Too hot to handle? Can the mining assets of the Pilbara’s iron ore majors (& the workers) survive rising heat?

Snaking through the russet-coloured expanse of WA’s remote Outback, vast mile-long trains ferry iron ore — the nation’s most valuable export — across a crucial mining district that’s increasingly vulnerable to volatile weather and where temperatures have matched the Southern Hemisphere’s record of 50.7C.

Heatwaves during summer set new extremes across the Pilbara, roughly the size of Spain. That has challenged a workforce of more than 60,000, many of whom operate outdoors in a network of dozens of open pits, process plants, railroads and ports. Conditions, according to the miners, are often like stepping inside an oven.

On December 30, heat touched 49.3C in Marble Bar — equalling the highest recorded in the desert town in 122 years of observations by Australia’s meteorological service — and that day, an iron ore rail line nearby buckled under the stress, causing a Fortescue train to slip from the tracks, scattering ore cars.

While the crew were uninjured, the exporter’s railroad was disrupted for four days.

Metals and natural gas producers in the Pilbara and the region’s communities, including Aboriginal communities with a local history stretching back at least 40,000 years, have long managed weather risks, contending with tropical cyclones that menace the north-western coast, regular bushfires and flash floods.

Preparing for a future of elevated climate change-fuelled threats is vital to protect an iron ore industry that’s prospered for decades by supplying steelmaking materials to mills in China and across Asia, a trade that underpins Australia’s economy and was worth about $138 billion in export earnings in the year ended June 30.

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