Kinross bets $3B on Chile gold district growth

Lobo Marte and La Coipa. (Image courtesy of Kinross Gold.)

Kinross Gold (TSX: K; NYSE: KGC) plans to invest $3 billion (C$4.1 billion) to develop the Lobo Marte project in Chile’s Atacama region, advancing one of the country’s largest proposed mining projects as gold prices remain near record highs.

The Canadian miner submitted Lobo Marte’s environmental impact assessment to Chilean regulators last month, outlining a $1.5-billion initial permitting phase for early operations and site development. The 22-year mine is designed to process about 35,000 tonnes per day and produce 6.7 million oz. of contained gold, including 4.7 million recoverable oz., at an average grade of 1.29 grams gold per tonne.

The project, President José Antonio Kast said, is one of the most important mining investments planned for the Atacama Region and the country for the next decade.

Lobo Marte highlights Chile’s renewed push to attract large-scale mining investment as global producers race to secure future supplies of gold, copper and lithium. The project joins a growing pipeline of major projects entering Chile’s permitting system, including developments proposed by BHP (ASX: BHP), Freeport McMoRan (NYSE: FCX) and Albemarle (NYSE: ALB).

The Atacama region alone accounts for 44% of Chile’s exploration budget and is expected to require about 6,000 mining jobs annually through 2034, according to Chilean industry data.

Gold hub

Kinross plans to develop Lobo Marte at roughly 4,200 metres elevation across 23.12 sq. km using a series of open pits at Marte and Lobo. Ore is to move by truck to a primary crusher and heap leach operation, while water would come from existing wells operated by subsidiary Mantos de Oro. Power would be supplied through a 220-kilovolt transmission line connected by upgraded regional roads.

Construction is slated for 2027-2030, with production targeted early next decade. Kinross said this year’s work will focus on engineering, technical studies and environmental baseline analysis.

The company also aims to extend operations at its nearby La Coipa mine through additional mining stages that could keep the complex operating into the 2030s. Kinross ultimately plans to integrate Lobo Marte into a broader Chilean gold district strategy extending beyond 2040. Chile currently accounts for about 11% of the company’s global equivalent gold production.

President Kast separately announced legislation aimed at simplifying Chile’s mining patent system, including reduced fees and streamlined permitting rules for smaller operators. The proposed reforms are intended to reduce administrative burdens and improve investment certainty across the sector.

Print

Be the first to comment on "Kinross bets $3B on Chile gold district growth"

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*