Anglo American says Woodsmith Mine expected to 'ramp up' from 2027

An aerial view of Woodsmith Mine

Mining giant Anglo American has suggested its stalled North Yorkshire fertiliser project could ramp up again from 2027.

Development work at the Woodsmith Mine near Whitby has been slowed since a decision last year to significantly cut investment. Since then it has cut hundreds of jobs from the project, which includes a 37km tunnel that will eventually connect the mine site with a processing and export facility at Redcar on Teesside.

Anglo has insisted its crop nutrients business - which constitutes the Woodsmith project - will be one of three key business in a slimmed down group that has so far seen it sell of its nickel business and remaining coal activities, with platinum following soon. The slowdown has ushered in a period of "care and maintenance" with the firm saying it wanted to preserve the long term value of the project which aims to extract high performing natural fertiliser polyhalite from underneath the North York Moors.

In new results, Anglo said it had continued service shaft sinking work at Woodsmith, reading a depth of 804 metres. It said further excavation work would progress through the sandstone strata for the rest of the year. Meanwhile work on the production shaft has been paused at a depth of 712 metres - about 45% of the full depth - since 2024

Meanwhile progress on the tunnel - which will be the country's longest - reached the final intermediate shaft at Ladycross before continuing at a slower pace. About 80% of the link between the Sneatonthorpe site and Redcar has now been completed.

In an update on its work to develop the so far underdeveloped polyhalite market, Anglo said: "We have made considerable progress in 2024, including through the signing of Memorandums of Understanding with two major Chinese fertiliser companies in August 2024 to further develop the market for polyhalite in China, and the signing of a new agreement to reinforce our European fertiliser partnership with Cefetra in November 2024."

It added: "During the slowdown period, the focus of marketing work will be on the key commercial and technical relationships that are already well established. This will maintain a presence in our key selling regions, consolidate the data that we have around product characteristics and performance, and develop our understanding of the potential for value adding blended polyhalite products.