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Site visit: Perpetua Resources’ Gold Stibnite project in Idaho named preferred alternative – US Forest Service

admin by admin
November 15, 2022
in Mining


Mining continued throughout the end of the Korean War, in a manner prior to the onset of more stringent environmental regulations. Mined since the 1890’s, by the 1990s, the site was left a mess  – and 72 miles of upgrades are needed on the road. 

Known as Midas Gold until last year, Perpetua (Nasdaq, TSX:PPTA) moved its headquarters from Vancouver to Idaho, where it is restoring the historic brownfield site. 

The results of an independent feasibility study envision the project becoming one of the largest and highest-grade open-pit gold mines in the United States with over 4 million ounces of gold in reserve – and the country’s only primary producer of antimony. 

East fork of the south fork of a salmon river flows into the abandoned mining pit. Image: Amanda Stutt.

According to Perpetua’s January 2021 feasibility study, the project has total proven and probable mineral reserves of 104.6 million tonnes (Mt) grading 1.43 grams per tonne gold.

The mineral reserves include 14.2 Mt of high-antimony ore grading 0.42% antimony. The average annual metal production during the first four years of operation is expected to be approximately 463,000 troy ounces of gold and 18.4 million pounds of antimony per year.

This summer, Perpetua gained momentum on its legacy cleanup, bringing on IMCO Construction as a partner to begin water quality improvements in the Stibnite mining district. 

Water quality at the site was degraded by elevated levels of arsenic and antimony from millions of tonnes of unconstrained tailings and other mine waste left behind by previous operators over the last 100 years.

Perpetua has permission from the Environmental Protection Agency and the United States Department of Agriculture to conduct time critical early action cleanup activities.

The Yellow Pine pit is the crown jewel – and will be mined first.  Environmental remediation needed is where the east fork of the south fork of a salmon river flows into the abandoned mining pit, where Chinook salmon and Bull trout migrate up the river – meaning miles of critical habitat.

The project has been designed, in the first years of construction, to fix that source of sedimentation that is degrading habitat and water quality. 

Fish tunnel construction at Stibnite Gold project. Image: Amanda Stutt.

Onsite, it is evident that Perpetua is making progress building a fish passage tunnel. The plan is to re-route the river into a re-designed fish passageway to ensure the adults can get up the river, and the juveniles can get down. 

Stibnite river restoration will add seven to 11 additional miles to the fish migration route from habitat they are blocked from. 

The US Forest Service released in October the Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement (SDEIS) for the project.

This a major milestone in the advancement of the project and provides clarity for the remainder of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process, the company said. 

This month, Perpetua’s modified mine plan was identified as the preferred alternative due to improvements in water quality and temperature and site access benefits. 

The US Forest Service identified Perpetua’s project as the preferred alternative because plan incorporates water management and closure activities to reduce the duration of long-term water treatment requirements, includes measures to manage stream temperatures, and reduces potential impacts associated with access, transportation and hazardous materials on alternative access routes to the project site.

It also concluded the preferred alternative would reasonably accomplish the purpose and need for consideration of approval of the Stibnite Gold Project, while giving consideration to environmental,economic, and technical factors. Under NEPA, a “Preferred Alternative” is identified by a Federal agency in a DEIS to let the public know which action the agency is leaning toward selecting as final.

The Stibnite Gold project has a 15 year reserve life with a payback period of less than 3 years and an internal rate of return over 20% at the base case assumption of $1,600 per ounce gold price. 

Construction at the site, said CEO Laurel Sayer, is targeted to begin in 2024.

On November 17, Perpetua is holding an investor webinar to update on permitting progress and the SDEIS. Registration is here.





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