Shandong Gold eyes turnaround for struggling Canada Arctic mine – executive

13th August 2020 By: Reuters

Shandong Gold eyes turnaround for struggling Canada Arctic mine – executive

The Hope Bay mine in Canada's northern territory of Nunavut.

TORONTO – Shandong Gold Mining's bid to acquire a gold mine in the Canadian Arctic should be approved for economic reasons, the new head of its Canadian unit told Reuters.

Shandong Gold in May offered C$230-million for struggling TMAC Resources.

TMAC shareholders approved the deal in June but it still requires Canadian government signoff.

TMAC operates the Hope Bay mine in Canada's northern territory of Nunavut, a region of growing strategic importance as climate change makes shipping lanes and resources more accessible.

For that reason Canada could block the acquisition, lawyers and security analysts have said.

Shandong Gold is keen to revitalise Hope Bay, which has underperformed expectations, said Mark Wall, CEO of Shandong unit Streamers Gold Mining.

"The net benefit to Canada will be an international company focused on ... continuing to drive and expand Canadian employment and the broader spend from Canadian suppliers," he said on Tuesday.

The one-time Barrick Gold executive said he was not "directly engaged" with the Canadian government review of the transaction.

Canada's department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development, which oversees foreign investment, declined to comment on the status of the review.

Canada-China relations froze in late 2018, when Canadian police detained Huawei Technologies Co's CFO, Meng Wanzhou, on a US arrest warrant.

Hope Bay started production in 2017 and had proven and probable mineral reserves totaling around 3.54-million ounces of gold at the end of 2019, according to the company's website.