Nunavut's newest gold mine will be up and running in 2017, company says - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 06:16 PM | Calgary | -8.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Nunavut's newest gold mine will be up and running in 2017, company says

TMAC Resources' Hope Bay project in Nunavut's Kitikmeot region will begin processing gold early in the new year, the company said Thursday.

Doris North gold deposit is one of three planned operating sites for TMAC's Hope Bay project

An aerial view of a mining project.
The Doris North gold mine, in Nunavut's Kitikmeot region. The partially constructed bilding, on the right of the site, will house the mine's processing plant. (TMAC Resources)

TMACResources' Hope Bay projectin Nunavut'sKitikmeot region will begin processing gold early in the new year, the company said Thursday.

The Doris North gold deposit is the first of three planned operating sites for TMAC'sHope Bay Project,located 125 kilometressouth-west of Cambridge Bay. Two other deposits, named Madrid and Boston, have been identified and are in various stations of permitting and proposals.

It's estimated that between the three deposits, there are about 3.5 million oz. of gold reserves.

The companyhas been mining gold underground at the site for nearly a year.It's now in the process of assembling a mill that was shipped from Australia, whicharrived on site in late August.
The cargo ship BBC Elbe unloads hundreds of seacans holding components of Doris North's processing plant. The mine's owner, TMAC Resources, says they plan on processing ore by early 2017. (TMAC Resources)

"By the end of this year we'll have between 55,000 and60,000oz. of gold in a high grade or run of mill stockpile" said TMAC CEO Catharine Farrow.

"We have been mining the ore, but the trick now is to get the processing plant up and running and achieve steady state production of gold bars. And that's what we will ship off site. It's that final stage in getting the Doris deposit fully operational."

Farrow says most of the mill was tested and pre-assembled before it was shipped halfway around the world. The company had a two month window to get more than 200 shipping containers to the site.
Sea containers containing a portion of the processing plant's components sit in a laydown area at the Doris North site. (TMAC Resources)

"We shipped the (processing plant) building last year and constructed it this spring. The assembly of the mill is on-going inside the building." says Farrow. She says that advanced work has meant "a compressed" ramp-up, compared to other mining projects.

TMAC expects to begin sending ore through the processing plant by late December, with commercial production beginning early in the new year.