'Industrial Minerals - their mining and use in New Zealand' is the theme of
the 1978 Annual Conference of the New Zealand Branch of The Australasian
Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. This paper describes the use of phosphate
rock, sulphur and potassium chloride (potash) - three industrial minerals which
have enabled the farmers of New Zealand to increase production to current
levels.
The growth of imports of these raw materials for the New Zealand fertiliser
industry is well documented in NZ Fertiliser Statistics 1977. This is the most
recent of the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries annual publications on this
Subject prepared from the detailed returns of fertiliser manufacture and sales
from each fertiliser works. There are now 12 of these works in New Zealand one
of the most recently established being in Whangarie where this conference is
being held. Its capacity to manufacture superphosphate will shortly be
300 000 tonnes twice that when it opened late in 1964. New grinding and
manufacturing equipment comes on stream early in 1979.
This paper illustrates the interdependence of two primary industries,
agriculture and mining. New Zealand's economy in the foreseeable future will be
based on agriculture so that our standard of living is dependent on the overseas
prices and freight costs of the bulk raw materials from which our fertilisers
are made.
For the year ended 31 March 1978 New Zealand's total exports were $3395
million, of this total $2413 million (71%) came from the products of pastoral
agriculture (wheat, wool, dairy and other animal products), $291 million from
forest products and $501 (15%) from manufactured exports. Approximately half of
the pastoral receipts can be attributed to the fertilisers applied at a total
cost of about $200 million including subsidy.
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