Mining Mirror July 2018 | Page 8

Global Papua New Guinea: an improved business case South African gold miner Harmony recently updated its feasibility study for the copper-gold Wafi-Golpu JV in Papua New Guinea. Edited by Leon Louw A fter the initial feasibility study carried out in 2016, the new feasibility study update (FSU), undertaken by the Wafi-Golpu Joint Venture (WGJV) and contractor WorleyParsons, will give Harmony a revised execution plan for its greenfield project. The FSU sets out an improved business case for WGJV. According to Bryan Bailie, executive project director for WGJV, the FSU confirms the preferred technical options to deliver the block cave mining project safely and with appropriate consideration given to environmental, social, and cultural heritage stewardship.” The FSU report incorporates findings from earlier pre-feasibility and feasibility studies and draws on extensive data collection undertaken since 2016, providing a deeper understanding of the project’s geotechnical, mining, processing, oceanographic, environmental, and social parameters. It also forms an integral component of the revised proposal for development in support of the special mining lease application, which was submitted to the Mineral Resources Authority (MRA) by the WGJV in August 2016. The Wafi-Golpu Project Wafi-Golpu is a 50/50 joint venture between Harmony Gold Mining and Australian company Newcrest Mining. It is in the Morobe [6] MINING MIRROR JULY 2018 The proposed Wafi-Golpu mining complex. Province of Papua New Guinea, about 65km south-west of the city of Lae. Various approaches to development (including infrastructure configurations) have been considered in the investigations for the development of the Wafi-Golpu deposits. Early investigations considered large-scale open-pit mining of the Wafi deposit rather than underground mining; however, this was dismissed for various reasons. Subsequent investigations were highly successful in more accurately delineating an ore body, but further work was required to determine the economic viability of mining. A number of technical studies across various disciplines were completed since 2012, which determined a viable business case for development of a large-scale deep-level block cave mine. The proposed development contemplated a significant upfront capital commitment to deliver maximum resource extraction and production profile over the project’s life. The outcomes of the pre-feasibility study initiated a pre-feasibility optimisation study phase of work. This phase of work contemplated alternative options focused more towards a smaller, scalable, lower-capital cost start-up mine.