お知らせ • Oct 04
Marathon Gold Corporation Files Valentine Gold Project Environmental Impact Statement
Marathon Gold Corporation report that it has filed its Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Valentine Gold Project located in the Central Region of Newfoundland and Labrador (NL). The EIS has been submitted to the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada (IAAC) and the NL Ministry of Environment, Climate Change and Municipalities (NLDECCM). The submissions are part of the Environmental Assessment (EA) process for the Valentine Gold Project that commenced in April 2019 with the filing of a Project Description and a Project Registration to the federal and provincial regulators respectively. The EA is being conducted pursuant to the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act,2012 and the NL Environmental Protection Act. Over an initial 30-day review period, IAAC will assess the EIS for conformity with federal guidelines issued in July 2019. During this IAAC review, a provincial Environmental Assessment Committee established under the auspices of NLDECCM has agreed to commence an initial review of the EIS. Once determined to be conforming by IAAC, the EIS will be accepted into the formal federal and provincial technical review processes. These reviews are expected to occur over a period of approximately 12 months and include information requests and submittals, as well as public consultations. Permitting for site-specific activities related to the Project’s construction and operation would be expected to commence following successful release from the EA process. The EIS has been authored by Marathon and Stantec of St. John’s, NL, and utilizes extensive environmental baseline data collected at the Project site by Marathon and its consultants starting in 2010. It incorporates the results of a Current Land Use and Traditional Knowledge Study completed by the Qalipu Mi’kmaq First Nation, and an independent economic assessment of the Project completed by Strategic Concepts Inc. of St. Johns, NL. Starting in March 2019, and continuing through to the summer of 2020, a series of public meetings, engagements and information sessions on the Project were conducted with the Qalipu and the Miawpukek First Nations, the communities of Millertown, Buchans, Buchans Junction, Badger, Grand Falls-Windsor and Bishop’s Falls, and regional civil society groups. Feedback received from these sessions was incorporated into the Project’s planning and design process. The EIS assesses the potential environmental and social effects of the Project in fifteen separate areas of study, including water and air quality, wildlife, vegetation and wetlands, fish and fish habitat, communities, Indigenous groups, and the regional and provincial economies. A particular focus of study has been delineating potential effects on water quality and fish habitat through the placement of the Project’s infrastructure and facilities, and potential effects on the nearby Victoria Lake hydroelectric reservoir and dam. The EIS also describes the potential effects on migration of the Buchans caribou herd, one of several herds located in the Central Region of NL, which is known to transit seasonally through the area of the Project. In each of the fifteen areas of study, the EIS assesses and characterises the potential effects from the Project’s development, and the mitigation measures to be adopted with the aim of reducing the Project’s environmental footprint. Based on the Valentine Gold Project Pre-Feasibility Study released in April 2020, and the independent assessment completed by Strategic Concepts Inc., the Project is expected to have substantial economic benefits for both NL and Canada during 15-years of construction, operation, and rehabilitation. Utilizing a gold price assumption of USD 1350/oz, these benefits include: Creation of over 19,000 person years of total employment in Canada (direct, indirect and induced), including approximately 11,000 person years in NL; Average annual employment of nearly 1,300 person years of employment in Canada, including an annual average of 725 person years within NL; Generation of approximately CAD 1.3 billion in income to workers and businesses within Canada, including CAD 750 million to workers and businesses located within NL; Contribution of CAD 3.6 billion to Canada’s gross domestic product (GDP), which includes CAD 2.9 billion to NL’s GDP; Generation of approximately CAD 292 million in federal government revenues; and, Generation of approximately CAD 400 million (CAD27 million on an average annual basis) in incremental revenues to the treasury of NL.