Pilgangoora
Operation Details
Project Logistics & B2B Overview
Geographic Location and Topography
Borrow L47/212 is an operating construction materials extraction licence situated within the West Pilbara Mining Field, Western Australia. The Pilbara terrain is characterised by ironstone ridges, alluvial plains and extreme aridity. Ambient temperatures routinely exceed 45 °C in summer, imposing severe thermal stress on mobile plant, hydraulic systems and operator personnel. Dust suppression and heat-load management protocols are non-negotiable baseline requirements for any contractor or vendor engaging on-site.
B2B Lifecycle and Operational Context
The licence status is confirmed Operating, indicating active extraction of borrow material — typically road-base, fill aggregate or rip-rap — in support of regional civil and mining infrastructure projects. No operator or corporate contact has been identified through open-source intelligence. B2B vendors supplying mechanical breakdown response, tyre management or fuel logistics must account for remote mobilisation lead times. On-site downtime costs in this corridor are disproportionately high; proximity to a certified workshop in Karratha or Tom Price is a critical procurement variable.
Engineering and Extraction Infrastructure
As a borrow operation, the primary circuit typically involves drill-and-blast or rip-and-push methodology, followed by scalping screens and jaw or impact crushing to achieve specification gradation. Unlike hard-rock metalliferous mines, flotation circuits are absent; however, particle-size compliance and compaction-index testing are mandatory for civil-grade output. Crushing plant components — jaw liners, screen meshes, conveyor idlers — face accelerated wear rates driven by abrasive Pilbara lithology and sustained high-temperature operation of hydraulic drives.
ESG, Value Chain and Sustainability
Construction material borrow sites in Western Australia operate under Mining Act 1978 licence conditions requiring a Mine Closure Plan and progressive rehabilitation. Although tailings facilities are not applicable to this commodity class, landform rehabilitation — re-contouring, topsoil replacement and native seed reinstatement — is a binding regulatory obligation. ESG-conscious contractors should verify that erosion-control bunding and dust-emission monitoring programmes are active, as DMIRS compliance audits in the Pilbara region have intensified across all operating licences since 2022.