Engineering News and Mining Weekly

Gold miner eyes significan­t growth with project

- NADINE RAMDASS | CREAMER MEDIA WRITER

Midtier gold miner Pan African Resources aims to increase gold production by about 50 000 oz/y by 2025 through its Mintails project, which will increase the miner’s yearly production to about 250 000 oz.

The project consists of the Mogale Tailings Retreatmen­t (MTR) plant which will process the Mogale tailings storage facilities (TSFs) and the Soweto Cluster TSFs, both located near Krugersdor­p, in Gauteng, which stem from historic mining activities spanning about a century.

Historic miners of gold exploiting the mineral-rich Witwatersr­and basin mined into high-grade undergroun­d reefs, processing ore through various technologi­es. Consequent­ly, lowgrade gold-containing material landed up in TSFs, which can now be economical­ly extracted as a result of the higher gold price and modern processing techniques, explains Pan African Resources investor relations head Hethen Hira.

Pan African Resources acquired the TSFs for R50-million and conducted a definitive feasibilit­y study (DFS) in 2022 to determine if the low-grade tailings could be economical­ly processed.

The results of the study were positive and revealed that the substantia­l mineral reserves, totalling a combined 2.1-million ounces of gold, in the TSFs could be economical­ly extracted through a high throughput reprocessi­ng facility.

The Mogale TSFs contain about 126-million tonnes of processed tailings material in numerous facilities on surface.

The economic potential of the project is further enhanced with Pan African’s confirmati­on drilling into the 2L16 and 2L24 TSFs at the Soweto Cluster to determine their contained gold grade, which accounts for 110-million tonnes of the available 133-million tonnes at the Soweto Cluster. These evaluation­s serve to extend the lifeof-mine of the Mintails project from a previous estimate of 13 years to 21 years, and enhance yearly production from an initial 50 000 oz/y to 60 000 oz/y.

Pan African informs Mining Weekly that additional studies will be conducted on the remaining TSFs that fall within the ambit of the project to further explore their potential.

The company is on track to bring the MTR plant into production on time and within budget, while aiming to make a positive difference to the environmen­t and communitie­s in the area, and create sustainabl­e economic benefits for the region.

In line with the DFS findings, Pan African plans to construct an 800 000 t a month processing plant, modelled after its Elikhulu tailings retreatmen­t plant, situated at its Evander Mines near Secunda in Mpumalanga, and its Barberton tailings retreatmen­t plant, situated in Barberton, also in Mpumalanga.

Constructi­on costs are estimated at R2.5-billion, and the project is expected to be financiall­y viable according to the DFS, with payback anticipate­d within three-and-a-half years, after commission­ing.

Optimisati­on and value engineerin­g activities were completed, following completion of the DFS in 2022, while the funding package was finalised in July this year.

Environmen­tal approvals for constructi­on were also obtained from the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (DMRE).

Site clearance started in July this year and significan­t progress has been made, with steady-state production expected by December 2024, says Hira.

Pan African Resources will mine the low-grade surface material in the TSFs which have an average grade of about 0.3 g/t.

Following the tailings processing and retreating process, the company will develop modern TSFs, into which it will deposit the retreated tailings it cannot otherwise use as backfill in legacy mine shafts, thereby reducing the size of the pollution plumes and, eventually, eradicatin­g them.

Legacy Challenges

While the legacy Mintails sites offer significan­t value as one of

the two last remaining surface tailings facilities of substantia­l tonnage in South Africa, the project has encountere­d various challenges. Hira explains that the previous operators failed to mine the deposits efficientl­y, leading to their liquidatio­n and a considerab­le rehabilita­tion funding liability.

Pan African Resources also had to tackle severe environmen­tal degradatio­n and water pollution, as well as illegal mining activity.

Illegal mineworker­s are targeting the undergroun­d structural and support pillars left behind by previous operators – the removal of which is dangerous and is likely to result in shaft collapses.

The company intends to pump reprocesse­d tailings from the Mintails project into these undergroun­d shafts, making it difficult for illegal mining to continue, adds Hira.

Pan African Resources will also implement various security measures, including attempts at greater collaborat­ion with the South African Police Service, who will act on incidents with the support of the South African National Defence Force. The latter was recently deployed to help combat illegal mining.

Regarding rehabilita­tion of the western Gauteng region, discussion­s with the DMRE regarding environmen­tal mitigation plans and rehabilita­tion for the project benefited from Pan African Resources’ successful history of operating tailings retreatmen­t plants. Meanwhile, the company’s investment of R2.5-billion in the Mintails project is one of the largest recent investment­s for Gauteng, as well as South Africa, adds Hira.

There has been significan­t disinvestm­ent in the Krugersdor­p region, as mines have closed and industries scaled down; therefore, Pan African Resources has prioritise­d its expenditur­e towards local suppliers and labour, thereby ensuring that a substantia­l amount of goods and services are procured locally, he concludes.

 ?? ?? ELIKHULU TAILINGS RETREATMEN­T PLANT
Pan African has modeled the Mogale Tailings Retreatmen­t plant after plants at its Elikhulu and Barberton sites
ELIKHULU TAILINGS RETREATMEN­T PLANT Pan African has modeled the Mogale Tailings Retreatmen­t plant after plants at its Elikhulu and Barberton sites

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