Regional News>Record
US$2.6b gold investment for Dom Rep - Canada's Barrick to reopen
mine
- AP
|
|
Canadian mining company Barrick Gold Corp will reopen a formerly state-owned
mine in the central Dominican Republic, the company and the Caribbean
country's president said Wednesday.
Barrick plans to spend about US$2.6 billion (€1.7 billion) on the
Pueblo Viejo mine in what will be the largest private investment in Dominican
history, President Leonel Fernandez said.
A Barrick spokesman said construction will cost about US$2.7 billion
(€1.8 billion) over three and a half years and operations would begin
in 2011.
The company and government have agreed in principle to share the cost
of cleaning up acid-filled rivers and fields of mineral waste left behind
by a Dominican state-run company's previous activity at the site, Barrick
spokesman Vince Borg told The Associated Press.
Details about paying for the cleanup, which Barrick estimates will cost
at least US$100 million (€67 million), are still to be worked out,
Borg said.
Barrick estimates that the mine will yield 20.4 million ounces of goald,
along with more than 400 million pounds of copper and more than 100 million
ounces of silver.
Massive Investment
The mine, located in pine-filled mountains north of the Dominican capital,
Santo Domingo, will be built with a 40 per cent stake by Vancouver-based
Goldcorp Inc.
Fernandez announced the project during his annual Independence Day address
to Congress, his last before facing re-election in May.
"This will be the largest investment ever realised in the history
of the Dominican Republic," Fernan-dez said to applause.
Barrick President and CEO Greg Wilkins praised the decision in a statement.
"We are very pleased with the progress made by our employees, our
partner Goldcorp Inc, and importantly, the Government of the Dominican
Republic," Wilkins said.
Barrick, the world's largest gold mining company, estimates it will create
3,500 construction jobs and 1,000 mining positions over the 25-year life
of the project.
Nearly nine years after the state-run Rosario Dominicano company stopped
work there, the site's two pits remain exposed. Acid run-off has killed
off the fish in the valley below.
The Dominican government said last year it would have to borrow money
from international lenders to contribute to the clean-up.
The project faces other logistical hurdles as well. Barrick estimated
that up to 1,000 people will have to be compensated for lost property
or homes as a result of new construction.
- AP
The Financial Gleaner
The Financial Gleaner
|