Pure Gold ramps up mill, fine tunes underground ops
In the first three months of 2021, Pure Gold processed 47,182 tonnes grading 2.8 g/t gold and generated 4,011 gold oz. In the last quarter of 2020, the company milled 3,535 tonnes at a head grade of 7.8 g/t gold.
Pure Gold has modified its blasting practices to reduce overbreak and shifted some stopes from longhole mining to mechanized cut and fill extraction (already the main mining method for the mine) to minimize dilution. Both stope accessibility and scheduling flexibility are expected to improve in the second quarter as the East ramp development advances. This second ramp has recently reached mineralization with stope access from the decline expected in April.
Based on a peak mill throughput of 897 t/d recorded on March 19, the company is now looking at the throughput and gold production as indicators of reaching a commercial production milestone. Pure Gold expects to announce initial production and cost guidance for the year shortly after the announcement.
Pure Gold has also entered into a binding agreement with Sprott Private Resource Lending to increase the principal amount of its debt by up tot $20 million; $12.5 million of this amount will be available on closing. The agreement also defers the payment of cash interest until the end of June.
“We are pleased by the progress of the ramp-up of the PureGold mine to date, highlighted by the milling facilities achieving design capacity prior to quarter end. With the mill ramp-up effectively complete, we can now focus our attention solely on ramping up the mine and accessing high grade ore from multiple declines where we are making great progress,” Darin Labrenz, president and CEO of PureGold, said in a release.
According to a 2019 feasibility study, the PureGold reserve grade of 9 g/t gold includes average annual grades between 6.3 g/t gold and 13.7 g/t gold. First-quarter stopes averaged between 5 g/t gold and 6 g/t gold, before overbreak. The study outlined probable reserves of 1 million oz., from 3.5 million tonnes at 9 g/t gold.
(This article first appeared in the Canadian Mining Journal)