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April 19, 2002
Kitikmeot road and port
scheme moves along
The Bathurst road-and-port
project could be the key that unlocks the Kitikmeots potential for mining
DENISE
RIDEOUT
CAMBRIDGE BAY Theres
a lot riding on the Kitikmeots road-and-port project.
If built, the Bathurst
Inlet road and port would provide greater access to mineral-rich areas in the
Kitikmeot and spark the development of promising mining projects.
"We needed to figure
out how to get mining going in the region, and the answer is the road and port,"
Charlie Lyall, president of the Kitikmeot Corporation, said at the Nunavut Mining
Symposium in Cambridge Bay earlier this month. The Kitikmeot Corporation, a
branch of the Kitikmeot Inuit Association, is spearheading the project.
Exploration and mining
companies are keeping their fingers crossed about the project coming to fruition.
Thats because the
road and port, proposed for Bathurst Inlet, could provide a transportation link
between the Arctic Coast and the Kitikmeot region. Right now, the only road
access to the area is by travelling the winter road from Yellowknife to the
Lupin mine.
The project organizers
envision building an 295-kilometre all-weather road from Bathurst Inlet to the
winter road on Contwoyto Lake and continuing on to the Izok Lake deposit, southeast
of Kugluktuk.
A deep-water port, located
at Bathurst Inlet, is the second component. The port will be complete with a
wharf, a dock for barges and a storage facility.
Together, the road and
port will give mining companies cheaper and easier access to the mineral-rich
land.
The Lupin, Diavik, Ekati,
Jericho and Hope Bay mines are all potential users of the proposed all-weather
road and deep-water port.
Inmet Mining Corp., owner
of the Izok Lake property 250 kilometres southeast of Kugluktuk, is banking
on the Bathurst Inlet road and port. The infrastructure would give the mining
company a sure route to Izok Lake.
The property boasts of
having zinc, copper, lead and silver deposits worth $2 billion. But, according
to Inmet Minings reports, the company simply cant afford to pay
for the infrastructure thats needed to ship its product to the markets.
In the report, Inmet says:
"Should this infrastructure become available, as recommended by the Bathurst
Inlet Road and Port Study, the economy of Izok will change, allowing it to become
a producer of zinc, copper and lead."
During the mining symposium,
people working on the Bathurst Inlet road-and-port project tried to assure mining
companies things are moving ahead.
Tony Keen, manager of the
project, said staff are busy researching and writing the reports that needed
before the road and port can get underway.
This month they submitted
a preliminary project description to the Kitikmeot Inuit Association and the
Department of Indian and Northern Affairs for assessment.
Next on the list is an
environmental impact statement, which Keen said will likely be ready by December
2002.
Keen said construction
on the $215-million road and port is slated to begin in mid-2004 and that it
could be operating by mid-2006.
The groups behind the Bathurst
Inlet project Kitikmeot Corporation, territorial and federal government
departments, and Inmet Mining have put $6 million into studying the possibility
of building a road and port.
Theyre convinced,
Keen said, that the new transportation routes will cut costs for mining companies.
For the Kitikmeot, the
road and port will bring jobs. The construction work, which is expected to take
two years, could employ up to 300 people from the region.
Despite the promising outlook,
the project hasnt moved forward without attracting criticism.
Some wildlife groups have
said construction of a road and a port could negatively affect the caribou that
calve and migrate in the area.
But Keen said protecting
wildlife and the environment are a top priority.
"This project isnt
in the calving grounds of the caribou," he said. "It is in the migration
route of the caribou, but the road will actually be closed during the major
migration period for the calves. So there will be no interference at those points."
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