Vancouver Sun

Weather leaves Centerra investors in cold

Stock down despite gold’s hot streak

- GABRIEL FRIEDMAN

Back in October 2016, Centerra Gold Inc. CEO Scott Perry told investors that purchasing the Mount Milligan gold and copper mine would give the company an asset in “one of the lowest risk jurisdicti­ons” in the world — British Columbia.

At the time, his company’s other flagship asset, a gold mine in the Kyrgyz Republic, was mired in disputes with the local government about pollution and corruption.

But about one year after Centerra acquired Mount Milligan, about 120 kilometres northwest of Prince George, as part of its US$1.1 billion takeover of Thompson Creek Metals in 2016, Perry is learning that even B.C.’s interior carries risks, including unpredicta­ble weather. After experienci­ng drought through spring and summer, the water supply was dangerousl­y low, and then froze when an unexpected cold snap hit in late December.

“Due to a lack of sufficient water resources, mill processing operations at the Mount Milligan mine ... have been temporaril­y suspended,” Centerra told investors on Dec. 27.

The halt comes just as gold prices are up nearly 18 per cent in the past six months. Centerra’s stock is down 13.1 per cent in the past six months even while other gold companies such as Agnico Eagle, Goldcorp and others surge.

Now, the Toronto-based company has asked B.C. authoritie­s to expedite its applicatio­n to pump water from nearby lakes that some First Nations groups claim overlaps their traditiona­l territory.

Although the Mount Milligan property may be the first mine affected by B.C.’s drought, hydrologis­ts and climatolog­ists in Canada said water management will increasing­ly create challenges as climate change wreaks havoc on precipitat­ion patterns.

“What we’re seeing is that weather systems … are very hard to predict,” said John Pomeroy, a professor and director of the Centre for Hydrology at the University of Saskatchew­an. “It’s very hard to design something like a tailing pond, because we’re seeing weather events that aren’t normal, so the capacity you designed your tailing pond for isn’t working anymore.”

Pomeroy is also director of the Global Water Futures Initiative, which received a $77.8-million grant from the Canada First Research Excellence Fund, to develop computer models that will help predict future water supply scenarios across Canada.

At Mount Milligan, Centerra executives disclosed in October that water was running low, but predicted only “minor disruption­s” in 2017. They thought the water supply would suffice until February or March, according to B.C.’s Environmen­tal Assessment Office.

Instead, in December, temperatur­es dropped precipitou­sly, and the shallow water supply froze, according to a company news release.

That same month, as part of its applicatio­n to pump water from nearby lakes, Centerra submitted materials to the province showing that First Nations groups, including the McLeod Lake Indian Band and Takla Lake First Nation, raised concerns at that time about cumulative and short-term impacts of the pumping. Another group, Nak’azdli Whut’en, conditiona­lly supported short-term withdrawal­s.

Meanwhile, elected officials from Fort St. James, Vanderhoof and Mackenzie have expressed concerns about the closure, and sent letters of support for Centerra’s applicatio­n.

The company declined to comment, but said it is tapping local aquifers and believes mill processing may resume at half-capacity by the end of January although full capacity is not predicted until snowmelt occurs in April.

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