North America’s deepest gold mine, in northwestern Quebec, may soon get deeper. The LaRonde mine 56 kilometres west of Val d’Or, with a depth of 3.1 kilometres, could reach 3.7 kilometres in the latest development initiative by operator Agnico Eagle Ltd.
If the deep-level operation is successfully developed, the mine will have enough reserves to last an additional decade, to 2034, the company said.
Chief executive Sean Boyd, a 22-year Agnico veteran, has an engineering team working on the new 3.7-kilometre target level, seeking higher-grade ore and lower production costs to help LaRonde deal with bullion prices around the present $1,200 U.S. an ounce. Most of LaRonde’s ore now comes from the deeper levels.
Boyd told analysts Friday Agnico is working to extend LaRonde’s reserve base by targeting the 3.7-kilometre level and it has two drill holes under way. Drilling late last year added 444,000 ounces to LaRonde’s indicated reserves.
“We have a big exploration program underway this year in Canada and the LaRonde project is part of our long-term strategy,” he said.