Pilbara Iron

Pilbara Iron
Industry Mining
Founded 2004
Headquarters Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Products Iron Ore
Number of employees
3850
Parent Rio Tinto
Website pilbarairon.com
Pilbara Iron train, Tom Price to Dampier Railway
Hamersley Iron Alco C628 locomotive at 7 Mile Yard, Dampier, Western Australia.

Pilbara Iron is a wholly owned subsidiary of the multinational Rio Tinto Group, that manages assets for Hamersley Iron Pty Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of Rio Tinto, and Robe River Iron Associates, an unincorporated joint venture between Rio (53% and operator since 2000) and three Japanese steel companies Mitsui Iron Ore Development P/L (33%), Nippon Steel Australia P/L (10.5%) and Sumitomo Metal Australia P/L (3.5%).[1]

All of these companies are involved in the mining of iron ore, predominantly from the Pilbara region of Western Australia.

In 2004, Rio Tinto announced that Robe and Hamersley would start merging operations under the new Pilbara Iron entity.[2] The concept had been tested by the formation of Pilbara Rail in 2001, which generated more than $16 million in savings. Pilbara Rail was folded into Pilbara Iron in 2005.[3] Each company continues to market products separately and retains ownership and profits from the underlying mines, as well as strategic development of their own mineral resources.[4]

Current mine sites

Mine sites currently operating:

All iron ore mined at the sites is transported on the Hamersley & Robe River railway, one of the world's largest privately owned railroads to either the port of Dampier, Western Australia or Cape Lambert near Wickham, Western Australia. From there the ore is shipped across the world, with China and Japan the largest markets as of 2007.[5]

Historical events

Film Red Dog

The film Red Dog, based on stories about an actual wandering dog of the Pilbara region, was made at Hamersley Iron locations.

See also

References

  1. Robe River | About Robe accessed 1 October 2007
  2. Rio Tinto and Robe River progress on Pilbara cooperation, 13 January 2004 Archived February 21, 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Farewell to Pilbara Rail" (PDF), Minera (Pilbara Iron), no. 5, April 2005, pp. 20–21, retrieved 2007-10-01
  4. Pilbara Iron - About Us accessed 1 October 2007 Archived April 11, 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  5. Trengrove, Alan (1976) Adventure in iron / Hamersley's First Decade Melbourne, Stockwell Press. ISBN 0-909316-03-1 (Hamersley Chronology on end-pages)

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pilbara Iron diesel locomotives.


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