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Gold mining company purchases parcel of land for conservation
Gold mining company purchases parcel of land for conservation

CBC

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • CBC

Gold mining company purchases parcel of land for conservation

The company behind Nova Scotia's Touquoy gold mine has purchased land on the Eastern Shore to conserve, as required by the province. Australia-based St Barbara announced Tuesday it has bought 228 hectares of ecologically sensitive land next to the Ship Harbour Long Lake wilderness area and the Tangier Grand Lake wilderness area. The parcel of land is home to water courses and wetlands of special significance and is suitable for wildlife habitat. "We are excited to move forward with this important initiative that safeguards natural areas for future generations," said Andrew Strelein, the director of St Barbara subsidiary Atlantic Mining, in a news release. Conservation required under industrial approval The Touquoy gold mine in Moose River, N.S., opened in 2017 and wrapped up active mining in January 2023. As part of the company's industrial approval, it is required to acquire and conserve other land to offset the area that has been impacted by its mining operations. The company said it issued a call for suggestions for land parcels from land trusts, community groups and the public, and received 18 proposals. The selected land was previously in the hands of a private landowner. In April, the Environment Department agreed to give the land conservation status. The company did not release the purchase price, and did not immediately respond to a request for an interview.

Australian owner of N.S. gold projects seeks to sell operations
Australian owner of N.S. gold projects seeks to sell operations

CBC

time12-02-2025

  • Business
  • CBC

Australian owner of N.S. gold projects seeks to sell operations

The Australian company that ran Nova Scotia's Touquoy gold mine in Moose River, N.S., is hoping to divest itself of its Atlantic operations. St Barbara announced Wednesday it is open to a "sale, vend-in or demerger" of its assets in Nova Scotia, which include the Fifteen Mile Stream, Beaver Dam and Cochrane Hill projects, as well as the Touquoy site. Those projects are run by a subsidiary of St Barbara called Atlantic Mining Nova Scotia. The Fifteen Mile Stream, Beaver Dam and Cochrane Hill projects are still in the development phase, do not have permits and are not currently involved in provincial or federal environmental assessment processes. Active gold mining at the Touquoy site stopped in January 2023 and the company then turned its attention to processing stockpiled rock. That activity stopped in late September 2023 and no production has occurred at the site since. Project 'financially robust,' company says "The decision to separate Atlantic from St Barbara is underpinned by the opportunity to unlock the full value potential of the Atlantic projects under a Canadian listed company with a local leadership team, to focus on delivering upcoming project milestones and benefit from being closer to regulators and key stakeholders," St Barbara CEO Andrew Strelein said in a news release. "Atlantic is a highly attractive and financially robust project and has the potential to be in production within 12 months from permitting approval." Atlantic Mining declined an interview request but said in a statement there are no redundancies or layoffs resulting from the decision. Touquoy reclamation bond Any new company that takes over the operations will also take over reclamation efforts at the former Touquoy mine. Atlantic Mining has an $80-million bond with the province to cover expenses associated with bringing the site back to a natural state. The company says it has spent over $7 million so far on reclamation activities. But the reclamation process has not been without challenges. Last year, the company appealed the reclamation criteria laid out by Environment Minister Tim Halman, saying the conditions set for water quality in the lakes and rivers around the mine cannot be met, and that the timelines were unreasonable. The province rejected that appeal and the company then . St Barbara has previously called into question the future of mining in Nova Scotia, accusing the Environment Department of "regulating the [mining] industry out of existence." Atlantic Mining said in its statement that it expects the separation to occur later this year.

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