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CHATHAM RETURNS TO PDAC 2024

Investor Presentation16 February 2024CRPIndustrials

NEWS RELEASE 24-06 February 15, 2024

CHATHAM RETURNS TO PDAC 2024 – THE PREMIER WORLD STAGE FOR RESOURCE

INVESTOR OPPORTUNITIES

WELLINGTON, New Zealand – Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited (TSXV: NZP and NZX: CRP)

(“Chatham” or the “Company") wishes to confirm that it will again have a strategically located

booth (#2933) in the Investors Exchange in the Prospectors & Developers Association of

Canada (“PDAC”) annual conference being staged in Toronto from March 3

rd

to March 6

th

.

PDAC is demonstrably the largest mining investment show in the world and has proven to be

a most successful venue for the Company in the past. Showcasing Chatham at PDAC has led

to subsequent, robust investor support not only from Canada and the USA, but Germany,

Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.

The Company will again be represented by CEO Chris Castle and executive director Colin

Randall.

En route to Toronto we will be presenting to existing and potential new investors in Germany

and Switzerland and also visiting a major European fertilizer manufacturer to progress a

possible offtake agreement.

The Chatham Renaissance

Attendance at PDAC 2024 is only a small part of Chatham’s present drive to inform world

markets about our Company’s renaissance in the last three and a half years.

Over the last three and a half years Chatham has transformed from a single project company

facing an uncertain and expensive permitting hurdle to a rapidly expanding group of projects

much closer to generating operating cash flows with prospects further boosted by phosphate

prices close to 10-year highs. These projects have three main focuses – phosphate, rare

earths, and selenium.

Phosphate

The existing phosphate projects are:

1. Chatham Rise marine project in New Zealand, planned production rate 1.5

Mtpa from 2027;

2. Avenir Makatea – onshore phosphate mine/rehabilitation project, planned

production rate 250,000 tpa;

3. Korella South – 2 Mtpa export focussed mine;

4. Korella North – 250,000 tpa production rate aimed at the domestic phosphate

market;

2
5. Korella Terminals – 5Mtpa phosphate export facility to be established at the

Port of Townsville. 2Mtpa rail loading facility located adjacent Korella North;

and

6. Korella MCP- Cloncurry based monocalcium phosphate manufacturing plant

expected to produce 100,000 tpa of MCP starting in 2026.

These projects already had attractive operating margins well before the recent surge in

phosphate prices.

Further, all the phosphate deposits concerned are ultra-low in cadmium, a food safety

attribute already essential in Europe and likely to become a universal requirement.

Ultra-low cadmium rock phosphate is relatively rare and will over time become an

increasingly valuable and strategic resource.

Rare Earths

Rare earths are present on the Chatham Rise as well as in the two Korella project areas.

Selenium

In the last two years, Chatham has also directed its energies towards acquiring potential

selenium sources, both organic and inorganic. To progress our selenium projects a new

Australian subsidiary company Organoselenium Pty Ltd has been created and this has

attracted four new investors who recognise the value of selenium.

Selenium’s addition to the Australian list of Critical Minerals assists the new company’s

prospects.

Selenium conducts different amounts of electricity, depending on how much light is hitting it.

It also can convert light to electricity. Consequently, it is used in photoelectric cells, light

meters, TV cameras, photocopiers, solar cells and semi-conductors. Hence selenium is a key

requirement for many aspects of the technology we routinely use in our daily lives.

Biologically, selenium is also necessary for human life. Its role is that of a cleanser or

protector; it shields against cancers and other diseases by scavenging for free radical oxidants

and some heavy metals. Natural selenium deficiency in rocks and soils may be related to the

incidence of stroke in humans, and excess selenium can cause deformities and disease in

animals.

For more information contact Chris Castle on 021 558 185 or chris@widespread.co.nz or

check out www.rockphosphate.co.nz

Neither the Exchange, its Regulation Service Provider (as that term is defined under the

policies of the Exchange), or NZX Limited has in any way passed upon the merits of the

Transaction and associated transactions, and has neither approved nor disapproved of the

contents of this press release.

Data sourced from publicly available filings. Our datasets may not be complete. Automated analysis can produce errors. If you believe any data on this page is incorrect, please contact us at hello@nzxplorer.co.nz. For informational purposes only. Not investment advice.