National Post

Northern Dynasty sees bright future

- Natae Obiko Pearson Bloomberg News

VANCOUVER• Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd. expects to resolve a dispute with the U.S. environmen­tal regulator by April to enable it to move ahead with permitting one of the world’s largest undevelope­d copper and gold deposits.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has “a desire to permit Pebble,” the company’s project in Alaska, Northern Dynasty Chief Executive Ronald Thiessen said Monday in Vancouver.

“We will come to a resolution within 100 days” with the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, he said.

In 2014, the EPA moved to impose restrictio­ns on Pebble, blocking it f rom applying for a permit, citing “potentiall­y destructiv­e impacts” to the world’s largest sockeye salmon fishery. Trump’s pick to head the regulator, Scott Pruitt, is a self- described opponent of the “EPA’s activist agenda” and has called for “regulatory rollback” at the agency.

Thiessen said Monday the company isn’t expecting special treatment under the Trump administra­tion but a return to a “normalized permitting” process. That process should take about four years and cost US$ 150 million, he said.

Thiessen said Monday his company expects to find a new partner by October. While Anglo American Plc had been a partner in the Pebble project, and Rio Tinto Group had held a stake in Northern Dynasty, both companies walked away during the past commodity rout.

Thiessen also said some suitors are interested in forming a consortium to develop the massive deposit, which has measured, indicated and inferred resources of 81.5 billion pounds of copper, 107 million ounces of gold and 514 million ounces of silver.

Northern Dynasty shares have more than trip led since the Nov .8 U.S. election as investors speculate that Trump’s administra­tion will allow the explorer’s longstalle­d Pebble project in Alaska to move ahead.

Pebble “is a really great bet,” Canadian mining magnate Frank Giustra said Sunday. He said he wishes he still owned shares in Northern Dynasty after selling off his holdings last year amid a political controvers­y.

“If there’s only one thing good about a Trump presidency, it’s that it’ ll be a lot easier in the resource industry in the United States to get things done,” Giustra said. “That’s about the only good thing.”

Giustra sold off his interests in Northern Dynasty last year amid criticism that if Hillary Clinton won the U.S. election, he could use his close personal ties with her husband, Bill, to ease U.S. regulatory roadblocks facing the company.

Giustra sold his stake “because I just don’t want anyone even thinking that I’m in this because of my political connection­s,” he said. “I left a lot of money on the table. It was very sad. It sucks to be me.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada