Dampier Salt

Dampier Salt

68

%

Ownership

Salt

Product

1967

Started

Western Australia

Dampier Salt Limited (DSL), located in Western Australia and comprising of 2 solar salt operations – Dampier and Port Hedland - is the world’s largest exporter of seaborne salt, harvesting millions of tonnes each year. DSL focuses on sustainable, premium salt production in thriving environments.

DSL is joint venture between Rio Tinto (68% ownership), Marubeni Corporation (22%) and Sojitz (10%).

Between the 2 operations there are 53 ponds across 20,000 hectares, operated by a 99% residential workforce. Sodium chloride is a key ingredient in many renewable energy products. For example, electric cars can require 200-600 kilograms of salt in their batteries.

DSL is committed to providing customers with premium grade salt that meets external standards, including Halal, Kosher and ISO9001 certifications.

Environment

At DSL, we’re committed to sustainability and good environmental stewardship. For example, we try whenever possible to reduce using potable water and have several projects in place to substitute up to 50% of potable water with seawater. And approximately 99% of the energy we use at DSL to grow and process salt comes from the sun and wind: we collect sea water, then concentrate the salt through evaporation before we harvest, wash and transport it to port.

Both DSL sites are recognised as being important to biodiversity. Dampier and Port Hedland are designated Key Biodiversity Areas by BirdLife Australia due to globally important numbers of shorebirds which live at or visit the sites on their migratory journeys from the Northern Hemisphere, including the threatened great sand plover and the small, red-necked stint. The different salinity of each pond increases the diversity of invertebrates living in the mud, providing shorebirds with an array of food options.

In 2018, we implemented a new biodiversity protection and natural resource management standard, with input from BirdLife Australia, IUCN, and Fauna & Flora International. The standard seeks to minimise our impact by balancing conservation needs with development priorities through 4 actions. Our priority is to avoid having an impact, after which we seek to minimise, restore, and finally offset impacts.

Salt downloads

Sustainably sourced food-grade salt
PDF
1.26 MB

Dampier Salt communities

Our 2 DSL operations employ a residential workforce – that is, employees live in towns near our operations. We want local communities to share in the benefits that come from our operations – providing local jobs is one of these benefits.

We have strong community partnerships. One of our partners, the Polly Farmer Foundation, provides educational support and mentoring for Indigenous secondary school students through the Follow the Dream Program. This successful program is delivered in partnership with the Department of Education and Woodside Energy.

Cultural heritage

The Dampier Archipelago has one of the largest and most diverse concentrations of rock art in the world, with an estimated one million engravings.

In the Dampier Archipelago in Western Australia, we are privileged to work alongside the densest concentration of rock engravings anywhere in the world. This art is of huge significance to both the local Traditional Owners and all Australians. I’m lucky to have been given the opportunity to spend time recording rock art in this magnificent outdoor gallery with Traditional Owners. And I’m proud to work for a company that values cultural heritage and has passionate people committed to our business, the rock art and our community partners.

– Victoria, Rio Tinto Cultural Heritage Adviser

In 2007, we supported the inclusion of the Dampier Archipelago – including the Burrup Peninsula – on the National Heritage List, in recognition of its outstanding rock art values. The listing covers approximately 300 square kilometres of the Dampier Archipelago land area which includes a significant portion of our iron ore and the Dampier Salt leases.

Dating back tens of thousands of years, the rock art is on Murujuga, the traditional name for the Dampier Archipelago and Burrup Peninsula. It depicts images of people, animals and geometric designs. The area also contains stone features, camp sites, quarries and shell middens, providing a fascinating insight into the cultural life of Australia's Indigenous ancestors.

As an outcome of the National Heritage Listing, we signed a Conservation Agreement with the Australian government, formalising our long-term commitment to protecting the rock art on the Burrup Peninsula. This included the establishment of a fund to advance the understanding and preservation of the rock art itself, as well as contemporary cultural and social values.

Both DSL sites have Cultural Heritage Management Plans – providing comprehensive procedures and processes for the recording, protection, management and maintenance of cultural heritage.

Contact Dampier Salt

Level 18, Central Park
152–158 St Georges Terrace
Perth WA 6000
Australia

Related content

Photo of employee talking to the chief in the Mafindou community near Beyla, Guinea

Communities

We know our operations can have far-reaching impacts on society
Woman in QMM community selecting raffia to make handicraft products

Community agreements

We are proud to be the first mining company in Australia to embrace native title to land and to form agreements with Traditional Owners
Photos from Yinjaa-Barni Art, Roebourne

Cultural heritage

Cultural heritage is the aspects of a community's past and present that it considers valuable and wants to pass on to future generations