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Cockle Creek Smelter

Cockle Creek Smelter was a zinc and lead smelter located at the northern end of Lake Macquarie near Boolaroo in Newcastle, New South Wales. The smelter was built in by the Sulphide Corporation in 1896 and the first attempts to refine zinc using the Ashcroft Process began in 1897 but that process was abandoned shortly after due to technical difficulties.

The plant was subsequently adapted to smelt Lead using blast furnace technology. The smelter produced large quantities of Zinc, Lead and sulfuric acid during its life. The Cockle Creek Smelter was one of the Hunter regions first major industrial site and its operation contributed to the economic growth of New South Wales and Australia.

Other materials were produced at the smelter to fill the need as required such as Cement, Superphosphate and compounds for explosive manufacture for the war effort in World War I and World War II.

A rail connection was made from the plant to the Newcastle line on 16 July 1896.[1] The smelter closed in September 2003, since it had become uneconomic.

It is now hoped COSTCO & IKEA will open Bulk Retail Sales Warehouses on the site. (http://www.lakesmail.com.au/story/6350365/state-snaps-up-pasminco-site/)

Environmental issues

The operation of the Pasminco smelter for over a century resulted in soil contamination of surrounding areas such as Boolaroo, Argenton and Speers Point by lead and other heavy metals.[2] During the last decades of its operation local opposition to the pollution produced by its activities began to develop but was stymied by skillful public relations which emphasized the economic benefits which accrued to the local community.[3] Following cessation of its operations due to insolvency and appointment of the insolvency practitioner Ferrier Hodgson as voluntary administrator in September 2001 under the Corporations Act 2001[4] there was environmental remediation of the site of smelter and nearby properties with some buyouts and teardowns; aid in removing 5 centimeters of contaminated soil was extended to 18 adjoining landowners with contamination of 2,500 parts per million or more of lead.[5] This partial cleanup was signed off on by the state government which in 2008 released Pasminco from a 1995 requirement that adjoining properties with lead levels above 600 parts per million be remediated, substituting a much less stringent "lead abatement strategy"[5] (There is no mechanism in Australia analogous to the Superfund mechanism in the United States).[6] Much of the soil in the surrounding area remains hazardous waste, however, and could not be deposited in a local tip. Pasminco was restructured in 2002 by Ferrier Hodgson, its voluntary administrator, as Zinifex.[7] Zinifex was merged into OZ Minerals,[8] then purchased by the Chinese state-owned China Minmetals, which then, with Australian participation, formed Minerals and Metals Group. The successor in interest to Pasminco has apparently been able to avoid continuing legal liability by virtue of skillful legal structuring of the transaction transferring the interest.[3] As of 2014 a total of $670 million remained in the hands of Ferrier Hodgson, Pasminco's administrator which, on the basis of completion of the cleanup, is slated to be paid to its creditors.[8]

References

  1. ^ The Sulphide Works Railway Buckland, John L. Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin April, 1950 pp118-119
  2. ^ "The archive of the Newcastle Herald's Toxic Truth investigation". Newcastle Herald. 13 December 2014. Archived from the original (Archive of links to a series of articles and videos) on 13 December 2014. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  3. ^ a b Donna Page; Matthew Kelly; Helen Gregory; Damon Cronshaw (8 December 2014). "Toxic Truth: Prisoners of propaganda". Newcastle Herald. Retrieved 12 December 2014. really slick public relations job
  4. ^ "Insolvency Management". ferrierhodgson.com. Ferrier Hodgson. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  5. ^ a b Damon Cronshaw (30 November 2014). "Residents outraged remediation no longer legally required". Newcastle Herald. Retrieved 12 December 2014. The planning department agreed to surrender the condition and instead accept a Lead Abatement Strategy in 2008, government documents show
  6. ^ Damon Cronshaw (11 December 2014). "Toxic Truth: Pasminico remediation criticised: US best practice example". Newcastle Herald. Retrieved 12 December 2014. a failure to regulate and enforce world's best practice
  7. ^ Barry FitzGerald (22 May 2002). "Plan to raise Pasminco from the grave". Sunday Morning Herald. Retrieved 12 December 2014. Under the restructuring plan, the creditors will first move to near 100 per cent ownership of Pasminco under a controversial debt-for-equity swap that will leave the company essentially debt free.
  8. ^ a b Ian Kirkwood (30 November 2014). "Pasminco's rocky road". Newcastle Herald. Retrieved 14 December 2014. Ferrier Hodgson told the Herald this month that remediation of the site was almost complete and that Pasminco's creditors – the banks owed $2.6billion – would get 22¢ in the dollar, or about $670 million.

32°56′52″S 151°37′34″E / 32.94778°S 151.62611°E / -32.94778; 151.62611

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