Gabriel hits another snag at Rosia Montana

The Romanian government has suspended its environmental impact assessment review of Gabriel Resources’ (GBU-T, GBRRF-O) gold mine project at Rosia Montana, after two NGOs launched a court challenge to the process.

Alburnus Maior, an NGO based in Rosia Montana founded by local property owners opposed to the project, and the Open Society Institute, backed by billionaire philanthropist George Soros, are challenging the validity of an “urbanism certificate” used in the EIA documentation.

The certificate is required to obtain a construction permit.

Gabriel Resources says the certificate is merely an “information document” listing all the documents needed to apply for the construction permit.

“Anyone is entitled to ask for an urbanism certificate and the relevant local council is obligated to provide a copy to anyone who asks,” the company says in a press release. “It is not a permit or approval, and does not authorize the undertaking of any activities.”

The new court challenge will further delay the Canadian company’s 10-year battle to develop its 80%-owned gold property in Rosia Montana — a rural Transylvanian town.

Gabriel says the mine would pump more than $2 billion into the country’s economy and provide hundreds of much-needed jobs.

But protestors have long challenged the project on environmental and historical grounds. Opposition to the gold mine has also erupted in neighbouring Hungary, which has criticized the project’s plan to use cyanide. (Transylvania used to be part of Hungary.)

Gabriel Resources had hoped to receive EIA approval this summer. But it says the timetable will have to be pushed back by three months. Now it hopes to have construction permits and all other approvals in place by the first quarter of 2008, with the first gold pour in early 2010.

It’s been a long process. Gabriel submitted its 5,000-page, 10-chapter EIA in May 2006.

Alan Hill, president and chief executive of Gabriel Resources, was travelling in Romania and unavailable for comment.

Controversy over the Rosia Montana project has heated up over the last year with the release of two new documentary films.

In Mine Your Own Business, Irish filmmaker and former Financial Times journalist Phelim McAleer, interviews villagers near the project site who say the mine will bring renewed prosperity to their economically depressed village and clean up the environmental mess left over from hundreds of years of previous mining projects.

In another film, Gold Futures, aired on PBS in late August, Hungarian filmaker Tibor Kocsis interviews villagers who appear divided over the benefits of the proposed project.

Mine Your Own Business received most of its funding from Gabriel Resources, while Gold Futures, according to The Wall Street Journal website, listed its partners as Greenpeace, the Hungarian Ministry of Environment, and the George Soros-backed Energy Club of Hungary. (Soros was born in Budapest, Hungary.)

Gabriel estimates the cost of developing the Rosia Montana project — including capital, interest, financing and corporate costs — will be in the order of US$750 million. The company says it will finance the cost with about 20% equity and 80% debt.

Gabriel Resources posted a $6-million loss in its second quarter. More than half of that figure was due to unrealized foreign exchange losses on U.S. dollar cash balances held to finance future U.S. dollar development activities.

In Toronto, news of the court challenge sent Gabriel stock down 21.35%, or 76 apiece, to $2.80 on a trading volume of 8.3 million shares.

Print

Be the first to comment on "Gabriel hits another snag at Rosia Montana"

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*


By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. To learn more, click more information

Dear user, please be aware that we use cookies to help users navigate our website content and to help us understand how we can improve the user experience. If you have ideas for how we can improve our services, we’d love to hear from you. Click here to email us. By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. Please see our Privacy & Cookie Usage Policy to learn more.

Close