Otago Daily Times

Oceana's expansion plans

- SIMON HARTLEY simon.hartley@odt.co.nz

OCEANA Gold has unveiled a 10year corporate strategy for more expansion, in the process outlining plenty of potential for mine life extensions at its Macraes site in East Otago and Waihi in the central North Island.

Oceana’s general manager at Macraes, Dale Oram, was upbeat and candid in his presentati­on at the New Zealand branch of the Australian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy annual conference this week, in front of most of the 220 delegates attending.

He said in the long term Oceana wanted to continue on its path of geographic diversity and eventually operate five to seven mines; it at present has two in New Zealand, one in the northern Philippine­s and a soon to be fully commission­ed new mine in the state of South Carolina in the United States being handed over on October 1.

Mine companies are constraine­d by regulation on reporting their estimates of proven or probable gold in the ground, which affects their estimates of mine life; Macraes formally has a 2019 pit life and 2020 undergroun­d and Waihi 2019.

‘‘Our New Zealand operations have a low mine life at present,’’ he said.

While Oceana had just formally closed its Reefton operation, Mr Oram was bullish on prospect developmen­ts at Macraes and Waihi; either pits or undergroun­d targets, several of which have yet to be formally included in estimate data.

Mr Oram said of $US35 million$US40 million being spent by Oceana gold this calendar year, the company was ‘‘heading towards 50% of that being spent in New Zealand’’.

‘‘We’re calling 2017 the year of [test] drilling,’’ Mr Oram said.

Oceana’s Macraes operations since 1990 had delivered more than 4.5 million ounces of gold and the group of Oceana mines is on track to deliver more than 500,000oz for the first time this calendar year.

‘‘We’re pushing for a 10year mine life there,’’’ Mr Oram said of Macraes.

‘‘Significan­t’’ drilling work was continuing at the Corona tion prospect at Macraes, while the relatively new and adjacent Coronation North pit was delivering a 20% better than expected grade of gold. Mr Oram believed it would have a threeyear mine life.

He estimated Macraes prospects Golden Point and Round Hill could turn into a 1.4 million ounce operation.

‘‘That could get us a 10 to 12year mine life extension,’’ he said.

‘‘Macraes has survived very well on its low grade ore body; there’s no fat in 1 gram [of gold extracted from 1 tonne of ore],’’ Mr Oram said.

Macraes is Oceana’s most expensive mine when it comes to costper ounce of gold to produce. Its overall average of around 2 grams per tonne is considered marginal, which makes keeping costs down crucial to its longevity.

Other Oceana interests include exploratio­n and some joint ventures in Myanmar and Laos, Nevada and Argentina, but Mr Oram provided no further details.

Its Haile mine developmen­t in South Carolina was soon to be commission­ed, the first gold had been produced and would soon start showing up on Oceana’s quarterly reports.

Since Oceana took ownership in Waihi about 18 months ago, in a $132 million deal, the $100 million debt component had been paid back, Mr Oram said.

Waihi was taken over with an estimated gold resource of 360,000oz and about 300,000oz had been recovered, but the test drilling programme had since pushed estimates out to a remaining resource of 570,000oz, he said.

‘‘At Waihi we believe we’ve got 1 million ounces there, which we want to turn into real numbers,’’ he said.

On the question of the Blackwater mine near Reefton, still held by Oceana, Mr Oram was reluctant to confirm industry speculatio­n it was for sale, admitting only a ‘‘maybe’’ for sale, or a joint venture operation.

Blackwater, 37km south of Reefton, beneath the abandoned township of Waiuta, in the foothills of the Victoria Range, produced 740,000oz of gold from 1908 until the shaft collapsed and the mine was closed in 1951.

Mr Oram believed Blackwater required exploratio­n spending of around $40 million, requiring a 3km decline tunnel from Snowy River Valley, plus two egress and access tunnel drives.

The bottom of the lowest mined level of the Blackwater mine was about 1000m deep.

‘‘We know it’s down there,’’ he said based on some test drilling results.

However, drilling from the surface was too difficult and exploratio­n drilling would have to be done from new tunnels.

An October 2014 preliminar­y economic assessment by Oceana estimated about 120,000 tonnes of ore per year from Blackwater could yield 58,000oz, recovering a total estimated 570,000oz.

Mr Oram said the size of Haile’s big pit, ‘‘large ore bodies’’ and potential for undergroun­d mining had pushed its mine life out to 2024.

Didipio in the Philippine­s, which is Oceana’s cheapest producer of gold, costs being offset by sales of byproduct copper, has a mine life to 2032, by which time Mr Oram said it would be a fully undergroun­d operation.

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 ?? PHOTO:GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Gearing up . . . Oceana Gold is hoping to extend the Macraes mine life by as much as 10 years. Pictured: work on one of five new, $4.5 million, Caterpilla­r 789D, 200 tonne, dump trucks last year.
PHOTO:GERARD O’BRIEN Gearing up . . . Oceana Gold is hoping to extend the Macraes mine life by as much as 10 years. Pictured: work on one of five new, $4.5 million, Caterpilla­r 789D, 200 tonne, dump trucks last year.

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