Pete Morrison: Councillor challenges Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment shutdown of gold venture
Download and listen anywhere
Download your favorite episodes and enjoy them, wherever you are! Sign up or log in now to access offline listening.
Description
The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) has shut down a West Coast goldmining exploration venture that was injecting $500,000 a year into the local economy and according to...
show morePeter Morrison, who owns farms in Canterbury and on the West Coast, has invested about $2 million over the past year, looking for gold - and finding it - on a 500ha block he owns near Inangahua Junction.
Morrison was working under an exploration permit, employing three skilled operators and local contractors on the 1ha site to evaluate the potential for a full-scale alluvial mine.
"We applied a year ago for a mining permit but we're still waiting ... in the meantime we've been doing the feasibility work ... trying to work out if it would be economic to go all in."But after being told by MBIE he was breaching the exploration permit and threatened with massive fines, Morrison has been forced to pull the plug.
"This has been going on for months … I've had my lawyer look at it and he can't see what this alleged breach is -- all they say is that the hole's too big," Morrison said.
The Buller District Council and West Coast Regional Council both said there were no issues with the land use and resource consents they issued for the site, and Morrison had paid the required surety bond.
But after more pressure from officials two weeks ago Morrison reluctantly laid off his three staff.
"I'm sorry to lose them, they were a very skilled team. I doubt I'll get them back. And those were $100,000 a year jobs."
Four MBIE officials had turned up twice in one week and been "very aggressive", he said.
"They walked around looking grim and grilling my staff and saying it was pretty big for an exploration. But it's just a tiny fraction of the 500ha permit," Morrison said.
"You have to excavate a decent area to work out what's going on with new alluvial sites, and see if mining is feasible," Morrison said.
His crew of three, plus contractors, had excavated a deep pit to explore the structure of the site, assess the volumes that would need to be stripped and had been testing different types of equipment.
In the process they had extracted about 100 ounces of gold, over the year.
"We've kept all the records, we've complied with all our resource consents -- and we've been harassed out of business.
"They just keep saying it's too big ... the biggest exploration site ever seen in New Zealand. But the exploration permit doesn't set any size or volume limit. And if they want me to have a mining permit, well they've had a year to process the application and so far -- nothing."
An MBIE spokesman said Morrison's application for a mining permit was being evaluated but there was a backlog of applications.
"There was a sizeable increase in the number of applications for all permit types last year, especially in the wake of the lifting of Covid-19 lockdown restrictions. Applications for gold-related permits really took off, largely driven by a high gold price."
The permit queue had grown rapidly in the last few months of 2020, and officials were trying to deal with it as quickly as possible, the spokesman said.
The ministry did not explain precisely how Morrison had broken the rules, but said exploration permits allowed data gathering over small, specific areas to test if the resource was commercially viable.
"Exploration activities can include aerial or seismic surveys, intensive surface-sampling and drilling core samples, trenching, bulk sampling and economic and mining feasibility studies could be undertaken."
Inangahua Community Board chairman John Bougen is calling on the ministry to explain exactly why it shut down the venture.
It was deeply disappointing to have a potentially productive private enterprise closed by officials from afar, in a community that badly needed industry and employment, the Reefton businessman said.
"These were high-paying jobs for skilled workers, and MBIE has just pulled about half...
Information
| Author | Rocco Zanni |
| Organization | Spreaker Staff |
| Website | - |
| Tags |
-
|
Copyright 2026 - Spreaker Inc. an iHeartMedia Company
Comments