August 22, 2003
An economic crossroads
What will happen to
Lupin's infrastructure?
JIM
BELL
If Kinross Mining Corp.
pulls the plug on its aging Lupin Mine, Nunavut would lose more than a few dozen
jobs and some service contracts.
Nunavut might also lose
a key transportation hub that could play a role in unlocking the Kitikmeot region's
enormous mining potential - opening new mines that could replace, and one day
surpass, the jobs and business opportunities lost in Lupin's demise.
The Lupin site, which boasts
a runway capable of handling Boeing 737 jets, lies at the end of a vital winter
ice-road that starts at Yellowknife and runs past the Diavik and Ekati diamond
mines on its way into the Kitikmeot region.
"It would be a shame
to lose all that really good infrastructure. It is an invaluable piece of property,"
said Charlie Lyall, president of the Kitikmeot Corporation.
The Kitikmeot Corporation,
along with other regional organizations and a group of mining companies, are
the proponents behind the Bathurst port and road project - a plan that would
build a road connecting the Kitikmeot's interior with a deep-sea port on Bathurst
Inlet.
Lyall sees the Lupin site
as one day being an integral part of a new Kitikmeot transportation system.
"It would be an ideal
jump-off point once the road and port goes in for all the different mine sites.
You could transport people there with jets and then disperse them to the different
mine sites, and the port." Lyall said.
Lyall also said the Lupin
site is a useful reference point for pilots flying in the area.
"It's the only place
between Yellowknife and Kugluktuk and Cambridge Bay and Resolute, so it is a
good navigation aid."
Right now, the Bathurst
project is mired in red tape. Robert Nault, the minister of the Department of
Indian Affairs and Northern Development, wants the proponents to submit a new
project description. That's because the Inmet Mining Corp. has withdrawn plans
to develop the lucrative Izok Lake zinc property, forcing proponents to change
the scope of their project.
But Lupin's possible demise
might affect other mining projects that are still very much alive, such as the
Tahera Corp.'s Jericho diamond mine project, which lies only 25 km from Lupin.
Alex Buchan, the municipality
of Kugluktuk's economic development officer, says he's worried about how the
Lupin shutdown could affect Tahera's plans. Tahera was counting on the Lupin
winter road to haul mine construction supplies to its site.
"I guess some of the
worries that we would have are how the closing of the Lupin mine affects the
economics of Tahera, because most of the supplies and everything goes up the
winter road and everything terminates at Lupin, and whether the subsequent reduction
in winter road traffic is going to somehow affect the Jericho economics,"
Buchan said.
Officially, though, the
Lupin Mine is not yet closed for good. Its owner, the Kinross Gold Corp. of
Toronto, has placed it on "care and maintenance," and the company
won't make a final decision until after it conducts a review, a process that
could take some months.
In that review, Kinross
will study the feasibility of extracting about 110 ounces of gold it believes
lie in rock pillars that are still standing inside the mine. That would likely
be the company's final act before closing the mine for good.
Lupin's previous owner,
Echo Bay Mines Ltd., pioneered the use of a winter ice-roads in 1982, when it
began production at Lupin. The model has since been used at new diamond mines
in the Northwest Territories.
Echo Bay's former CEO,
John Zigarlick, now runs the Inuit-owned Nuna Logistics, a well-known company
that specializes in ice-road transportation and other mining-related services.
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