May 12, 2006
Dubai miners set sights
on Aupaluk iron deposits
Potential mine would
be 1,000 times the size of the community
JANE
GEORGE
Aupaluk, Nunavik's tiniest
community, may someday have a satellite city of 10,000 next door.
Delegates at Makivik Corporation's
annual meeting last month learned that mining interests from the United Arab
Emirates are encouraging residents of Aupaluk to dream of a mega-mine employing
10,000 workers.
The mine's workforce would
rival the entire population of Nunavik in number, and be nearly 1,000 times
larger than Aupaluk.
Davidee Angutinguak, the
mayor of Aupaluk, confirmed that people from Dubai in the U.A.E. hold claims
to the property, which contains a large iron ore deposit near Aupaluk. He said
they are serious about pursuing development of a mine there, but there was nothing
"official" to report yet.
"They already know
the ore is there, and they're waiting for the price to come up," Angutinguak
said.
The mine near Aupaluk will
not move ahead without the agreement of the community, he said.
The Canadian company fronting
the group in Dubai is called Oceanic Iron Ores - a company that is not listed
on the stock exchange, does not pop up on any Internet search engines, and could
not be located by the key mining industry newspaper, Northern Miner.
This means that Oceanic
is likely a new company and is privately owned.
Geologist Mel de Quadros
works for Oceanic, according to a business card handed to a Nunavik Mineral
Exploration Fund staffer last year.
De Quadros was reached
at a Toronto telephone number, but deferred detailed comment to his boss, Peter
Sheridan, who could not be reached at the number provided to Nunatsiaq News.
De Quadros did say that
"billions" of tonnes of iron ore lie near the community of Aupaluk
- it's just a question of how to get at it economically.
Aupaluk is located at the
northern reaches of the Labrador Trough, which is so rich in iron deposits that
the presence of iron in the soil is visible even to the untrained eye. The meaning
of Aupaluk's name in Inuttitut refers to the reddish colour of its soil.
Globally, iron is the most
used of all metals. Its relatively low cost and high strength make it indispensable,
especially in vehicles, the hulls of large ships, and structural components
for buildings. Steel is the best-known alloy derived from iron.
The price of a pound of
iron ore has doubled since 2003 and now stands at about $65 U.S. It's expected
to rise even higher.
As the demand for iron
and other metals increases, projects on many known deposits in the North, which
couldn't be economically mined in the past, have now been dusted off and are
being examined again.
Another company, Consolidated
Thompson-Lundmark Gold Mines Ltd., said last month that it intends to open a
major new iron mine in northern Quebec by late 2008.
The project, at Bloom Lake
on the south end of the Labrador Trough near Fermont, would probably be the
lowest-cost iron ore mine in Canada. That's because Bloom Lake is near existing
mines, and the region already has major infrastructure, including hydro electricity
and nearby rail lines.
Meanwhile, the demand for
iron is high in the booming Middle East economy. According to the Metal Bulletin
Research site, the Middle East region, which includes Dubai, is home to one
of "the most vibrant and fastest growing steel industries in the world."
Aupaluk iron has a past
In the 1960s, an iron mine
closed down not far from the location of the original community of Aupaluk.
But, during negotiations
leading up to the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement in 1975, Quebec wanted
to reserve the mine site as "category three" lands, where there could
be mining under the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement, and Inuit living
in "Old Aupaluk" were encouraged to move to the site of the present-day
community.
"They said, look,
it's nice over there. They actually promised Aupaluk that it would become the
administrative and transportation center of Nunavik," says an Internet
blog entry from an Aupaluk resident.
Evidence of this mine still
exists near Aupaluk - and last year's Cruise North also helped clean the abandoned
mine site up a bit.
The project involved the
removal by volunteers of more than 100 rusting fuel drums, some partly full,
as well as numerous propane tanks and truck batteries. The operation earned
the company an award from the CIBC for "good entrepreneurship."
Adamie Alaku, Makivik Corporation's
vice-president for economic affairs, said a similar visit to clean up the mine
is scheduled in 2006 at the end of the Cruise North's season.
Cruise North is currently
developing a three-year plan involving annual visits to Aupaluk that would see
the site completely cleaned and restored.
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