HanRoy implements GeoMoby Protect to strengthen Heritage Protection at Mulga and McPhee

Perth, Western Australia | March 2026

HanRoy implements GeoMoby Protect to strengthen Heritage Protection at Mulga and McPhee

Supporting stronger heritage protection in the field with GeoMoby Protect

HanRoy has implemented GeoMoby Protect, a Cultural Heritage Protection solution that supports stronger operational controls and improved oversight of heritage-sensitive areas. The initial deployment has been delivered across the Mulga and McPhee projects.

The implementation provides site teams with a more structured way to manage cultural heritage requirements in the field, supporting consistent decision-making, clearer reporting, and stronger governance.

Practical capability for operational teams

GeoMoby Protect has been introduced to help:

  • Strengthen controls supporting cultural heritage management across active work areas
  • Improve situational awareness for field personnel working near heritage-sensitive zones
  • Standardise reporting and create reliable, audit-ready records
  • Reduce the likelihood of inadvertent disturbance through clearer guidance and oversight
  • Enable faster access to information for project leads and relevant stakeholders

Collaboration and delivery

GeoMoby, an Australian-owned technology company based in Western Australia, worked closely with HanRoy’s project and operational teams to configure and implement the solution for the Mulga and McPhee environments.

“HanRoy approached this with a clear focus on productivity improvements, operational fit and measurable assurance,” said Math Paul, Director, GeoMoby. “GeoMoby Protect is designed to support that approach, helping teams work with confidence in and around sensitive areas, supported by clearer information.”

Media contacts

HanRoy:

Dean Benson
Senior Media and Communications Advisor
dean_benson@hancockprospecting.com.au
+61 474 201 069

GeoMoby:

Math Paul
Director

math@geomoby.com
+61 401 072 874

GeoMoby-Hanroy - Media Release - Image - March 2026 - Cultural Heritage Protection
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