SYDNEY, Feb 18, 2026, 18:28 AEDT — The market is now closed.
- Fortescue edged up 0.5% on Wednesday, closing at A$20.20.
- Western Australia’s EPA is now collecting public input on Fortescue’s Wyloo North iron ore project proposal.
- Looking ahead, Feb. 23 marks the submissions deadline. Fortescue reports results Feb. 25.
Fortescue Ltd closed 0.5% higher at A$20.20 on Wednesday. The stock saw some movement as investors considered the miner’s possible new iron ore venture in Western Australia, now catching early notice from regulators. (StockAnalysis)
Pressure is on now, as the company faces a pair of urgent obstacles: a fast-approaching regulatory comment window and its next half-year earnings report. Iron ore, meanwhile, stays pinned around $100 a tonne—a price point traders scrutinize. (Investing.com)
On Feb. 17, the Environmental Protection Authority of Western Australia opened a seven-day period for public feedback on Fortescue’s Wyloo North Iron Ore Mine proposal. Submissions are due by Feb. 23. (Environmental Protection Authority)
Wyloo North sits about 110 km west of Tom Price and, according to the EPA summary, would operate as a standard open-cut mine. Plans involve mining above and below the water table, which means groundwater will need to be pumped out. Ore would be hauled via road train to Fortescue’s nearby Eliwana site for processing. The proposed life of the mine is close to 13 years, with up to 4,954.5 hectares set to be cleared inside a 21,910-hectare development area. (epa.wa.gov.au)
Public filings list hefty emissions numbers, but Fortescue is pushing back on how those should be read. Dino Otranto, mining and operations chief executive, told reporters, “Wyloo North is absolutely part of our decarbonisation plan,” and pointed out the submission was based on “a conventional operating scenario.” He added, “It’s not the way we intend to run the mine.” (The Australian)
Scope 2 emissions refer to pollution tied to bought electricity. Scope 3 stretches further, capturing emissions from customers turning ore into steel. The distinction matters. Investors have been known to recoil from large disclosed totals in approval documents, even if the mine’s launch is still a long way off.
Fortescue lost ground while broader gains lifted the ASX 200, which finished up 0.54% on Wednesday. Materials ended as the only sector in the red, according to the market wrap. (News.com.au)
BHP ended down 0.85%, highlighting the sector’s limited gains despite the index moving higher. (Investing.com)
Even so, the mine process could throw up some unexpected twists. Should Wyloo North face a longer, tougher review or if regulators decide to tighten deadlines and tack on extra costs, Fortescue’s promises to hike output and cut diesel use might run into trouble.
Offshore worries don’t end there. Should China’s demand for steel weaken again, or if iron ore prices slip below $100, high-beta names like Fortescue tend to react sharply—and they’re usually the first to show it.
Fortescue will deliver its FY26 half-year results on Feb. 25. The focus for investors: what management says about costs, proposed dividends, and new details on its push to exit fossil fuels faster. (investors.fortescue.com)