After an anticlimax with environmental groups, Chalice secured approvals for drilling of Hartog in the Julimar State forest
https://www.afr.com/companies/mining/chalice-wins-permission-to-drill-in-wa-state-forest-20220519-p5amvy
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For those that want background information on the opposition groups and a map of Hartog, there is a great article in AFR (behind a paywall)
https://www.afr.com/companies/mining/chalice-asks-opponents-to-see-the-forest-for-the-trees-20220502-p5ahop
Further drilling on the farmland since November has suggested the resource contains even more platinum, palladium, nickel and copper than was understood in November.
But the big hope for Chalice shareholders – and the big concern for opponents such as Kinsella – lies in what a helicopter found just six kilometres north of Gonneville in September 2020.
As it surveyed terrain inside the forest boundary for the type of magnetic signals that bounce off underground metal deposits, the helicopter received signals from several spots inside the forest boundary.
One of those signals was “significantly stronger” than Gonneville had produced when it was the subject of aerial surveys, and the location of that signal has since been dubbed “Hartog”.
The magnetic signals picked up by aerial surveys do not guarantee the presence of valuable minerals, but where there is smoke there is often fire, and Hartog is now one of Australia’s most eagerly anticipated exploration targets.
The investment community swiftly formed the view that if Chalice could get inside the forest to drill Hartog, it would likely prove that Gonneville was the tip of an iceberg whose richest parts were buried inside the forest boundary.
It’s a hypothesis that has turned pre-revenue Chalice into a $2.5 billion company and elevated its managing director Alex Dorsch onto the Financial Review Young Rich List.
But it’s also a hypothesis that will remain unproven until Hartog is drilled.
“We don’t know if anything is there yet.” stressed Dorsch, when asked about Hartog.
“I know the public is quick to associate exploration effort with mining and typically the mind goes straight to big, open-cut type of mining.
“We are many years away from knowing what sort of mineralisation is there, if any, as well as what style of mining it would be.”
The WA government has given Chalice permission to drill on the existing dirt tracks that firefighters and recreational users have carved through the forest.
But those tracks are nowhere near Hartog, nor the other targets identified by the helicopter surveys.
Permission to leave the tracks and push through the forest vegetation to drill the centre of the Hartog target looked to have been secured by Chalice in January, but the WA government permit has since been held up by five appeals from members of the public.
Community appeals
One of those five appeals was lodged by the Avon and Hills Mining Awareness Group, a community activist group that was formed to fight bauxite mining proponents in the region long before Chalice found Gonneville.
Kinsella was not one of the five, preferring to fight the project through other means.
Dorsch says it is not yet possible to judge whether the economic and environmental benefits of mining within the forest would justify the environmental impacts of the project, because the size and contents of the geology remains a mystery.
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