Mining Mirror March 2019 | Page 12

Global news and projects Southeast Asian population growth and urbanisation as key factors for a strong coal outlook on which it plans to capitalise. Yancoal produced close to 50 million tonnes of saleable coal in 2018, 59% more than in the previous year. Moolarben accounted for 33% of the saleable coal production (16.5 million tonnes), achieving an operational record, while Mount Thorley Warkworth delivered 24.2% (12.1 million tonnes) of the company’s saleable coal production. The Hunter Valley Operations represented 26.6% (13.3 million tonnes). pr oje Block cave to expand Northparkes cts Global A giant in the making Two mining giants have entered into an agreement that will create one of the world’s leading gold mining companies. Newmont Mining and Goldcorp have announced that Newmont will acquire all the outstanding common shares of Goldcorp in a stock-for- stock transaction valued at USD10-billion. According to the agreement, Newmont will acquire each Goldcorp share for 0.3280 of a Newmont share, which represents a 17% premium based on the companies’ 20-day volume weighted average share prices. The new company will be known as Newmont Goldcorp. Its portfolio includes operating assets in favourable jurisdictions, an impressive project pipeline, and exploration potential in the most prospective gold districts around the globe. “This combination will create the world’s leading gold business with the best assets, people, prospects, and value-creation opportunities,” says Gary Goldberg, CEO at Newmont. “We have a proven strategy and disciplined implementation plan to realise the full value of the combination, including an exceptional pool of talented mining professionals, stable and profitable gold production of six to seven million ounces over a decades-long time horizon, the sector’s largest gold reserve and resource base, and a leading project and exploration pipeline,” he says. [12] MINING MIRROR MARCH 2019 New gold behemoth starts trading The new company that was created after the merger between Barrick Gold and Randgold Resources started trading on New York (NYSE) and Toronto (TSX) stock exchanges on 2 January 2019. The company’s executive chairman, John Thornton, rang the opening bell. Thornton was accompanied by the president and CEO, Mark Bristow. The new company is still known as Barrick but its trading symbol on the NYSE has changed to GOLD, the ticker formerly held by Randgold on the Nasdaq. On the TSX, the ticker remains ABX. Australia Chinese ramp up exploration work Chinese coal miners Yancoal plans to ramp up exploration work at their new South Wales mines. The company has set ambitious growth targets for 2019 and achieved record coal production during 2018. Its growth plans include a potential six million tonnes per year underground development at Mount Thorley Warkworth in the Hunter Valley, which completed pre-feasibility seam drilling at the end of last year. Yancoal has cited long-term demand for thermal and metallurgical coal, driven by An expansion project at China Molybdenum (CMOC) and Sumitomo’s Northparkes copper and gold operation in New South Wales, Australia, will produce an estimated 40 million tonnes of ore over a 10-year period once operational. CMOC and Sumitomo have approved the development of a new block cave mine to expand Northparkes. The USD200-million, three-and-a- half-year project (called E26 Lift 1 North) is expected to reach full production in mid-2022. The project will involve 11km of underground development, an underground primary crusher, conveying systems, and associated infrastructure. The operator is currently upgrading the ventilation system to provide the new mine with sufficient airflow to support development and production activities. The site became the world’s most automated underground mine in 2015 by producing 100% of its ore from driverless loaders. The mine has been operating for 24 years. The operation has development consent to mine until 2032, with reserves of 125 million tonnes of ore and a further 471 million tonnes of resources. CMOC owns 80% of the operation, which is 27km north-west of Parkes. The remaining 20% is held by Sumitomo. Chile Montero hunts for Atacama lithium Canadian company Montero Mining and Exploration has been awarded exploration licenses covering an area of 13 800 hectares in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile. The exploration licenses are located between the Salar de Atacama and the coastal range in northern Chile. According to Dr Tony Harwood, president and CEO of Montero, the geology of the Avispa Project consists of extensive sedimentary evaporite salt deposits. “These salt deposits are intercalated with fine-grained clastic sediments of Tertiary age that occur in a stratified package, partially exposed and up to 30m in thickness. The evaporite deposits are considered to have been deposited as a lacustrine sequence that formed in a tectonically isolated part of the early www.miningmirror.co.za