Canada’s Barrick Gold (TSX:ABX)(NYSE:GOLD), the world’s second largest producer of the precious metal, said it was considering a $1 billion expansion of its Pueblo Viejo mine, in the Dominican Republic, a 60-40 joint venture with Newmont Goldcorp (NYSE: NEM)(TSX: NGT).
Having recommitted Barrick to its Latin American portfolio earlier this year, president and CEO Mark Bristow said the company expected to complete in 2020 a feasibility study for the expansion of the gold mine, already a “tier one” asset.
$1B project includes an expansion of the Pueblo Viejo’s processing plant and tailings capacity and it has the potential to extend the life of the mine into the 2030s.
The gold giant defines as “tier one” a mine with a projected life of more than 10 years and production, as of 2017, of at least 500,000 ounces of gold.
The project includes an expansion of the Pueblo Viejo’s processing plant and tailings capacity and it has the potential to extend the life of the mine into the 2030s and beyond.
“We look forward to continue making a significant and growing contribution to our communities and other stakeholders and to unlocking the enormous value of its mineral potential while addressing the historical third-party environmental issues,” Bristow said in the statement.
The executive noted that Barrick and its JV partners had already invested $5.2 billion in Pueblo Viejo, which represented about 20% of the total foreign direct investment in the Central American country over the past 10 years.
Pueblo Viejo, located nearly 100km northwest of Dominican Republic’s capital Santo Domingo, began production in 2012. Last year, it churned out 581,000 ounces of gold at an all-in sustaining cost of $623 an ounce in 2018 and is forecast to produce 550,000 to 600,000 ounces this year at an AISC of $610-$650 an ounce.
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