Cote Gold project back on track: IAMGOLD moves Gogama gold project toward feasibility.

AuthorKelly, Lindsay
PositionMINING

In 2013, IAMGOLD held out a lot of promise for its Cote Gold project near Gogama, acquired a year earlier from Trelawney Mining. But then the price of gold dropped, and the project was put on the backburner.

"As with most mining companies, we just tried to survive," said Steve Woolfenden, IAMGOLD's director of environment, during an April 21 talk in Sudbury to kick off that city's Modern Mining and Technology Week.

"We've managed through that downturn."

In the background, IAMGOLD was still chipping away at the environmental assessment (EA) process, and today, the company has emerged with a renewed optimism about the project, although the plan has been amended from its earlier version.

The Cote Gold project is located almost halfway between Timmins and Sudbury, about five kilometres west of Highway 144.

In its previous iteration, the proposal called for a 15-year mine life, a mill rate of 60,000 tonnes per day, and a requirement of 1,200 employees--500 for construction alone.

"At the time, we thought bigger was better," Woolfenden said.

But the company is now considering a scaled-back footprint for the proposed operation.

The project has earned both its federal and provincial EA certificates, and in February IAMGOLD announced the completion of a positive preliminary economic assessment (PEA), indicating it would start work on a prefeasibility study.

According to the PEA, the proposed open-pit gold mine has an indicated resource of 8 million ounces and an inferred resource of another 1 million ounces.

The mine, which would have an initial capital cost of $1.031 billion, would have a production life of 21 years. The PEA outlines a mill rate of 29,000 tonnes per day, with an average annual gold production of 302,000 ounces.

Woolfenden said the company is still doing exploration in the area to see if it can expand the resource to add more life to the mine, which will ultimately benefit the community.

"When you have a big mine with a short mine life, it becomes really hard to work with the community because it's a lot of money flowing through for a short period of time," he said.

He anticipates a prefeasibility study to be ready by late June or early July, and if it's approved, IAMGOLD will move right into a feasibility study.

An innovative feature of the mine is IAMGOLD's proposal to use a high-pressure grinding roll (HPGR), rather than the more commonly used ball or semi-autogenous grinding (SAG) mills.

A HPGR has two large cylinders that spin...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT