The Weekend Post

Mining jobs boom ahead

- BRONWYN FARR

MORE than 100 jobs at a mine just 130km from Cairns will be on offer with an emerging tungsten operation taking a leap forward with a $6m federal government grant underscori­ng its role in building a critical minerals industry.

EQ Resources chief executive Kevin MacNeill said more than 100 jobs would be on offer as the mine ramped up to full production, with an emphasis on employing locals.

“Today we employ around 50 people but our plan is to grow that workforce closer to 150 as our expansion plans play out,” Mr MacNeill said.

“Many of those new workers will be women – female share of the current workforce is today more than 30 per cent and growing.

“Our recent advertisin­g for unskilled workers has been a great success,” he said.

“EQ Resources has been surprised and delighted at the quality of people who have applied to work at Mt Carbine.”

“As tourism has suffered from the effects of the pandemic, we have been able to offer an alternativ­e as a career,” Mr MacNeill said.

There are more jobs on the horizon in the region, with a repurposed open-cut gold mine west of Cairns set to deliver a jobs boom as major earth, electrical and mechanical works hit top gear following a constructi­on start of the Kidston pumped hydro project’s upper reservoir.

Tungsten is one of the hardest elements on earth, used in aerospace, constructi­on and technology, with much of the market controlled by China.

Mr MacNeill said the funding was an endorsemen­t of the project’s potential to become a strategica­lly significan­t Australian producer of critical minerals within the near term.

A large-scale tungsten operation using low-grade historic mine waste and highgrade resources identified in an open pit is planned.

With two partners, EQ Resources has invested $20m to date and released a Bankable Feasibilit­y Study in December.

Announcing $42m funding for three mines including Mt Carbine, federal Resources Minister Keith Pitt said Australia had extraordin­ary reserves of critical minerals crucial to many industries.

“This initiative will help uncover new sources of supply, moving up the value chain of critical minerals through processing and high-technology manufactur­ing, supporting robust supply chains, and creating high-paying regional jobs,” Mr Pitt said.

Mr MacNeill said mining at Mt Carbine began more than 100 years ago but when the price of tungsten nosedived, mining ceased in 1985.

He said technologi­cal advances created the opportunit­y to drive down processing costs at the same time as the global price of tungsten was rising.

Rock waste is being put to use in constructi­on and repairs at places including Newell Beach. The mine has a 12-year project life with potential for undergroun­d mining after year four.

Tungsten would be transporte­d to Townsville, where a $1.7bn Copperstri­ng transmissi­on line project to connect the minerals rich northwest region with the national electricit­y grid is under way.

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