The world’s iron ore powerhouse is preparing to reinvent itself

Vast heaps of crushed brown rock hem the Indian Ocean at the Parker Point port in the Pilbara — each a stockpile of 200,000 tonnes of iron ore, ready to be poured into a procession of bulk carriers bound for Asia’s steel mills.

Rio Tinto, the world’s largest iron ore producer, shipped its first cargo of the steelmaking ingredient from this spot in 1966, at the dawn of a boom that minted billionaires and lifted the Australian economy, generating $1.3 trillion in earnings in the past two decades alone. Last year, iron ore shipments accounted for about 5 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product.

But now China is cooling, while steel producers are under pressure to clean up a sector that accounts for at least 7 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, a change that will require new methods and higher-quality raw materials. Much of the dry, dusty Pilbara region’s gargantuan resource base may no longer make the grade.

Rio, BHP and Fortescue Metals Group produce almost two-thirds of the world’s seaborne iron ore from WA, and margins remain enviable. For the first time in a generation, though, the specter of disruption looms over mining’s most reliable profit generator.

“Australia’s ore industry is now at the start of a long-term structural decline,” said Tom Price, a London-based analyst at Liberum Capital. “It’s a fundamental shift that will resonate across the Australian economy.”

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