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Base metal mines 2.5 times more costly in far north: report

It came as no surprise to the Mining Association of Canada (MAC) that it's more expensive to mine in the Far North than in the south, but thanks to a new report, the association has quantified that difference.
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In its report, called Levelling the Playing Field, the Mining Association of Canada found the capital costs for base metal mines are, on average, 2.5 times higher in the far north – such as the remote Ring of Fire deposit – than in the south.

It came as no surprise to the Mining Association of Canada (MAC) that it's more expensive to mine in the Far North than in the south, but thanks to a new report, the association has quantified that difference.

“In the case of base metals, or gold mines, the difference is really significant,” said Pierre Gratton, MAC president and CEO.

In its report, called Levelling the Playing Field, the association found the capital costs for base metal mines are, on average, 2.5 times higher in the Far North.

The capital costs for gold mines were around double in the north, and the capital costs for diamond mines were 15 to 20 per cent higher.

MAC defined the Far North as the territories, and northern and remote regions of the provinces, including the Ring of Fire deposit in northwestern Ontario.

Gratton said most mines in the north need to have very high grades, and to last for many years, to be viable investments.

But to meet growing demand for materials in emerging economies like China and India, Canada will need to step up to the plate, or the demand will be met by another country, Gratton said.

And the most potential for new mines in Canada, he said, lies in the Far North.

“We are seeing our industry go increasingly north,” Gratton said.

“Unless we change the current economic equation in the Far North, we're still going to go slowly, and only the highest quality and highest grade mines actually get built,” he added.

Part of that economic equation includes government investments in infrastructure, such as recent powerline extensions in British Columbia, and the Ontario government's promise to set aside $1 billion for infrastructure to the Ring of Fire.

“We would have liked to have seen it built a while ago, but we understand the issues there,” said Gratton, who delivered a similar message at an event in Sudbury last September.

In its report, the association recommended a number of tax incentives it believes would spur more mine development in remote regions.

“To support exploration, the group advocates for a new and enhanced federal Mineral Exploration Tax Credit (METC) for projects for these areas at 25 per cent versus the current 15 per cent, as well as financial incentives to make the costs of drilling for early-stage exploration projects more economically feasible,” the report said.

The association also called for a base 10 per cent tax credit for companies that operate in remote northern areas, in addition to either a 15 per cent investment tax credit for eligible infrastructure, or a pardonable 25 per cent conditionally repayable contribution for infrastructure investments.

“Maybe there's a way in which the tax system can try and recognize some of those infrastructure components you don't see in the south,” Gratton said.