks.

Steps are presently being taken to put in place an underwriting panel to ensure that all the options are exercised.

Company Reconstruction

In October 2010 a decision was made to reconstruct the various assets held by the two Widespread companies (Widespread Energy and Widespread Portfolios) in order to facilitate the raising of the significant capital required to develop the Chatham Rock Phosphate project.

The logic supporting this decision was along the following lines:

  • The two NZ companies that held the Chatham Rise project were thinly traded, partly because they are small and operate in a sector (mining and mineral exploration) that is unfashionable, scarcely researched and which attracts relatively few local investors.

  • Further, there are no NZX listed fertiliser companies, therefore no comparable stocks, and therefore little point in trying to raise significant capital and list the project on the local market.

  • In overseas markets (particularly the Toronto Stock Exchange) the activities of minerals and fertiliser sector companies are better understood, regularly researched and form a legitimate part of many investors’ portfolios.

  • As a result these companies are often readily able to raise significant quantities of new capital to finance exploration and project development. In Toronto alone there are 17 listed fertiliser stocks, which collectively raised over C$187 million in the first three months of 2011.

  • These factors lead the Boards of Widespread Energy and Widespread Portfolios to conclude that the interests of both groups of shareholders would be far better served if the Chatham Rise project were to be restructured with a view to a new listing in an overseas sharemarket.

  • Widespread Energy would become the dedicated vehicle for the Chatham Rise Project prior to an offshore listing occurring.

  • This would require selling all other Widespread Energy investments as well as undertaking an issue of shares to Widespread Portfolios so that Widespread Energy would then hold 100% of the Chatham Rise Project.

  • The key benefit of that approach were that the operations of Widespread Energy would be singularly focussed for taking to an offshore market to raise capital and a New Zealand domiciled and listed company (Widespread Portfolios) would remain a significant shareholder.

In order to complete this restructuring a number of approvals were required under the Takeovers Code, NZX Listing Rules and from Crown Minerals. Independent adviser reports were also necessary. These reports and approvals were completed and the transactions were subsequently approved on 30 March 2011 by the shareholders of both Widespread Energy and Widespread Portfolios.

On April 14 the transformation of Widespread Energy, previously an investor in predominantly oil and gas projects, into a fertiliser project development company, was consummated by the name change to Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited.

Chatham Rock Phosphate – why we are so excited about this project 

The concept of recovering rock phosphate from the seabed 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 industry

  • Generation of additional income tax, GST and royalty income for the local economy

  • Security of supply (most rock phosphate is imported from potentially unstable regimes in 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 once every three years, and is a more effective, slower acting product

  • Extraction will affect only 1/1000th of the Chatham Rise total area and will be intermittent

  • Extraction will occur in accordance with International Marine Mining environmental guidelines

The market benefits include

  • Much cheaper source than Morocco

  • 25+ years security of supply

  • Known extraction costs will allow fixed price contracts over several years which will benefit fertiliser companies, farmers and agriculture outputs generally as fertiliser pricing will be less of a lottery

Post Balance Events

The project now has significant momentum. Since balance date there have been further developments on various fronts including operational matters, cash generation, and the Canadian IPO.  

Operational

  • In recent months there has been an ongoing dialogue with three fertiliser sector companies and we now expect to be able to sell product to all three. Other market development initiatives included added value processing for exports are also underway

  • NIWA has recently completed for CRPL six reports concerning various aspects of the Chatham Rise seabed environment. We intend to publish these reports in order that there can be an informed discussion about what actually exists on and above the Chatham Rise and can put into context our planned activities there

  • CRPL representatives will next week be meeting the dredging companies, together with our selected panel of international marine mining experts. The expected outcome of these meetings will be a determination of  the best way forward with one chosen mining services provider

  • This week environmental baseline monitoring equipment will be stationed within our permit area on the Chatham Rise. This equipment will be monitoring currents, water temperatures, water turbidity, etc, in order to create baseline environmental records for our permit area. Some rock phosphate samples may also be gathered.     

  • There is an ongoing dialogue with stakeholders in the project with ongoing briefings of government and non-government agencies. 

Cash Raising

As noted earlier in this report, we are raising the cash to maintain forward momentum by encouraging option holders to exercise their options well before the witching hour of 30 June this year. Options not exercised by their holders by that date will likely finish up in the hands of the underwriters who will then be able to exercise them and acquire CPRL shares for 10 cents.

Option holders who are not in a position to exercise their options can sell them in the market. They are in the money at the present CPRL price of 14 cents and at the time of writing there was a buying bid for the options at 3 cents. Option holders who are uncertain about what to do or who require an option exercise form should contact Chris Castle at chris@widespread.co.nz  

Canadian IPO

During February and March 2011 a number of meetings were held in Toronto with investment banks potentially interested in sourcing equity in Canada for Chatham Rock Phosphate. Several of these firms subsequently indicated firm interest in further discussions, subject to first receiving an independent technical report on the project. This report, required to be prepared in respect of any resources-based new listing in Canada, is known as a National Instrument  43 101. (43 101).

We commissioned this report during March from a Vancouver based consulting engineering group, and a final draft was submitted last week to the TSX and has already been provisionally approved by them.

The 43 101 report was then circulated to the Toronto investment banks and presentations are being made to them tomorrow. The time for talking turkey has commenced.

A prospectus is also required for the IPO and drafting of this is underway. The timing of the IPO remains early July as we have been advised that options should first convert.

Notwithstanding this other preparations are underway with suitably qualified Toronto based legal advisers, a company secretary and a chief finance officer signed up subject to the IPO proceeding.   

Outlook

The continuation of the present level of activity and that foreshadowed over the next two years is reliant upon the success of the TSX listing and the proposed IPO. 

At the time of writing we are confident of success in our market of choice (Canada) but markets change and we cannot predict the future.

However, even if we do face setbacks in Canada we do have fallback plans in place for other markets and other possible funding scenarios.

The project itself has very low fixed overheads and these can be reduced even further if necessary while still adhering to the work programme in our permit conditions.   

For and on behalf of the Board

Keith T Hindle                          Chris D Castle
Chairman                                 Director                

Onekaka

20 May 2010Results for announcement to the market – NZX Format

Reporting Period Year ended 31 March 2011 Previous Reporting Period Year ended 31 March 2010

  Amount (000s) Percentage change Revenue from ordinary activities $84, 34 147% Profit (loss) from ordinary activities after tax attributable to security holder. $(629), (198) (218%) Net profit (loss) attributable to security holders. $(629), (198) (218%)       Interim/Final Dividend Amount per security Imputed amount per security It is not proposed to pay a dividend for the reporting period. N/A N/A

Record Date Not Applicable Dividend Payment Date Not Applicable

Comments: On the 30th March 2011 Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited purchased Widespread Portfolios Limited 10% interest in Chatham Rise Joint Venture for a purchase price of $3.4m. This value was determined with reference to two independent reports which support a board valuation of the current value for the Chatham Rock Phosphate Project being $34 million. This valuation was reviewed by Simmons Corporate Finance on behalf of Chatham Rock Phosphate shareholders and by McDouall Stuart Corporate Finance for Widespread Portfolios shareholders, which both concurred with the fairness of the valuation. This transaction was approved by the shareholders of both companies. Consideration for this purchase was by way of an asset swap whereby the non-project assets of Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited including shareholdings in Akura Limited, a Fijian oil prospector, and Green Gate Limited, a private oil explorer which no longer holds any licence interests, together with exploration expenditure capitalised in Kotuku PEP 38526 were transferred to Widespread Portfolios Limited. Additionally Widespread Portfolios Limited was issued with 4,099,627 shares in Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited at an issue price of $0.70587 cents. 
Widespread Energy does not operate any dividend or distribution reinvestment plan.

 

Accounting rules are absurd says Chatham

The directors of Chatham Rock Phosphate have slammed the international accounting rules that mean 10 percent of its mining project is worth four times more than the other 90 percent.

In announcing the financial results for the year to March 31, managing director Chris Castle said the International Financial Reporting Standards do not permit the revaluation of mineral properties.

This meant the company has included the 10 percent of the Chatham Rock Phosphate project it bought from sister company Widespread Portfolios in its books for the independently valued price of $3.4 million.  However despite two independent valuations showing the project to be worth $34 million, the other 90 percent held by CRP could only be included in the accounts at $883,000 – the capitalised exploration and project costs.

“This folly results in an absurd hybrid valuation of the project in our books of $4.283 million and in our view significantly distorts our financial statements, an outcome that IFRS was presumably intended to avoid,” Mr Castle said.

He said on the basis of independent valuations from Simmons Corporate Finance and McDouall Stuart, which formed the basis of the transaction to buy 10 percent of the project, the board resolved to revalue the project to $34 million and prepared draft year-end financial statements on this basis.

However auditors informed the directors that IFRS would not permit the revaluation of mineral properties. 

“It’s an issue a number of Australasian mining companies have encountered since the inception of IFRS. Due to this nonsense we now hold in our financial statements 10 percent of the project at acquisition cost of $3.4 million and the other 90% at the capitalised exploration and project costs of $883,000.

The company announced a net loss of $614,000 ($198,000) for the year to March 31, as a result of increased spending on the Chatham Rise rock phosphate project and substantial one-off costs relating to the year-end company reconstruction.

CRP raised just over $1 million from shareholders with about 16 million 10c options still to be exercised by 30 June.

IPO progress

The company is progressing an initial public offering on the Toronto Stock Exchange to finance a detailed work programme to progress towards a mining licence application within 18 months.

A required technical (43 101) report was submitted last week to the TSX and has already been provisionally approved. It has since been circulated to the Toronto investment banks and presentations are being made to them tomorrow.   Drafting of a prospectus has started.
Project benefits

In the report the company detailed the key economic, environmental and market benefits of the project for New Zealand. 

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 industry
  • Generation of additional income tax, GST and royalty income for the local economy
  • Security of supply (most rock phosphate is imported from potentially unstable regimes in 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 once every three years, and is a more effective, slower acting product
  • Extraction will affect only 1/1000th of the Chatham Rise total area and will be intermittent
  • Extraction will occur in accordance with International Marine Mining environmental guidelines

The market benefits include

  • Much cheaper source than Morocco
  • 25+ years security of supply
  • Known extraction costs will allow fixed price contracts over several years, which will benefit fertiliser companies, farmers and agriculture outputs generally as fertiliser pricing will be less of a lottery.

Further information:
Chris Castle on 03 525 9170, 021 55 81 85 or email chris@widespread.co.nz