Mining in Western Australia, together with the petroleum industry in the state, accounted for 94% of the State's and 46% of Australia's income from total merchandise exports in 2019–20. The state of Western Australia hosted 123 predominantly higher-value and export-oriented mining projects and hundreds of smaller quarries and mines. The principal projects produced more than 99 per cent of the industry's total sales value.[2][3]
Western Australia's mineral and petroleum industry, in 2019–20, had a value of $174 billion, up from $145 billion in 2018–19. In comparison, the value of the mineral and petroleum industry in 2005–06 was $43 billion.[4][5]
Iron ore was, in 2019–20, the most important commodity in Western Australia, accounting for 60 percent of sales in the state's mineral and petroleum industry. The petroleum sector, consisting of oil and gas, followed in second place with 22 percent of the overall value. The third most important commodity in the state was gold, at $16 billion, 9.2 percent of the overall value. Alumina, nickel, and base metals (copper, lead and zinc) followed in order of importance, each achieving a value in excess of A$1 billion. Other major commodities included lithium, mineral sands, salt, coal, cobalt, rare earths, and diamonds.[2]
Employment in the Western Australian mining and petroleum industry has sharply increased over the last decade, from 85,163 in 2010, directly employing an average of 135,001 people during 2019–20. The largest employers were the iron ore (48.5%) and gold (23.4%) sectors.[2][6]
The industry's regulating authority in Western Australia is the Department of Mines, Industry Regulation and Safety, renamed from the Department of Mines and Petroleum (DMP) on 1 July 2017, which in turn replaced the Department of Industry and Resources (DOIR) on 1 January 2009. The department also produces the annual Western Australian Mineral and Petroleum Statistic Digest and operates the MINDEX website, which is aimed at listing all current and former mining operations in the state.[7]
Mining transformed the Western Australian economy. Gold finds in the 1890s brought unprecedented numbers of people and amounts of capital to the state.
Gold mining declined after 1904, and Western Australia went through a painful period of structural adjustment over the course of the following three decades during which time two world wars, an international depression and a major drought complicated the state's economic development. Mining began to take off again in the 1930s, however at the time the state governments' focus was on agricultural expansion and manufacturing initiatives. The primary sector would experience strong growth until the early 1970s, after which it levelled off. More than one million hectares (2.5 million acres) of marginal agricultural land was abandoned, and the government turned to mining as the state's main economic priority.
The period after 1945 has been characterised by the development of the state's mining sector into a world-scale industry and Western Australia's increasing access to the rest of the world. Communication and transport advances brought Western Australia much closer to the rest of the world, providing opportunities for local producers to access markets in other countries much more easily. On the other hand, overseas producers could access the Western Australian market relatively more readily. The outcome has been a highly specialised and trade-dependent Western Australian economy (with mining and mineral processing the dominant industries), using income derived to import many other goods and services.
The state's second major resource boom was stimulated when, in 1960, the Commonwealth Government lifted the iron ore export embargo that had been in place since 1938.[8] Demand was fuelled by the buoyant Japanese economy and Japanese, American and British investment flowed into the state. While Asia had previously been a market for Western Australian products (notably sandalwood and wool), the export of iron ore to Japan marked a fundamental shift in Western Australia's trade dynamic and paved the way for the development of Asia as the state's most important trading region.
Prior to the resurgence of the resource sector, economic conditions had been relatively subdued, with constant-price household income per capita roughly the same in 1960–61 as in 1948–49. However, the mining boom caused income per capita to more than double by 1973–74. Importantly, while iron ore was (and remains) a significant component of the mining industry, one important aspect of the resources boom in the 1960s that set it apart from the gold rush, was the diversity of commodities being mined. There were major discoveries of nickel, petroleum, bauxite and alumina, which all developed into significant industries in the 1960s and 1970s. There was also a major revival in the mining of gold in the 1980s, stimulated by price increases associated with the end of the gold standard in 1971, high inflation throughout the 1970s and new processing technology.
Timeline
1848: Lead ore was found by explorer James Perry Walcott, a member of A.C. Gregory's party, near Northampton.
1863: Lead and copper ores represent 14% of the colony's total annual exports, exceeded only by wool and sandalwood.
1877: Copper and lead ores are the colony's second largest export, still at 14% of the total, after wool.
1892: Arthur Bailey and William Ford discover gold at Fly Flat near Coolgardie.
17 June 1893: Paddy Hannan discovers gold near Kalgoorlie, sparking Western Australia's gold rush.
1899: Sir John Forrest, the first Premier of Western Australia, saw the importance of gold in the development of Western Australia's economy, and successfully lobbied the British Government to establish a branch of the Royal Mint in Perth.
1934: A lease was assigned over iron ore deposits at Koolan Island in Yampi Sound off the coast of the Kimberley to the Nippon Mining Company backed by the Japanese government.
1935–39: High gold prices encourage investment.
1937: Public and government outcry when Nippon Mining proposed not to use Australian labour but to send its own engineers to construct the Koolan Island mine.
1939–45: Labour shortages as a result of the Second World War caused many mines to cease operation, and following the war, many did not re-open.
1938: Commonwealth government enacts iron ore export embargo.[8] The stated reason for the embargo was doubt as to the adequacy of Australian iron ore resources for Australia's own needs.[9]
1940: Extensive survey of iron ore deposits determined only two were commercially viable, one being the Yampi Sound Group.[9]
1948: Bureau of Mineral Resources combined with the WA Department of Mines to carry out systematic geological and geophysical surveys in the North West, mostly seeking oil.
1960: Commonwealth Government lifts iron ore export embargo.
1964: Oil discovered on Barrow Island.
1967: Oil production on Barrow Island begins.
1969–1970: Poseidon nickel boom
1977: Premier Sir Charles Court agreed with Alcoa Australia to take a designated quota of the gas in return for permission to build a third alumina refinery at Wagerup.
1981: The Western Australian Government negotiated an agreement to allow development of the large natural gas reserves on the North West Shelf.
1987: Global stock market crash
1989: First liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargo exported to Japan in 1989.
2008: Global financial crisis - the mining industry placed Australia in a strong economic and fiscal position ahead of the crisis, and helped accelerate the post-crisis recovery.[10]
August 2009: Gorgon Consortium signs $50 billion contract with PetroChina for gas extraction from the fields around Barrow Island.
Major commodities
Major commodities in Western Australia in order of their 2021–22 sales values:
Iron ore mining in Western Australia, in the financial year 2018–19, accounted for 54 percent of the total value of the state's resources exports, with a value of A$78.2 billion. The overall value of the mineral and petroleum industry in Western Australia was A$145 billion in 2018–19.[5]
Production of iron ore in Western Australia in 2018–19 was 794 million tonnes (1.8 trillion pounds), down on the previous year's 839 million tonnes (1.8 trillion pounds) of ore, however due to improved iron ore prices, sales of $78.2 billion were up 26 per cent on the previous year, setting a new record for iron ore sales values. The bulk of Western Australian ore went to China, which imported 82 percent of the 2018–19 production, followed by Japan with 7.9 percent.[5]
In the calendar year 2019, the Western Australian Government received A$4.9 billion in royalties from the iron ore mining industry in the state, 288% more than a decade ago in 2009.[6][5]
Iron ore mining in Western Australia is predominantly, but not exclusively, carried out in the Pilbara region, which produced ore in value of A$76.8 billion in 2018–19, 98 percent of the total for the state.[5]
Petroleum production was valued at $38.4 billion in 2018–19, an increase of 45 per cent from $26.5 billion in 2017–18.[5]
LNG was the state's most valuable petroleum product, accounting for 20 per cent of all mineral and petroleum sales in 2018–19. Sales reached a record 37.9 million tonnes (84 billion pounds), with values rising from A$18.9 billion in 2017–18 to A$29 billion in 2018–19 (A$6.3 billion in 2009). In 2018–19 crude oil production was down 34 percent to 3.2 gigalitres (20 million barrels), while condensate increased 60 percent to 11.4 gigalitres (3.0 billion US gallons) over the previous year.[5]
The history of gold mining in Western Australia dates back to the 1880s but took on some larger dimensions in the 1890s, after gold discoveries at Coolgardie in 1892 and Kalgoorlie in 1893. It reached an early peak in 1903, experienced a golden era in the 1930s and a revival in the mid-1980s. In between, the industry declined a number of times, particularly during the two world wars, experiencing an absolute low point in 1976.[11]
In 2018–2019, gold production in the state was steady on the previous year, at 211 tonnes (6.8 million troy ounces), 6.4% of world production, although an improving gold price delivered a 4.6 percent increase in value, from $11.4 billion in 2017–18, to a record annual value of $11.9 billion.[5][12]
Historically, Lithium mining in Western Australia accounted for only a very small share of the state's mining revenues, to the point were the production would not be listed individually by the annual relevant mining department's publication but rather be grouped with tin and tantalum. In 2009–10, for example, the combined value of lithium, tin and tantalum production in the state stood at just under A$75 million in comparison to the state's mining industry value of A$71 billion at the time, with the state's lithium production coming from just one operation, the Greenbushes mine.[13] Production values for the three minerals had doubled by 2015,[14] and, in 2016–17, seven lithium mines were active in Western Australia, with a combined production of 2.1 million tonnes of spodumene concentrate at a value of A$1.6 billion.[15]
Western Australia, during 2021–22, was the world's largest producer of Lithium, accounting for 52 percent of the world production. Global Lithium prices rose drastically, with spodumene concentrate reaching A$6,000 per tonne, six times its previous record, while battery-grade lithium hydroxide rose to US$70,000 per tonne. Spodumene concentrate production in the state increased to 2.05 million tonnes, resulting in a record value of A$6.8 billion.[16]
Lithium mining in Western Australia, in 2021–22, took place at the Greenbushes mine (Talison Lithium Australia), Pilgangoora (Pilbara Minerals), Mount Marion and Wodgina (both Mineral Resources), the Bald Hill mine (Lithco No.2) and at the Mt Cattlin mine (Allkem).[17]
Western Australia accounts for 67 per cent of Australia’s alumina production. The Darling Range in the state's southwest contains considerable deposits of bauxite, which are mined by Alcoa and Worsley Alumina for the production of alumina.
Alcoa's first bauxite mine at Jarrahdale was opened in 1963 to service the Kwinana alumina refinery. 168 million tonnes (370 billion pounds) of bauxite was mined from Jarrahdale until its closure in 1998. The Huntly mine was established in the early 1970s to supply bauxite for both the Kwinana and Pinjarra refineries. Willowdale mine was established in 1984, near Waroona. It supplies bauxite ore to the Wagerup Alumina Refinery.[18]
Worsley Alumina constructed a bauxite mine site and refinery in the early 1980s, with the mine located near Boddington. The bauxite is transported by a 51-kilometre (32 mi) conveyor belt to the refinery at Worsley. Following an A$1 billion expansion in 2000, Worsley now export 4.4 million tonnes (9.7 billion pounds) of alumina.[5][19]
Production of alumina and bauxite was a record 15.4 million tonnes (34 billion pounds) in 2018–19. The value of the alumina and bauxite sector increased 25 per cent from $6.6 billion in 2017–18 to $8.3 billion in 2018–19. The state's largest export markets for alumina are United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, South Africa and Mozambique.[5]
In 2021–22, Western Australia produced 4.33 million tonnes of Alumina, ten percent of the world production and a decline from the 16.22 million produced in the previous period. Production value of the 4.33 million tonnes was A$6.7 billion, an increase because of the higher overall prices. Production in Western Australia occurred at the Alcoa World Alumina and Chemicals Huntly and Willowdale mines and at the South32 Boddington mine.[16]
The Western Australian nickel industry suffered from falling international prices in 2009. Nickel production had been reasonably steady, the value of the industry had decreased from a peak A$6.9 billion in 2007 to under 3.3 billion in 2009. Also, the number of employees fell from a peak 13,307 in 2008 to 7,561 in 2009.[6][needs update]
A large number of nickel mines in the state were placed in care and maintenance at the end of 2008 because of falling international prices.[20]
Nickel mining is the sixth largest commodity sector in Western Australia with a value of A$4.946 billion in 2021–22. The 147,190 tonnes sold in that year accounted for 5.5 percent of the world's nickel production and 100 percent of all nickel produced in Australia. The 2021–22 value of nickel sales was the highest in 15 years, while the amount produced was the lowest in 20 years.[16]
From 1997 to 2022, Western Australia was the only state or territory in Australia to produce nickel, until nickel concentrate production restarted at the Avebury nickel project in Tasmania in October 2022.[16]
In 2021–22, nickel mining in Western Australia employed 8,294 people.[16]
Base metals
The value of base metals production in the state declined by 12 percent in 2009.[6] The largest base metals producing mine in Western Australia is the Golden Grove Mine near Yalgoo.[20] The combined sales value of base metals mined in Western Australia in 2021–22 was A$2.3.[Is this billions, or what?][16]
In 2021-22, base metals were mined at three locations in Western Australia, at Golden Grove (29Metals), at the Jaguar mine (Aeris Resources) and at the DeGrussa mine (Sandfire Resources).[17]
Western Australian output of copper increased by ten percent in 2009, having grown from just over 34,000 tonnes (75 million pounds) per annum in 2000 to 142,490 tonnes (310 million pounds) by 2009,[6] with a brief dip in production in 2004 due to the closure of the Lennard Shelf mine.[21] In 2009 however, world copper prices fell by 26 percent, causing the industry in the state to lose 11 percent of its value.[6] In 2021-22, Western Australian copper production reached a record value of almost A$2 billion. After decade-low production figures in the previous period, production of 153,000 tonnes of copper saw an increase again. Despite this, Western Australia remains a minor producer of the metal on the world stage. Over seventy percent of the state's production goes to South Korea (27 percent), the Philippines (24 percent) and Japan (22 percent).[16]
In its first phase of operation, from 2004 to 2015, the Savannah Mine was the premier source of copper mining in Western Australia, providing up to 50 percent of the annual production in the state and being the largest producer of the commodity in Western Australia.[22] The Savannah Mine restarted production in late 2021, with the main production of copper in the state coming from the Golden Grove mine, the DeGrussa mine and the Jaguar mine as well as, as a by-product, from Nova, a nickel mine, and the Boddington gold mine.[16]
Lead
Lead mining in Western Australia experienced a boom in 2009, almost doubling its production. This was caused by the reopening of the Magellan mine, near Wiluna. Overall, the state's lead production in the last 20 years[when?] has been varied, reaching a peak of 91,380 tonnes (200 million pounds) in 2001, falling to 1,170 tonnes (2.6 million pounds) in 2004 because of the closure of the Lennard Shelf mine,[21] before reaching another peak in 2006 and a low in 2008.[6] In 2021-22, the Western Australian Department of Mines, Industry Regulation and Safety registered no production for lead in the state while, in the previous period, it had been 1,266 tonnes at a value of A$3.787 million.[16]
Zinc
Zinc experienced a drop in production and prices in 2009, output in Western Australia falling by 33 percent and the value of the industry decreasing by 35 percent.[6] Because of the close association in nature of zinc and lead ores, zinc has experienced the same variations in production as lead in recent decades.[21] In 2021-22, Western Australia produced 74,049 tonnes of Zinc at a value of A$355 million, both increased figures compare to the previous period.[16]
Mineral sands
In 2021–22, Mineral sands sales in Western Australia reached a record value of A$1.3 billion. Western Australia is the world's largest producer of Garnet and Zircon, having produced 374,476 tonnes of Garnet, 313,998 tonnes of Zircon, 66,596 tonnes of Rutile, 281,991 tonnes of Synthetic rutile, 230,358 tonnes of Ilmenite and 15,458 tonnes of Leucoxene.[16]
Rare earths
Western Australia, in 2021–22, was the fourth largest producer of rare earths in the world, producing 30,000 tonnes, an increase compared to the previous period. Rare earths sales from the state achieved a value of A$779 million.[16]
Rare earths mining in Western Australia takes place at the Mount Weld mine, operated by Lynas.[17]
Cobalt
In 2021–22, Western Australia produced 5,314 tonnes of cobalt with a value of A$522 million. While production remained steady in comparison to the previous year, the value almost doubled as market prices for the commodity rose from US$44,248 per tonne in 2021 to US$81,539 in April 2022. Cobalt in Western Australia is mined as a by-product in the state's nickel mines.[16]
Salt
In 20–2020 over 90% of all salt produced in Australia came from Western Australia. Of the state's production, 66 percent originated from Rio Tinto's operations at Dampier, Port Hedland and Lake MacLeod in the Pilbara. Other mining locations in the state include Mitsui & Co.'s Onslow and Useless Loop (Shark Bay) mines (33% of production), with minor production from Lake Deborah near Koolyanobbing.[2]
While the overall salt production in Western Australia dropped by 4 percent in 2019–2020, to 11.2 million tonnes, the value of the industry increased by 24 percent, to A$375 million, due to increased prices. In 2021-22, Western Australia produced 11.6 million tonnes of Salt, a decrease compared to the previous period, at a value of A$558 million.[16]
Coal in Western Australia is currently, as of 2019, mined at Collie, where two mines are operating. Ninety percent of all coal mined at Collie is used in power stations, the remainder in the mineral sands production. While a small amount of Western Australian coal has been exported to India and China in recent years, the majority goes to the coal-fired power stations, mainly located in the Collie area.[6]
Coal production in the state has been quite steady in the past decade, with the 2019 production of 6.3 million tonnes: only four percent less than in 2009. Like production, the value of the Western Australian coal industry has remained reasonably constant, too, with a slight increase in sales to A$319 million in 2019.[6][5] In 2021-22, Western Australia produced 5.19 million tonnes of coal, a record low, at a value of A$325 million, seeing an increase despite the reduced production.[16]
Coal mining in Western Australia was carried out at the Premier mine (Yancoal) and the Griffin mine (Griffin Coal Mining Company), but the latter entered into receivership in September 2022.[17]
Manganese
In 2021–22, Western Australia produced 539,000 tonnes of manganese, an increase from the 469,000 tonnes from the previous period, at a value of A$324 million. Sales values for the previous period are not available as it was achieved by a sole producer, the Woodie Woodie mine.[16]
Manganese mining in Western Australia is carried out at the Woodie Woodie mine, operated by Consolidated Minerals, and the Butcherbird mine, a new mine opened in 2021 and operated by Element 25.[17]
Diamonds
The bulk of diamonds produced in Western Australia originated from the Argyle diamond mine, located in the far north of the state. The mine produced around 20 percent of the global diamond output and commenced mining in 1985. The mine's most famous product was its pink diamonds, of which it produces around 90 percent of the world's supply, which is, however, only one percent of the mine's overall production. Apart from Argyle, there is only one other operating diamond mine in the state, the Ellendale mine, located 100 kilometres (62 mi) east of Derby, which opened in 2002. Ellendale produces the rare yellow diamonds.[6]
In 2009, sale volumes for diamonds fell by 44 percent while the value of the industry in the state decreased by 53 percent in comparison to 2008.[6]
By 2022, diamond mining in Western Australia had ceased after the closure of the Argyle diamond mine.[16]
No uranium mining currently takes place in the state.[23] Five projects are in the approval process but none of these projects are progressing to production in the short term given the low uranium price.
These five projects are as follows, with Lake Maitland, Lake Way and Yeelirrie located within 100 kilometres (62 mi) of Wiluna.[24]
In the past decade, from 2001 to 2010, 42 employees have lost their lives in the state's mining industry. Of those, gold and iron ore have been the most dangerous, with 14 fatalities each, followed by nickel, with nine. Of the 42 fatalities, 29 have occurred at the surface and 13 in underground mining.[28]
From 1943, the year the Department of Mines records started, to 2010, there have been 657 work-related fatalities in the mining industry in the state.[28][needs update]
The destruction of Juukan Gorge, consisting of two rock shelters dated over 46,000-years old, by Rio Tinto on 25 May 2020, prompted a national and international outcry and prompted a Parliamentary inquiry.[29]
Environment
The majority of Western Australian mining operations are located in remote, thinly populated parts of the state. It was highlighted by the Office of the Auditor General that, despite the growth of the mining sector in Western Australia, inspections by the relevant government departments, the Department of Mines, Industry Regulation and Safety and the Department of Water and Environmental Regulation, had actually fallen in number in 2022. Those inspections that did take place focused on the Goldfields and southern regions, with none conducted in the north of the state in the 2021–22 financial year.[30][31]
Because of its close proximity to the state's capital Perth, 55km south-west of the city centre, the effects of bauxite mining on the environment and Perth's drinking water have raised concerns. Bauxite mining takes place as close as 300 metres to Serpentine Dam, one of the city's drinking water supplies. In the five years prior to 2023, 227 drainage failures across Alcoa's Western Australian mines were recorded, with sediment flowing into Serpentine Dam 46 times during 2021. Also in 2021, 100,000 litres of diesel and hydraulic oil spillage from heavy mining equipment were recorded.[32]
It has also been highlighted that bauxite mining, in the 2010s, has led to more land clearing than logging carried out by the timber industry, with mining accounting for 62 percent of the deforestation of tall and medium forests in Western Australia during that time. While native forest logging is to be banned from 2024, no such restrictions have been placed on bauxite mining. Bauxite mining takes place in the Northern Jarrah Forest, an ecosystem already under threat because of reduced rainfalls and temperature increase. While rehabilitation of the previously mined land takes place, until 1988 by planting dieback-resistant eucalypts from Eastern Australia, now by planting jarrah and marri trees, native forests take up to 200 years to fully recover as a habitat for native bird life.[33]
Statistics
Annual statistics for the Western Australian mining industry. Figures are for financial years, which, in Australia, run from 1 July to 30 June:[1][16][34][35][36][37][38]
Production
Commodities measured in million tonnes per annum
Commodity
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Iron ore
151.2
161.8
164.6
188.2
202.0
233.2
242.6
257.6
291.0
316.5
Alumina
10.48
10.86
11.13
11.23
11.17
11.16
11.47
11.98
12.31
12.27
Salt
8.81
8.30
8.60
9.61
9.88
11.58
10.83
10.42
10.59
10.52
Coal
6.50
6.10
6.16
6.32
5.98
6.28
6.71
6.02
6.23
6.98
Commodity
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
Iron ore
385.0
397.6
454.4
512.6
623.5
718.8
748.1
793.0
839.4
790.6
Alumina
12.64
12.28
12.42
13.53
13.72
13.77
13.94
14.17
14.79
15.43
Salt
10.97
12.23
12.81
12.39
12.99
11.73
10.98
10.87
12.96
11.73
Coal
6.71
7.23
6.99
7.49
6.28
6.55
6.89
6.81
6.68
6.28
Lithium
0.25
0.35
0.46
0.49
0.34
0.49
0.42
0.89
2.13
1.82
Commodity
2020
2021
2022
2023
Iron ore
836.8
838.7
844.4
861.3
Alumina
15.80
16.21
14.33
13.13
Salt
11.27
12.5
11.7
13.1
Coal
6.2
5.27
5.19
4.77
Lithium
1.35
1.6
2.05
3.19
Commodities measured in tonnes per annum
Commodity
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Nickel
143,930
167,450
179,460
191,680
182,210
180,420
183,560
173,660
172,360
178,390
Copper
30,730
42,620
53,500
59,410
53,290
61,930
81,200
115,980
124,530
127,330
Zinc
232,590
236,010
223,670
206,450
108,040
48,400
110,520
142,180
197,130
142,060
Lead
64,470
82,330
75,080
70,020
29,450
2,320
58,740
70,470
25,710
25,200
Cobalt
2,070
4,190
4,430
5,920
4,550
4,500
5,200
4,700
5,090
4,710
Commodity
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
Nickel
180,150
192,450
208,540
228,300
232,673
183,320
175,752
157,564
163,374
154,383
Copper
149,810
148,760
155,080
198,610
211,186
184,495
190,275
170,730
174,074
162,483
Zinc
87,560
70,540
63,500
55,760
54,060
77,831
82,676
82,943
93,373
71,405
Lead
26,090
40,720
6,550
22,590
78,651
59,248
5,988
3,507
7,397
4,852
Cobalt
4,360
3,730
4,890
6,380
6,236
6,036
5,479
4,759
5,200
5,228
Commodity
2020
2021
2022
2023
Nickel
153,516
158,710
147,190
160,371
Copper
169,888
145,853
153,321
119,128
Zinc
72,263
64,219
74,049
62,223
Lead
2,905
851
0
12,776
Cobalt
5,805
5,446
5,314
5,863
Commodities measured in million carats per annum
Commodity
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Diamonds
50.98
25.42
25.69
38.89
32.50
22.80
29.26
18.22
27.97
9.19
Commodity
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
Diamonds
16.28
10.12
8.69
9.61
11.61
10.39
13.87
12.61
15.28
11.15
Commodity
2020
2021
2022
2023
Diamonds
17.49
8.08
0.04
0
Commodities measured in kilograms per annum
Commodity
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Gold
204,960
201,210
185,000
187,240
177,010
167,350
166,170
161,770
141,480
136,610
Commodity
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
Gold
163,830
183,800
180,390
178,680
196,074
193,162
195,968
203,003
212,060
211,534
Commodity
2020
2021
2022
2023
Gold
212,142
207,567
213,757
212,465
Value
Commodities with annual production values in A$ billions
Commodity
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Iron ore
3.72
4.91
5.21
5.19
5.33
8.30
12.7
15.7
22.0
33.6
Gold
2.95
3.25
3.28
3.44
3.11
3.02
3.71
4.22
4.14
5.23
Alumina
2.658
3.601
3.584
3.205
3.085
3.462
4.111
4.847
4.522
4.564
Nickel
1.806
2.239
2.002
2.458
3.031
3.503
3.815
8.059
5.142
2.997
Commodity
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
Iron ore
35.3
57.6
60.8
56.4
75.2
54.4
48.8
64.3
62.1
81.8
Gold
6.55
8.19
9.40
8.97
8.89
9.11
10.11
10.86
11.42
11.96
Alumina
3.810
3.977
3.907
3.856
4.295
5.023
4.939
5.089
6.644
8.279
Nickel
4.649
3.712
3.625
3.419
3.17
2.203
2.095
2.636
2.700
3.168
Lithium
0.07
0.10
0.14
0.18
0.15
0.25
0.24
0.59
1.59
1.55
Commodity
2020
2021
2022
2023
Iron ore
104.6
154.7
137.1
125.1
Gold
15.87
16.57
17.37
18.59
Alumina
6.417
5.565
6.709
6.682
Nickel
3.480
4.946
4.041
5.743
Lithium
0.92
0.94
6.8
20.9
Commodities with annual production values in A$ millions
Commodity
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Copper
64.62
111.12
122.57
138.57
155.82
243.73
559.85
1,052.5
1,080.6
654.34
Mineral sands
862.93
909.22
855.87
760.75
755.10
800.89
865.97
788.06
692.48
728.87
Salt
208.58
233.08
251.04
227.95
179.85
221.25
229.85
236.15
232.93
386.25
Coal
271.53
252.28
258.13
272.89
274.28
271.72
297.37
271.52
270.42
332.57
Diamonds
703.67
614.45
489.34
770.94
519.72
467.80
693.80
435.30
610.67
261.50
Zinc
251.01
280.24
173.82
173.19
79.55
42.42
336.65
675.75
578.31
231.27
Cobalt
82.26
174.38
127.36
124.18
213.14
202.38
183.98
275.28
448.53
220.20
Lead
20.24
37.31
36.72
30.97
10.57
0.31
86.55
146.07
81.39
42.12
Commodity
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
Copper
1,156.7
1,290.1
1,165.5
1,441.2
1,559.6
1,283.1
1,181.3
1,240.5
1,347.8
1,321.6
Mineral sands
695.87
473.33
898.27
755.90
471.03
470.63
571.55
583.45
550.39
715
Salt
417.46
366.94
353.78
381.66
410.10
374.62
336.25
292.29
302.93
303.29
Coal
325.86
296.26
289.63
310.64
263.70
306.73
336.47
338.44
331.96
319.37
Diamonds
304.33
303.0
343.29
349.50
398.21
342.31
354.05
268.38
249.76
219.22
Zinc
210.12
162.11
120.74
100.26
118.26
197.04
195.5
204.16
323.50
263.16
Cobalt
190.32
145.59
145.16
159.81
175.18
210.55
174.85
239.64
510.25
332.39
Lead
61.59
97.73
12.87
46.99
178.76
136.95
14.81
10.15
22.8
13.34
Commodity
2020
2021
2022
2023
Copper
1,386.8
1,485.1
1,963.4
Mineral sands
775.3
824.44
1,305.55
1,401.31
Salt
375.12
553.48
557.53
714.15
Coal
326.98
306.06
324.65
375.83
Diamonds
281.27
112.1
1.19
0
Zinc
223.32
229.19
355.38
265.19
Cobalt
295.16
293.8
324.65
367.6
Lead
7.47
2.17
0
39.77
Employees
Employment figures for the major commodities and overall figures for the complete mining industry
^[1]Full time employees only. Up until 2022, the Western Australian Mineral and Petroleum Statistics Digest listed a combined figure of both full time employees and on-site personnel but the latter was not included in the 2022–23 edition, which only listed full time employees.
^Mining towns of Western Australia, page: 48, accessed: 5 February 2010
^Sheaffer, Kristin N. (20 January 2020). "Gold"(PDF). Mineral commodity summaries 2020. Reston, Virginia: U.S. Geological Survey. pp. 70–71. ISBN978-1-4113-4362-7. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
^Quaggin, Lucy (28 October 2019). "Flashpoint: The plan to dump nuclear waste in Western Australia". Seven News. Seven West Media. Retrieved 7 October 2020. Western Australia's Goldfields region is being proposed as a potential site for dumping the world's nuclear waste.
^Zaunmayr, Tom (30 October 2019). "Shire of Leonora deputy president says no thanks to foreign nuclear waste pitch". Kalgoorlie Miner. Retrieved 7 October 2020. The Leonora community has little interest in becoming a dumping ground for the world's nuclear waste despite claims from industry of a multi-billion dollar economic windfall.
Prider, Rex T., ed. (1979). Mining in Western Australia. Sesquicentenary celebrations series. Nedlands, WA: University of Western Australia Press. ISBN0855641533.