The mining newspaper for Alaska and Canada's North

(545) stories found containing 'Western Alaska Copper'


Sorted by date  Results 426 - 450 of 545

Page Up

  • When the dust settles

    Shane Lasley, North of 60 Mining News|Updated Feb 1, 2018

    Alaska's mining industry captured the attention, not only of Alaskans but also the country during the past year when a controversy over the proposed Pebble Project in Southwest Alaska bubbled to the surface. Supporters and opponents of a ballot initiative aimed at blocking the mining venture squared off in a vocal and often strident campaign that made headlines nationwide. Alaska Miners Association director Steve Borell cited the contest over development the world-class...

  • Alaska explorers hit potential pay dirt

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Aug 30, 2009

    They say when it rains, it pours, and that is just what is happening with news from field programs all over Alaska. Results from summer 2009 programs are pouring in from the Brooks Range to Prince of Wales Island, from Eastern Interior Alaska to Southwestern Alaska. Commodities of interest range from the expected gold, silver, copper, lead and zinc to the nearly unpronounceable, including praseodymium, dysprosium, terbium, thulium, lutetium and yttrium. Go ahead, drop a...

  • Recession drives miners into mergers

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated Aug 30, 2009

    The recession is taking its toll among mining companies with properties in Alaska and northwestern Canada as mergers and acquisitions surged in this sector during the second quarter, in step with a global industry trend. Companies across the exploration and development spectrum from mining giants to the smallest juniors closed on deals with firms that are struggling to survive the recent cash crunch as independent entities. The Wall Street Journal reported in early August that according to data provider Dealogic, value of...

  • Junior accelerates work at Eagle Gold

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated Jul 26, 2009

    Victoria Gold Corp. is making good on its promise to put the Eagle Gold Project in east-central Yukon Territory on a fast track once its merger with StrataGold Corp. was completed. The Toronto-based junior June 29 reported the commissioning of a pre-feasibility study and a comprehensive project proposal that satisfies Yukon regulatory requirements and associated permits necessary for development of Eagle Gold, a sizeable, advanced, lower-risk project through its merger with Vancouver, B.C.-based StrataGold Corp., which...

  • 260,000 abandoned mines still mar West

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated Jul 26, 2009

    Though Alaska has more than 7,300 abandoned hardrock mine sites, most of which are located on federal lands, the state's problems are relatively small potatoes compared with the estimated 260,000 abandoned mines to be found scattered across the West, according to a 2008 study conducted by the U.S. General Accounting Office. GAO Natural Resources and Environment Director Robin M. Nazzaro, in testimony before a U.S. Senate panel July 14, said the GAO researched state mining royalties and abandoned mine sites - two issues that a...

  • Miners miss out on ample opportunities

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Jun 28, 2009

    I have been reading the tea leaves and think there is an extremely important sequence of events unfolding that represents a golden opportunity for Alaska. Please bear with me as I try to wade through the logic of this and you can tell me what you think. About two months ago, Brent Cook, a well-known mining analyst and owner of Exploration Insights, published a rather illuminating article entitled "Where Have All the Gold Mines Gone?" The upshot of his article was that most...

  • Mining industry gears up for new season

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated May 31, 2009

    Spring has arrived in Alaska and the mining industry is heading to the hills to do its work. Compared to last year, the state is a quiet place in the sun due to drastically reduced exploration and development budgets. Alaska's mines continue to benefit from the sharply reduced costs of power, diesel fuel, labor and other goods and services, but worldwide economic uncertainties have dried up the availability of venture capital for smaller exploration companies and have made...

  • Mantra seeks next gold find like Donlin

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated May 31, 2009

    Since Mantra Mining Inc. emerged in September as the vehicle in which NovaGold Resources Inc. would spinoff its non-core assets, the Vancouver B.C.-based junior has positioned itself to become a major player on the Alaska mining scene. Over the past eight months, Mantra has acquired whole or part interest in more than 417,000 acres of mining properties in western Alaska, assembled an impressive management team and board of directors (including two Thayer Lindsley award winners...

  • Miner eyes Yukon, northern B.C. projects

    Rose Ragsdale, For Mining News|Updated May 31, 2009

    If it were entirely up to Copper Ridge Explorations Inc., the project generator would explore most of its mineral properties in Yukon Territory, northern British Columbia and Alaska this summer. But tough economic times have forced the Vancouver, B.C.-based junior to pick and choose among its 12 key projects, betting precious dollars on a handful of ideas that could pay off with additional exploration by catching the eye of future partners or investors. Fortunately, some of Copper Ridge's projects have already hit that magic...

  • Rough days may be ahead for mining

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Apr 26, 2009

    Last month we talked about economic impacts of the Alaska mining industry. This month, the world mineral exploration industry is in our crosshairs. Halifax-based Metals Economics Group reported that 2008 worldwide nonferrous mineral exploration reached $13.2 billion, more than 2.5 times the previous peak exploration spending level reached in 1997. Add uranium exploration expenditures, and the total expands to $14.4 billion. Exploration spending would have been even higher...

  • Mining pay ranks No. 2 after oil and gas

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Mar 29, 2009

    There are some new stats out from the State of Alaska that I thought you might like to see. For 2008, the Alaska mining industry accounted for 3,500 direct jobs and 5,500 indirect jobs. The industry doled out US$350 million in payroll with the average salary totaling US$82,600 per year, which is 90 percent higher than the statewide average for all sectors. Mining salaries were higher than all other sectors, except for the oil and gas sector. The industry paid US$105 million in...

  • Mineral Roundup in Yukon Territory

    Updated Mar 29, 2009

    Yukon Territory has one producing mine, the Minto copper-gold-silver operation near the Yukon River north of Whitehorse. During 2008, more than 150 active hardrock exploration projects in the territory, 73 of which recording spending greater than C$100,000, and 22 posted outlays greater $1 million. Here's a look at some of the mining companies active in Yukon Territory. Producing mines Sherwood Copper Corp., now a part of Capstone Mining Corp., took the Minto Mine, Yukon Territory's only producing hard rock mine, to new...

  • Mineral Roundup in northern B.C.

    Updated Feb 22, 2009

    Producing mines Thompson Creek Metals Co. operates the Endako Mine, a molybdenum producer for more than 40 years. Located near Fraser Lake in northern British Columbia, Endako includes three open pits, a mill and a roasting facility, and is operated as a joint venture, with Thompson Creek holding a 75 percent interest and Japan-based Sojitz Corp. having the remaining 25 percent. The miner produced 25 million to 26 million pounds of moly in 2008. Due to a sharp drop in molybdenum prices last year, Thompson Creek decided...

  • Gold bucks trend by holding its own

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Jan 25, 2009

    Despite the strong price and increasing investment surge for gold, Gold Fields Mineral Services reported in it's Gold Survey 2008 summary that global gold mine production dropped 4 percent in 2008 to reach its lowest level since 1995. Australia, Indonesia and South Africa experienced the most significant declines in production with Mexico and Russia seeing increases in production. South African production plummeted by an estimated 14 percent, the sharpest percentage fall...

  • Alaska mining project roundup

    Updated Jan 25, 2009

    Alaska saw robust mining activity in 2008 across the full spectrum of the industry, from small placer operations to major producers, and from exploration programs to advanced development projects. Here is a look at companies reporting significant progress during the year. Placer mining Silverado Gold Mines Ltd. has recovered 26,879 ounces of placer gold from channel and bench deposits in the Nolan Valley through 2007. The largest nugget recovered from the property, located about 280 miles north of Fairbanks, weighed 41.35...

  • 2008: A truly memorable year for mining

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Dec 28, 2008

    As 2008 winds inexorably to a close, I found myself looking for words adequate to describe what will go down in history as one of the most memorable years in many a moon. Words like tumultuous, unpredictable, singular, turbulent, chaotic, confusing, and unsettling hardly do justice to the past year's events. As usual, the mining industry played its small but vital role in the scheme of world events. The first half of the year brought stratospheric commodity prices, while the...

  • Alaska mining industry faces credit crunch

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Nov 30, 2008

    Let me start this month's mining update by saying I am not a chartist nor do I believe economic cycles are controlled by cosmic forces known only to the mystics. That said, I do believe in cycles because I have lived and worked through more cycles in the mining industry than I care to remember. So a couple of observations seem in order as we plummet down the slope off another peak into what looks to be a pretty deep, chilly valley. First off, what goes up, must come down with...

  • Miners spend record $4 billion in 2007

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Nov 30, 2008

    Alaska's mineral industry set a new spending record of about $4 billion in 2007, up 13.3 percent from the value of the industry's expenditures in 2006, according to an 89-page report released Nov. 5 by the Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys and the Office of Economic Development. The industry's reported value, according to DGGS, is calculated by combining the amount spent on exploration and development with the production value of mines in Alaska. While 2007 was a...

  • Alaska mining industry faces credit crunch

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Oct 26, 2008

    The national sucking sound of venture capital exiting the mining industry has now expanded to a worldwide sucking sound as virtually all of the world's economies fight the massive, unprecedented credit crunch which started in the U.S. The mining industry is certainly not alone in feeling the down turn but its effects in Alaska began to be felt last month and continued this month as projects were shortened, plans down-sized or programs cancelled, all in an effort to preserve...

  • Junior mining companies active in Alaska exploration

    Updated Oct 26, 2008

    Full Metal Minerals Ltd. has 11 exploration projects spanning Alaska. The company's two primary projects are the Lucky Shot high-grade gold property about 90 miles north of Anchorage, and the LWM zinc-lead-silver prospect at its 40 Mile property in eastern Alaska. In a joint venture with BHP Billiton, Full Metal is exploring multiple copper-gold porphyry targets on 88,675 acres of Doyon Ltd. land in eastern Alaska. Full Metal has joint venture agreements with both major and junior mining companies, including Kinross Gold,...

  • Junior producers plan Mexi-Can merger

    Mining News|Updated Sep 28, 2008

    Sherwood Copper Corp. and Capstone Mining Corp. Sept. 8 said they signed a letter of agreement to combine their operations to create a copper mining company with two producing mines in mining-friendly jurisdictions in North America. The two companies agreed to combine on an "at-market" basis with Sherwood shareholders receiving 1.566 shares of Capstone for each share of Sherwood stock. The boards of directors of Sherwood and Capstone unanimously approved the transaction. Called a true merger by Sherwood President and CEO...

  • Mantra Mining emerges as spin-out vehicle

    Shane Lasley, North of 60 Mining News|Updated Sep 28, 2008

    Mantra Mining Inc. became a major mineral property landholder in Alaska literally overnight when it agreed to purchase more than 485,000 acres of mining claims from NovaGold Resources Inc. and Rio Tinto PLC. In a C$20 million deal Mantra bought NovaGold's interest in six western Alaska projects including its option agreement to earn a 51 percent interest in the Ambler project about 290 kilometers, or 180 miles, southeast of the Red Dog zinc mine. Mantra has agreed to pay $29...

  • Opportunities will mushroom for the bold

    Curt Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Sep 28, 2008

    With termination dust settling ever lower throughout Alaska, the bulk of the 2008 exploration season has been completed, but lots of results are still pending from projects around the state. As the exploration industry winds down, the Rock Creek gold mine started production bringing owner and operator NovaGold Resources Inc. its first operating mine and bringing Nome its first modern lode gold mine. While this was going on in our backyard, the financial markets were starting...

  • Involvement is keystone of Pebble plan

    Shane Lasley, North of 60 Mining News|Updated Sep 28, 2008

    We feel strongly that an informed public is an empowered public," the Keystone Center said in an early September report that attempts to identify the principle issues people have raised in regard to the proposed Pebble mine and to evaluate the desirability and feasibility of a process to discuss and possibly address those issues. Keystone was hired by the Pebble Partnership to assist it in developing the huge copper-gold-molybdenum Pebble deposit in Southwest Alaska into a...

  • Miners head into second half of 2008

    Curt J. Freeman, For Mining News|Updated Aug 31, 2008

    Several drilling programs started in the last month and several others began reporting initial results from programs commenced earlier in the summer. Two of Alaska's operating mines reported strong operating results and two new mineral resource estimates have been released. Alaska's seasonal exploration efforts are entering the second half of the season, while commodities prices continue to slide, inflation rates increase and operating costs increase. While nobody likes to admit it, there is mounting evidence that the mining...

Page Down