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April 19, 2002
Hope Bay gleams with possibilities
Hope springs eternal
in a little corner of the Kitikmeot
DENISE
RIDEOUT
CAMBRIDGE BAY The
mining companies drilling at the Hope Bay gold project in the Kitikmeot are
banking on that stretch of tundra becoming Nunavuts first gold mine.
Theyre so confident
that theyre pumping another $8 million into the project this year, drilling
more holes at the site of the proposed gold mine and exploring for new sources
of gold deposits.
For Hope Bays joint
owners, Miramar Mining Corp. and Hope Bay Gold Corp., the gold-rich site that
lies 160 kilometres southwest of Cambridge Bay, is gleaming with possibilities.
The Hope Bay project is
big in more ways than one.
The area, an 80-kilometre
gold-rich belt, contains what its owners say is the "best undeveloped gold
property in North America." Three deposits already discovered there boast
4.3 million ounces of gold resources.
On top of that, Hope Bay
is the largest exploration project in all of Nunavut. Last year, the mining
companies spent $15 million on exploration and they plan to put in another $8
million worth of drilling this year.
Dean McDonald, an official
with Miramar Mining Corp, said that of Hope Bays three major drilling
areas, Doris, Boston and Madrid, the Doris deposit will be the focus of 2002.
Doris beckons
McDonald told delegates
attending the Mining Symposium in Cambridge Bay two weeks ago that Hope Bays
Doris gold deposit is their most promising.
The Doris deposit, located
near the north end of the Hope Bay site, consists of a four-kilometre-long quartz
vein. As McDonald puts it: "The Doris project is virtually a large quartz
vein."
Because its high-grade
gold deposits are located near the tundra surface, the Doris site is set for
major drilling work this summer.
"When we sat down
to figure out where to start first, we thought the Doris site would be the best
to start with," McDonald said, pointing to a map of the gold-rich area.
Workers will drill 100
holes, totalling 8,900 metres, in the Doris Hinge area in the coming months.
The digging will help Hope Bay and Miramar determine the amount of gold resources
they could mine in the future and will aid in drafting a detailed mining plan.
In addition to the drilling
at the Doris site, the mining companies will tackle some exploration work in
other spots. McDonald said the objective is to find areas that may hold significant
new gold deposits.
The proposed mine
In a pamphlet, Miramar
and Hope Bay Gold describe their vision for a proposed mine in the Doris Hinge
area.
Under the plan, the companies
would build an access road and an airstrip to the site. All bulk supplies and
equipment would be shipped on barges from Hay River, while the crew would be
transported to and from the site on aircraft.
The Hope Bay project could
employ about 96 workers on site, with the majority coming from Cambridge Bay,
Bathurst Inlet, Taloyoak, Gjoa Haven and Yellowknife.
Hugh Wilson, who works
with Miramar Corp., said the proposed mine could operate for two years.
"It might not be the
optimum mining that people are talking about here," Wilson admitted. "But
it may be the first gold mine in Nunavut. More importantly, it will be the first
gold mine on Inuit-owned lands."
Besides gearing up for
more drilling and exploration, Hope Bay and Miramar are deep into paperwork.
As a large portion of the
Hope Bay project sits on Inuit-owned lands, the mining companies have to submit
a handful of reports to various Inuit organizations and boards for assessment.
On March 22 they submitted
a preliminary project description to the Kitikmeot Inuit Association and the
Nunavut Water Board. Those organizations then gave the report to the Nunavut
Impact Review Board for screening.
McDonald said once the
review board responds, the companies will turn their attention to writing an
environmental impact statement, a detailed look at how the mining project could
affect the surrounding land and wildlife.
They plan to submit the
statement to the Nunavut Impact Review Board in the fourth quarter of their
fiscal year.
If everything falls into
place including the financing Miramar and Hope Bay Gold will start
initial construction in the end of 2003, complete the open pits, access road,
plant site and tank farm by April 2004 and begin production the end of 2004.
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