Xstrata and Erdene announce Cape Breton coal mine plans

The Donkin coal exploration project in Cape Breton.The Donkin coal exploration project in Cape Breton.

Vancouver – Underground coal mining is making a comeback in Nova Scotia. After several years of development, Xstrata‘s (XTA-L) Canadian subsidiary and partner Erdene Resource Development (ERD-T) have announced definitive plans for the Donkin Coal mine. The Cape Breton project will see 2.75 millions tonnes of coking coal mined annually and sold on the open market, a shift from earlier plans to mine a larger volume of thermal coal to sell domestically.

The decision was prompted by Nova Scotia Power’s announcement in late 2009 that it would not buy thermal coal from Donkin because environmental regulations do not allow the power company to burn coal with the high mercury and sulphur levels found in the Donkin coal bed. Erdene also cited increasing demand for steel by China and India as a reason for switching to metallurgical coal.

Xstrata and Erdene, who own 75% and 25% of the project respectively, acquired a special license to explore and dewater  the property in 2006. The mine, however, goes back to the late 1970s when the Cape Breton Development Corporation drove two access tunnels 3.6 km under the Atlantic at a cost of $80 million. They then suspended the project in 1989 due to a collapse in coal prices without ever having recovered any coal. The tunnels were sealed and flooded in 1992 to await future development, which is now finally happening.

Initial exploration work identified eleven coal seams in an area spanning 8 km east to west and 4.5 km north to south. Three of those seams, known as Lloyd Cove, Hub and Harbour, were included in a 2007 resource estimate. The economic success of the project will rest largely on the Harbour seam, which contains 101 million indicated tonnes and 15 million inferred tonnes of high volatile bituminous A coal with a high sulphur and medium ash content. The total resource estimate, with the three seams included, stands at 227 million indicated tonnes and 254 million inferred tonnes.

The Harbour seam is 2 km off shore and 130 metres below the Atlantic Ocean. The location of the mine, with an entrance in Nova Scotia but technically off shore, led to some jurisdiction issues between the provincial and federal governments. Those have since been resolved, with Nova Scotia to receive royalties from the project.

The Donkin mine is located about 20 km east of Sydney, which puts it close to a coal-fired power plant, a deep-water coal terminal facility and rail access.

Production is slated to begin in 2011, assuming permitting and feasibility studies go as planned. The mine is expected to cost roughly $350 million, of which Erdene is to contribute $80 million. A $50 million coal-washing facility will be built on-site.

News of the planned opening was welcomed by the locals who filled a Donkin fire hall to hear that the project should create some 200 jobs, once running at planned capacity. The last underground coal mine in Cape Breton, the Prince mine in Point Aconi, closed in 2001. That closure ended 280 years of commercial coal mining in Cape Breton, which is also home to the first commercial coal mine in North America.

Local politicians have been working to bring the mine to life. Alfie MacLeod, who represents Cape Breton West in the Nova Scotia assembly, went so far as to table a bill called the Donkin Coal Act in late 2009. The act would have exempted Nova Scotia Power from emissions and environmental standards for four years to spur the mining of thermal coal, but the bill did not get past first reading. The decision to mine coking coal instead reduced the scope of the project, which means the operation will create about 100 fewer jobs in the area than originally thought.

As well as owning a controlling stake in the Xstrata-Erdene Donkin project, Xstrata also has a 5% stake in Nova Scotia-based Erdene itself. The two companies have an arrangement whereby Xstrata has the option of buying a 75% stake in any coal opportunity identified by Erdene by funding all work through completion of a feasibility study. Erdene is also exploring several coal projects in Mongolia.

Erdene’s share price fell 4¢ on the news to close at 31¢. The company has a 52-week trading range of 15¢ to 40¢ and has 89 million shares outstanding.

 

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