Vancouver – Salazar Resources (SRL-V,SRLZF-O) and Dynasty Metals & Mining (DMM-T, DMMIF-O) announced they received approval to resume mining and exploration activities in Ecuador from the Ecuadorian Ministry of Mines and Petroleum.
They join a growing list of companies authorized to get back to work that, as reported by The Northern Miner on March 17, already includes Kinross Gold (K-T, KGC-N) and Corriente Resources (CTQ-T, ETQ-X).
The approvals have been trickling out from the Ecuadorian government on a company by company basis following the ratification of new mining legislation in January.
The legislation officially ended a nine-month ban on mining activities issued by the government in April, 2008, that it slapped in place so it could review mining laws.
The green light on field operations boosted Salazar’s share-price by 12¢ to close at 60¢. Dynasty’s share-price gained 11¢ to $4.70 on news of receiving its government approval.
Salazar says its drill crews are ready to restart exploration on its Curipamba property 100-km northeast of Guayaquil.
Salazar’s primary target on the Curipamba property is the Las Naves area where, at the El Domo zone, it managed to drill enough holes before the mining ban came into effect to produce an inferred resource estimate of 4.1 million tonnes grading 3.49 grams gold per tonne, 76.33 grams silver, 0.47% lead and 4.55% zinc.
Dynasty, with its approval now in hand, says that it has begun commissioning its Zaruma gold mine about 150-km south of the same city. Dynasty, which has estimated Zaruma’s resource at 1.6 million tonnes grading 13.93 grams gold in the measured category and 915,000 tonnes grading 13.87 grams gold in the indicated, expects the Zaruma gold mine to operate at a 300,000-tonne-per-year capacity once it reaches full production.
The Ecuadorian government’s thumbs-up on mining activity could also help ignite negotiations over the sale of Corriente. At the end of March Corriente reported that talks with an unnamed party, first announced last year, were continuing.
Much of Corriente’s value lies in its significant copper assets in Ecuador which include the Mirador, Mirador Norte and Panantza and San Carlos projects about 100-km southeast of Cuenca. At Mirador, for example, it has calculated a 438 million tonne indicated resource grading 0.61% copper, 0.19 gram gold and 1.5 grams silver.
One notable miner that hasn’t yet announced getting the go-ahead from the government is International Minerals (IMZ-T). Nor is that the company’s only concern in Ecuador.
International Minerals is having to contend with disgruntled locals at its Rio Blanco property 50-km west of Cuenca. The company says protesters, apparently unhappy about being laid-off in light of the government’s mining ban, recently occupied the property.
Negotiations with the protesters, International Minerals says, are underway.
International Minerals has estimated proven and probable reserves of 2.1 million tonnes grading 8.8 grams gold at Rio Blanco.
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