A work in progress: mining veteran brought in to reboot palladium mine.

AuthorRoss, Ian
PositionMining

The last two years at North American Palladium's Lac des lies mine, Jim Gallagher has experienced a major company refinancing, an ownership changeover, a management reshuffle, a tailings pond issue, a round of layoffs, and the tragic death of a worker.

As the newly anointed president-CEO, Gallagher is hoping the streak of bad luck has run its course and he can now focus on the positives.

"We're setting the goal of becoming one of the best mines in the world."

Earlier this year, the Toronto-headquartered miner was struggling under a crushing debt load until Brookfield Capital Partners recapitalized and restructured the company. Gallagher was promoted to the top job last August, replacing Phil du Toit, who resigned.

Weak metal prices in September caused the company to cut its workforce by 44 and it chose not fill 17 vacant positions.

The 15,000-tonne-per-day processing mill is back to running on an intermittent mill schedule of 14 days on and off running 13,400 tonnes. It will also stop blending low-grade ore, taken from a surface stockpile, with higher-grade ore mined from underground.

The company also downgraded its 2015 mine production guidance from a range of 185,000 to 205,000 ounces of palladium for the year to between 160,000 and 170,000 ounces.

With a remaining workforce of 422, Gallagher said some workers could be called back if prices rebound sufficiently.

"They aren't all permanent. Some is the normal restructuring that you do when it's time to get lean."

Gallagher is a 30-year mining veteran experienced in operations, engineering and consulting with Falconbridge and Hatch.

Upon arriving at NAP in 2013, Gallagher recognized a good ore body with a large milling facility and everything in place to run a fairly efficient mining operation.

"What I saw was less than perfect management and not enough good engineering," he said.

"The metal was still warm on the new ore-handling system," but parts of it had to be ripped out and redesigned.

As Hatch's senior manager of mining and mineral processing, Gallagher got a chance to globetrot and view the best mining and safety practices at remote mines in Australia and Scandinavia. At Lac des lies, he has a chance to put that accumulated knowledge to full use.

"We struggled at the start with safety. But we are now running 440...

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