Sunday, July 18, 2021

NDP GOVT
BC approves early construction at Artemis Gold’s Blackwater
Canadian Mining Journal Staff | July 15, 2021 | 

An aerial view of the Blackwater gold project. Credit: Artemis Gold

British Columbia has granted a permit for early construction work at the Blackwater gold project belonging to Artemis Gold (TSXV: ARTG). This is the first step in construction of a mine, allowing for site preparations and land cleaning at the site 150 km southwest of Prince George, BC.


Blackwater is estimated to be the largest gold mine development in the Cariboo region of BC in the last decade, supporting regional employment over 25 years, including the construction period, with the potential for that to be extended through further exploration.

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Blackwater is to be connected to the BC Hydro grid, which is powered by hydro-electricity providing it with a sustainable source of low-carbon power, with the potential to produce gold and silver with one of the lowest GHG emissions from an open pit in the world.

BLACKWATER HAS THE POTENTIAL TO PRODUCE GOLD AND SILVER WITH ONE OF THE LOWEST GHG EMISSIONS FROM AN OPEN PIT IN THE WORLD

The project will be developed in phases as an open pit and carbon-in-pulp processing plant. Initial capital requirements will be C$592 million ($470m) for phase one with a mill capacity of 5.5 million t/y and an annual output of 248,000 oz. of gold. Over the 23-year life of the mine, throughput will be increased to 20 million t/y with two further expansion phases.

The Blackwater gold project has an after-tax net present value (5% discount) of C$2.2 billion ($1.75bn), an internal rate of return of 35%, and a payback period of 2 years.

The deposit is estimated to contain 251 million measured and indicated tonnes grading­ 1.04 g/t gold and 8.3 g/t silver for 8.4 million oz. gold and 68 million oz. silver. The inferred estimate is 5.6 million tonnes at 0.79 g/t gold and 26 g/t silver, containing 142,000 oz. gold and 4.6 million oz. silver. These numbers reflect a 0.5 g/t gold cut-off.

(This article first appeared in the Canadian Mining Journal)

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