United States
Securities and Exchange Commission
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 6-K
Report of Foreign Private Issuer
Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16
of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
For the month of
April 2023
Commission File Number 001-15030
Vale S.A.
Praia de Botafogo nº 186, 18º andar,
Botafogo
22250-145 Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
(Address of principal executive office)
(Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.)
(Check One) Form 20-F x Form 40-F ¨
Technical Report Summary
Ontario Operations
Sudbury District
Canada
Report current as at: December 31, 2022
Qualified Persons | Signature | Date |
Mr. Darren Hodder, P.Geo. | /s/Darren Hodder | 23 March 2023 |
Ms. Tiffany Dube, P.Eng. | /s/Tiffany Dube | 23 March 2023 |
Mr. Charles Buck, P.Eng. | /s/Charles Buck | 23 March 2023 |
Dr. Xiaolin Yao, P.Eng. | /s/Xiaolin Yao | 23 March 2023 |
Ms. Lisa Lanteigne, P.Eng. | /s/Lisa Lanteigne | 23 March 2023 |
Ms. Monica Ansah-Sam, P.Eng. | /s/Monica Ansah-Sam | 23 March 2023 |
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Table of Contents
1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY | 16 |
1.1 Introduction | 16 |
1.2 Terms of Reference | 16 |
1.3 Property Setting | 16 |
1.4 Ownership | 16 |
1.5 Mineral Tenure, Surface Rights, Water Rights, Royalties and Agreements | 17 |
1.6 Geology and Mineralization | 18 |
1.7 History | 19 |
1.8 Exploration, Drilling, and Sampling | 19 |
1.8.1 Exploration | 19 |
1.8.2 Drilling | 19 |
1.8.3 Sampling | 20 |
1.8.4 Density Determinations | 20 |
1.8.5 Sample Preparation and Analysis | 20 |
1.8.6 Quality Assurance and Quality Control | 20 |
1.9 Data Verification | 20 |
1.10 Metallurgical Testwork | 21 |
1.11 Mineral Resource Estimates | 22 |
1.11.1 Estimation Methodology | 22 |
1.11.2 Mineral Resource Statement | 22 |
1.12 Mineral Reserve Estimates | 25 |
1.12.1 Estimation Methodology | 25 |
1.12.1.1 Underground | 25 |
1.12.1.2 Open Pit | 26 |
1.12.2 Mineral Reserve Statement | 26 |
1.13 Mining Methods | 28 |
1.13.1 Underground Operations | 28 |
1.13.2 Open Pit Operations | 29 |
1.13.3 Mine Life | 29 |
1.14 Recovery Methods | 29 |
1.15 Infrastructure | 30 |
1.16 Market Studies | 31 |
1.17 Environmental, Permitting and Social Considerations | 33 |
1.17.1 Environmental Studies and Monitoring | 33 |
1.17.2 Closure and Reclamation Considerations | 33 |
1.17.3 Permitting | 33 |
1.17.4 Social Considerations, Plans, Negotiations and Agreements | 34 |
1.18 Capital Cost Estimates | 34 |
1.19 Operating Cost Estimates | 34 |
1.20 Economic Analysis | 36 |
1.20.1 Introduction | 36 |
1.20.2 Methodology and Assumptions | 36 |
1.20.3 Economic Analysis | 37 |
1.20.4 Sensitivity Analysis | 37 |
1.21 Conclusions | 37 |
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1.22 Recommendations | 37 |
2 INTRODUCTION | 39 |
2.1 Registrant | 39 |
2.2 Terms of Reference | 39 |
2.2.1 Report Purpose | 39 |
2.2.2 Terms of Reference | 39 |
2.3 Qualified Persons | 40 |
2.4 Site Visits and Scope of Personal Inspection | 41 |
2.5 Report Date | 42 |
2.6 Information Sources | 42 |
2.7 Previous Technical Report Summaries | 42 |
3 PROPERTY DESCRIPTION | 43 |
3.1 Property Location | 43 |
3.2 Property and Title in Ontario | 43 |
3.2.1 Introduction | 43 |
3.2.2 Mineral Title | 43 |
3.2.2.1 Mining Claim | 43 |
3.2.2.2 Mining Lease | 45 |
3.2.2.3 Patented Claims | 45 |
3.2.2.4 Mining License of Occupation | 45 |
3.2.3 Order In Council | 45 |
3.2.4 Surface Rights | 46 |
3.3 Ownership | 46 |
3.4 Mineral Title | 46 |
3.4.1 Overview | 46 |
3.4.2 Mining and Surface Rights on Lands Leased to Vale | 46 |
3.4.3 Mining Licenses of Occupation | 59 |
3.4.4 Unpatented Mining Claims | 59 |
3.5 Property Agreements | 59 |
3.5.1 Roadways and Easements | 59 |
3.5.2 Access Agreements | 59 |
3.5.3 Glencore Canada Limited Bowtie Agreement | 59 |
3.5.4 Ventilation | 59 |
3.5.5 Export Agreements | 59 |
3.6 Surface Rights | 60 |
3.7 Water Rights | 60 |
3.8 Royalties and Streaming Agreements | 60 |
3.8.1 Royalties | 60 |
3.8.2 Streaming Agreements | 60 |
3.9 Encumbrances | 60 |
3.10 Permitting Requirements | 60 |
3.11 Significant Factors And Risks That May Affect Access, TITLE, Or Work Programs | 61 |
4 ACCESSIBILITY, CLIMATE, LOCAL RESOURCES, INFRASTRUCTURE AND PHYSIOGRAPHY | 62 |
4.1 Physiography | 62 |
4.2 Accessibility | 62 |
4.3 Climate | 63 |
4.4 Infrastructure | 63 |
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5 HISTORY | 65 |
6 GEOLOGICAL SETTING, MINERALIZATION, AND DEPOSIT | 68 |
6.1 Deposit Type | 68 |
6.2 Regional Geology | 68 |
6.3 Local Geology | 68 |
6.3.1 Geology and Stratigraphy | 68 |
6.3.2 Structure | 70 |
6.3.3 Mineralization | 70 |
6.3.3.1 Contact-Style Deposits | 70 |
6.3.3.2 Offset-Style Deposits | 70 |
6.3.3.3 Footwall-Style Deposits | 77 |
6.4 Property Geology | 78 |
6.4.1 Blezard | 78 |
6.4.1.1 Deposit Dimensions | 78 |
6.4.1.2 Lithologies | 78 |
6.4.1.3 Structures | 78 |
6.4.1.4 Mineralization | 80 |
6.4.2 Coleman | 80 |
6.4.2.1 Deposit Dimensions | 80 |
6.4.2.2 Lithologies | 80 |
6.4.2.3 Structure | 83 |
6.4.2.4 Mineralization | 84 |
6.4.3 Copper Cliff | 84 |
6.4.3.1 Deposit Dimensions | 84 |
6.4.3.2 Geology | 84 |
6.4.3.3 Structure | 84 |
6.4.3.4 mineralization | 84 |
6.4.4 Copper Cliff Pit | 87 |
6.4.4.1 Deposit Dimensions | 87 |
6.4.4.2 Geology | 87 |
6.4.4.3 Structure | 90 |
6.4.4.4 Mineralization | 90 |
6.4.5 Creighton | 90 |
6.4.5.1 Deposit Dimensions | 90 |
6.4.5.2 Geology | 90 |
6.4.5.3 Structure | 90 |
6.4.5.4 Mineralization | 92 |
6.4.6 Stobie | 92 |
6.4.6.1 Deposit Dimensions | 93 |
6.4.6.2 Geology | 96 |
6.4.6.3 Structure | 96 |
6.4.6.4 Mineralization | 97 |
6.4.7 Garson | 97 |
6.4.7.1 Deposit Dimensions | 97 |
6.4.7.2 Geology | 97 |
6.4.7.3 Structure | 100 |
6.4.7.4 Mineralization | 100 |
6.4.8 Garson–McConnell | 101 |
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11.12.3 Cut-off | 149 |
11.12.4 QP Statement | 149 |
11.13 Mineral Resource Estimate | 152 |
11.14 Uncertainties That May Affect the Mineral Resource Estimate | 152 |
12 MINERAL RESERVE ESTIMATES | 156 |
12.1 Introduction | 156 |
12.1.1 Underground | 156 |
12.1.2 Open Pit | 156 |
12.2 Development of Mining Case | 157 |
12.2.1 Underground | 157 |
12.2.2 Open Pit | 157 |
12.3 Dilution and Mine Recovery | 158 |
12.3.1 Underground | 158 |
12.3.2 Open Pit | 159 |
12.4 Cut-off Grades | 159 |
12.4.1 Underground | 160 |
12.4.2 Open Pit | 160 |
12.5 Ore/Waste Determinations | 160 |
12.5.1 Underground | 160 |
12.5.2 Open Pit | 160 |
12.6 Mineral Reserve Estimate | 160 |
12.7 Uncertainties That May Affect the Mineral Reserve Estimate | 163 |
13 MINING METHODS | 165 |
13.1 Introduction | 165 |
13.2 Geotechnical Considerations | 165 |
13.2.1 Guidance Documents | 165 |
13.2.1.1 Underground | 165 |
13.2.1.2 Open Pit | 165 |
13.2.2 Underground | 166 |
13.2.2.1 Geotechnical Designs and Support | 166 |
13.2.2.2 Backfill | 166 |
13.2.3 Open Pit | 167 |
13.3 Hydrogeological Considerations | 167 |
13.3.1 Underground | 167 |
13.3.2 Open Pit | 167 |
13.4 Mine Accesses | 167 |
13.4.1 Coleman | 167 |
13.4.2 Copper Cliff | 169 |
13.4.3 Creighton | 169 |
13.4.4 Garson | 169 |
13.4.5 Totten | 170 |
13.5 Mining Methods | 170 |
13.5.1 Open | 170 |
13.5.2 Longitudinal | 170 |
13.5.3 Transverse | 171 |
13.5.4 Slot–Slash | 171 |
13.5.5 Vertical Retreat | 172 |
13.5.6 Uppers Retreat | 172 |
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15.1 Introduction | 203 |
15.2 Roads and Logistics | 203 |
15.3 Waste Rock Storage Facilities | 203 |
15.3.1 Underground | 203 |
15.3.2 Open Pit | 203 |
15.4 Tailings Storage Facilities | 206 |
15.5 Slag Disposal Facility | 209 |
15.6 Water Management | 209 |
15.6.1 Water Management Strategy | 209 |
15.6.2 Water Treatment | 209 |
15.6.2.1 Copper Cliff Mine, Creighton Mine, Clarabelle Mill, Copper Cliff Smelter Complex and Copper Cliff Refinery | 209 |
15.6.2.2 Totten Mine | 210 |
15.6.2.3 Garson Mine | 210 |
15.6.2.4 Coleman | 210 |
15.6.3 Water Sources | 210 |
15.7 Built Infrastructure | 211 |
15.8 Camps and Accommodation | 211 |
15.9 Power and Electrical | 211 |
16 MARKET STUDIES | 213 |
16.1 Products | 213 |
16.2 Markets | 213 |
16.2.1 Nickel | 213 |
16.2.1.1 Demand | 213 |
16.2.1.2 Supply | 213 |
16.2.2 Copper | 214 |
16.2.2.1 Demand | 214 |
16.2.2.2 supply | 214 |
16.2.3 Cobalt | 215 |
16.2.3.1 Demand | 215 |
16.2.3.2 Supply | 215 |
16.2.4 Platinum | 216 |
16.2.4.1 Demand | 216 |
16.2.4.2 Supply | 216 |
16.2.5 Palladium | 217 |
16.2.5.1 Demand | 217 |
16.2.5.2 Supply | 217 |
16.2.6 Gold | 218 |
16.2.6.1 Demand | 218 |
16.2.6.2 Supply | 218 |
16.2.7 Comments on Market Studies | 218 |
16.3 Price Outlook | 219 |
16.3.1 Nickel | 219 |
16.3.2 Copper | 219 |
16.3.3 Cobalt | 220 |
16.3.4 Platinum | 221 |
16.3.5 Palladium | 222 |
16.3.6 Gold | 222 |
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22.6 History | 241 |
22.7 Exploration, Drilling, and Sampling | 241 |
22.8 Data Verification | 241 |
22.9 Metallurgical Testwork | 242 |
22.10 Mineral Resource Estimates | 242 |
22.11 Mineral Reserve Estimates | 243 |
22.12 Mining Methods | 243 |
22.13 Recovery Methods | 244 |
22.14 Infrastructure | 245 |
22.15 Market Studies | 245 |
22.16 Environmental, Permitting and Social Considerations | 246 |
22.17 Capital Cost Estimates | 247 |
22.18 Operating Cost Estimates | 247 |
22.19 Economic Analysis | 248 |
22.20 Risks and Opportunities | 248 |
22.20.1 Risks | 248 |
22.20.2 Opportunities | 250 |
22.21 Conclusions | 250 |
23 RECOMMENDATIONS | 251 |
24 REFERENCES | 252 |
24.1 Bibliography | 252 |
24.2 Abbreviations and Symbols | 253 |
24.3 Glossary of Terms | 254 |
25 RELIANCE ON INFORMATION PROVIDED BY THE REGISTRANT | 261 |
25.1 Introduction | 261 |
25.2 Macroeconomic Trends | 261 |
25.3 Markets | 261 |
25.4 Legal Matters | 261 |
25.5 Environmental Matters | 262 |
25.6 Stakeholder Accommodations | 262 |
25.7 Governmental Factors | 262 |
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Table of Tables
Table 1-1: | Ontario Operations, Measured and Indicated Mineral Resource Statement | 24 |
Table 1-2: | Ontario Operations, Inferred Mineral Resource Statement | 25 |
Table 1-3: | Proven and Probable Mineral Reserve Statement | 27 |
Table 1-4: | LOM Capital Cost Estimate | 36 |
Table 1-5: | LOM Operating Cost Estimate | 37 |
Table 3-1: | District Locations | 44 |
Table 3-2: | Mine Locations | 44 |
Table 3-3: | Smelter/Refinery Locations | 44 |
Table 3-4: | Mineral Title Summary, Ontario Operations | 47 |
Table 5-1: | Exploration and Development Summary Table | 66 |
Table 6-1: | Project Stratigraphy | 73 |
Table 6-2: | Mine-Scale Lithologies | 74 |
Table 6-3: | Key Structures, Sudbury Region | 75 |
Table 6-4: | Sulphide Mineralization Styles | 76 |
Table 6-5: | Dimensions, Coleman Zones/Orebodies | 83 |
Table 6-6: | Dimensions, Copper Cliff Zones/Orebodies | 86 |
Table 6-7: | Dimensions, Creighton Zones/Orebodies | 92 |
Table 6-8: | Dimensions, Garson Zones/Orebodies | 100 |
Table 6-9: | Dimensions, Totten Zones/Orebodies | 105 |
Table 6-10: | Dimensions, Victor Orebodies | 110 |
Table 7-1: | Drill Summary Table, Blezard, Coleman, Copper Cliff, Creighton | 116 |
Table 7-2: | Drill Summary Table, Garson, McConnell, Frood–Stobie, Copper Cliff Pit | 116 |
Table 7-3: | Drill Summary Table, Totten, Victor | 116 |
Table 8-1: | Analytical and Test Laboratories, Ontario Operations | 132 |
Table 8-2: | Lower Detection Limits (ALS Geochemistry) | 134 |
Table 9-1: | External Data Verification, Ontario Operations | 139 |
Table 10-1: | Clarabelle Mill Recoveries, 2016–2022 | 142 |
Table 10-2: | Combined Smelter and Refining Recoveries, 2016–2022 | 143 |
Table 10-3: | Long Term Average Processing Metal Recoveries | 143 |
Table 11-1: | Input Parameters | 151 |
Table 11-2: | Ontario Operations, Measured and Indicated Mineral Resource Statement | 153 |
Table 11-3: | Ontario Operations, Inferred Mineral Resource Statement | 154 |
Table 12-1: | Pit Optimization Input Factors, Copper Cliff Pit | 158 |
Table 12-2: | LOM Plan NPR Formula Input Parameters | 161 |
Table 12-3: | Proven and Probable Mineral Reserve Statement | 162 |
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Table 13-1: | Hydrological Considerations | 168 |
Table 13-2: | Mining Methods by Mine | 171 |
Table 13-3: | Ventilation Systems | 187 |
Table 14-1: | Key Equipment, Clarabelle Mill | 193 |
Table 14-2: | Equipment List, Copper Cliff Smelter | 199 |
Table 14-3: | Equipment List, Copper Cliff Refinery | 199 |
Table 14-4: | Equipment List, Port Colborne Refinery | 200 |
Table 14-5: | Equipment List, Clydach Refinery | 201 |
Table 15-1: | Current Mine Site Infrastructure | 204 |
Table 15-2: | Annual Power Usage | 212 |
Table 17-1: | Key Water Treatment Infrastructure | 227 |
Table 18-1: | LOM Capital Cost Estimate | 231 |
Table 18-2: | LOM Operating Cost Estimate | 232 |
Table 19-1: | Ontario Average Cashflows 2023–2148 | 235 |
Table of Figures
Figure 2-1: | Ontario Operations Location Plan | 40 |
Figure 3-1: | Townships with Land Depositions, Ontario Operations | 48 |
Figure 3-2: | Ontario Mineral Resource and Mineral Reserve Rights | 48 |
Figure 3-3: | Mineral Rights – Blezard Property | 49 |
Figure 3-4: | Coleman Property | 50 |
Figure 3-5: | Copper Cliff Property | 51 |
Figure 3-6: | Copper Cliff Pit Property | 52 |
Figure 3-7: | Creighton Property | 53 |
Figure 3-8: | Frood–Stobie Property | 54 |
Figure 3-9: | Garson Property | 55 |
Figure 3-10: | Kelly Lake Property | 56 |
Figure 3-11: | Totten Property | 57 |
Figure 3-12: | Victor Property | 58 |
Figure 6-1: | Deposit Models | 69 |
Figure 6-2: | Regional Geology of Sudbury Basin | 71 |
Figure 6-3: | Sudbury Basin: Simplified Stratigraphic Column | 72 |
Figure 6-4: | Schematic Section Showing Mineralization Types | 77 |
Figure 6-5: | Composite Cross-Section of North and East Range Deposit Types | 79 |
Figure 6-6: | Composite Cross-Section of South Range Deposit Types | 79 |
Figure 6-7: | Schematic Geological Section, Blezard (17500 N) | 81 |
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Figure 6-8: | Example Cross-Section, Blezard | 82 |
Figure 6-9: | Coleman Mine 153 Orebody (schematic section looking east) | 85 |
Figure 6-10: | McCreedy East Section (north–south) | 85 |
Figure 6-11: | Example Cross-Section, Coleman (Lower 70 east) | 86 |
Figure 6-12: | Local Geology of Copper Cliff Deposit | 88 |
Figure 6-13: | Example Cross-Section, Copper Cliff (865 orebody) | 89 |
Figure 6-14: | Geological Section, Copper Cliff Pit | 91 |
Figure 6-15: | Example Cross Section, Copper Cliff Pit (13,300 m east) | 91 |
Figure 6-16: | Geological Plan, Creighton Mine Area | 93 |
Figure 6-17: | Composite Cross Section, Creighton Mine | 94 |
Figure 6-18: | Example Cross Section, Creighton (4,500 east) | 95 |
Figure 6-19: | Frood–Stobie Generalized Geology Plan | 98 |
Figure 6-20: | Frood–Stobie Mineralization Type Distribution (long section) | 98 |
Figure 6-21: | Example Cross-Section, Block 37 (3150 N) | 99 |
Figure 6-22: | Garson Mine Typical Cross-Section (looking east) | 102 |
Figure 6-23: | Example Cross-Section, Garson (level 3250 E) | 102 |
Figure 6-24: | Example Cross-Section, Garson (level 3450 E) | 103 |
Figure 6-25: | Example Cross Section, McConnell (level 2750 east) | 104 |
Figure 6-26: | Worthington Offset Regional Geology | 107 |
Figure 6-27: | Example Cross Section, Totten (20,500 N) | 108 |
Figure 6-28: | Example Cross-Section, Totten (21,700 N) | 109 |
Figure 6-29: | Geological Plan, Victor–Nickel Rim South Extension Area | 111 |
Figure 6-30: | Example Cross Section, BL28 N (7,500 m east) | 112 |
Figure 6-31: | Example Cross Section, Victor Main (7,600 m east) | 113 |
Figure 7-1: | Drill Collar Location Plan, Blezard | 117 |
Figure 7-2: | Drill Collar Location Plan, Coleman | 118 |
Figure 7-3: | Drill Collar Location Plan, Copper Cliff | 119 |
Figure 7-4: | Drill Collar Location Plan, Creighton | 120 |
Figure 7-5: | Drill Collar Location Plan, Frood–Stobie Block 37 | 121 |
Figure 7-6: | Drill Collar Location Plan, Garson | 122 |
Figure 7-7: | Drill Collar Location Plan, Copper Cliff Pit | 123 |
Figure 7-8: | Drill Collar Location Plan, Totten | 124 |
Figure 7-9: | Drill Collar Location Plan, Victor–Nickel Rim South Extension | 125 |
Figure 11-1: | Example Wireframe Domains vs Drill Data, Victor Contact | 146 |
Figure 11-2: | Schematic Showing Unfolded Strings Relative to Composited Samples | 148 |
Figure 11-3: | Example Assigned Confidence Classifications, Creighton 310 Deposit | 150 |
Figure 12-1: | Pit Phasing, Copper Cliffs Pit | 159 |
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Figure 13-1: | Coleman Mine Cross-Section | 174 |
Figure 13-2: | Copper Cliff Mine Cross-Section | 175 |
Figure 13-3: | Copper Cliff Pit Plan View | 176 |
Figure 13-4: | Copper Cliff Pit Cross-Section | 177 |
Figure 13-5: | Creighton Mine Cross-Section | 178 |
Figure 13-6: | Garson Main Mine Cross-Section | 179 |
Figure 13-7: | Garson Mine–McConnell Cross-Section | 180 |
Figure 13-8: | Garson Mine–Garson Ramp Cross-Section | 181 |
Figure 13-9: | Totten Cross-Section | 182 |
Figure 14-1: | Process Overview Flowsheet | 190 |
Figure 14-2: | Simplified Comminution Flowsheet | 190 |
Figure 14-3: | Simplified Flotation Flowsheet | 191 |
Figure 14-4: | Schematic Flowsheet, Copper Cliff Refinery | 195 |
Figure 14-5: | Simplified Flowsheet, Clydach Refinery | 196 |
Figure 15-1: | Proposed Infrastructure, Copper Cliff Pit | 205 |
Figure 15-2: | Historical Plan for Central Tailings Area | 207 |
Figure 15-3: | Central Tailings Impoundment | 207 |
Figure 15-4: | Tailings Impoundment Detail Plan | 208 |
Figure 16-1: | Nickel Market Supply and Demand, 2021–2030 | 214 |
Figure 16-2: | Copper Market Supply and Demand, 2021–2030 | 215 |
Figure 16-3: | Cobalt Market Supply and Demand, 2022–2030 | 216 |
Figure 16-4: | Platinum Market Forecast, 2022–2030 | 217 |
Figure 16-5: | Palladium Market Forecast, 2022–2030 | 218 |
Figure 16-6: | LOM Nickel Price Forecast | 219 |
Figure 16-7: | LOM Copper Price Forecast | 220 |
Figure 16-8: | LOM Cobalt Price Forecast | 220 |
Figure 16-9: | LOM Platinum Price Forecast | 221 |
Figure 16-10: | LOM Palladium Price Forecast | 222 |
Figure 16-11: | LOM Gold Price Forecast | 222 |
Figure 19-1: | Annual Cashflow | 236 |
Figure 19-2: | Sensitivity Analysis | 237 |
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1 | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY |
1.1 | Introduction |
This technical report summary (the Report) was prepared for Vale S.A. (Vale) on the Ontario Operations in the Sudbury district of Ontario. Vale uses its wholly-owned subsidiary, Vale Canada Limited (Vale Canada), as operator of the Ontario Operations.
1.2 | Terms of Reference |
The Report was prepared to be attached as an exhibit to support mineral property disclosure, including mineral resource and mineral reserve estimates, for the Ontario Operations in Vale’s Form 20-F for the year ending 31 December, 2022.
Mineral resources are reported for the Blezard, Coleman, Copper Cliff, Copper Cliff Pit, Creighton, Garson, Stobie, Totten and Victor deposits. Mineral reserves are reported for the Coleman, Copper Cliff, Copper Cliff Pit, Creighton, Garson and Totten deposits.
The Ontario Operations consist of operating underground mines (Coleman, Copper Cliff, Creighton, Garson, and Totten), a proposed open pit mine at Copper Cliff Pit, and a potential open pit operation at Stobie, processing and refining facilities in Ontario (Clarabelle Mill, Copper Cliff Smelter and Nickel Refinery, Port Colborne refining complex), supported by the Clydach Refinery in Wales, non-operating mines, and non-producing properties.
Unless otherwise indicated, all financial values are reported in US currency (US$). The Canadian currency is the Canadian dollar (C$). The metric system is used in the Report unless otherwise noted. Mineral resources and mineral reserves are reported using the definitions in Subpart 229.1300 – Disclosure by Registrants Engaged in Mining Operations in Regulation S–K 1300 (SK1300). The Report uses Canadian English.
1.3 | Property Setting |
The Ontario Operations are located in the Sudbury district of Ontario. Sudbury is about 330 km north–northeast of Toronto.
There are excellent transportation routes that access the Sudbury area. Highway 17 is the main branch of the Trans-Canada Highway connecting the city to points east and west. Highway 69, also a branch of the Trans-Canada Highway, leads south to Parry Sound, where it connects to the Highway 400 freeway to Toronto. Highway 144 leads north to Highway 101 west of downtown Timmins. Access to the various mine and deposit sites is through a system of numbered municipal roads and private roads operated by Vale. Prospects and exploration areas are accessed via a network of municipal and local private roads.
The Greater Sudbury Airport is served by regional carrier lines. Sudbury is also served by rail. There are no other means of transportation that are used to access the operations.
The Ontario Operations are located in an area that has more than a hundred years of mining activity. As a result, local and regional infrastructure, and the supply of goods available to support mining operations is well-established. Personnel with experience in mining-related activities are available in the Sudbury district.
There are no significant topographic or physiographic issues that would affect the Sudbury Operations. The dominant vegetation type is temperate boreal forest.
The Sudbury district has a humid continental climate with warm and often hot summers and long, cold, snowy winters. Mining operations are conducted year-round.
1.4 | Ownership |
The Ontario Operations are wholly-owned by Vale Canada, a Vale subsidiary.
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The term “Vale Base Metals" refers to Vale’s base metals division led by Vale Canada, comprising nickel and copper mining, smelting, and refining assets in Canada, Brazil, Indonesia, the United Kingdom, and Japan, including the production and sale of cobalt, platinum group metals, and other precious metals as by-products of nickel and copper mining and processing operations. Vale Canada is the corporate head and holding company for its base metals operations and assets globally.
1.5 | Mineral Tenure, Surface Rights, Water Rights, Royalties and Agreements |
In the Sudbury district, Vale is the registered owner of mining rights and surface rights or a combination of both held under patented ownership, mining leases, mining licenses of occupation and unpatented mining claims.
Vale owns approximately 80,383 ha of patented mining rights and approximately 59,742 ha of patented surface rights which includes a combination of approximately 1,369 ha of mining and surface rights co-owned with other parties:
· | Patented mining rights are granted to exploit and extract minerals on, in or under the land, and surface rights are rights to use the surface of the land. These rights remain in effect so long as Vale owns the land to which these rights apply; |
· | Vale holds approximately 14,026 ha of land leased from the Province of Ontario. These leased lands, which include a combination of mining and surface rights, are leased for either 10 or 21 years. Annual rentals of C$3.00/ha are paid to the Province of Ontario to keep the leases in good standing; |
· | Vale holds licenses of occupation covering approximately 2,952 ha in Ontario of which approximately 17 ha are held jointly with other parties. Annual rentals of C$5.00/ha are paid to the Province of Ontario to keep these mining licenses of occupation in good standing; |
· | Vale currently holds unpatented mining claims covering approximately 9,676 ha in Ontario of which approximately 6,596 ha are held jointly with other parties. Unpatented mining claims are issued by the Province for the purpose of exploring the mineral potential and require that assessment work be performed to continue holding the claims. |
Municipal taxes and mining land taxes for each mine were paid in full for 2022. All assessment work due annually on the patented and unpatented mining claims was filed as at 31 December, 2022.
Vale has a number of third-party agreements in support of the Ontario Operations. Given the patchwork property holdings of mining companies within the Sudbury area, Vale has multiple road and property easements with various mining companies, in particular Glencore Canada Limited (Glencore), to grant access between each party’s properties for operation and exploration activities necessary for each other’s operations. Vale and Glencore have various corridor agreements permitting development of underground corridors by the requestor through the permittee’s subsurface rights area in order to access the requestor’s deposit area. Glencore uses its infrastructure (including the Fraser mine), local Sudbury work force and operational expertise to mine the adjacent Vale Bowtie deposit; Glencore purchases the ore mined from Vale. There is also an agreement with Glencore that allows reciprocity of ventilation to provide ventilation capacity necessary for each party’s operations in the Fraser mine/Bowtie area.
Vale and Silver Wheaton Corp (now Wheaton Precious Metals) executed an agreement in 2013 wherein Vale agreed to sell to Wheaton Precious Metals an amount of gold equal to 70% of the gold production from certain of its Sudbury mines, including the Coleman, Copper Cliff, Garson, Stobie, Creighton, and Totten mines and the Victor project for a period of 20 years. Wheaton Precious Metals made a total upfront cash payment in March, 2013 of US$570 million plus warrants to purchase 10 million shares of Wheaton Precious Metals common stock at a strike price of US$65, with a term of 20 years. In addition, Wheaton Precious Metals will make ongoing payments of the lesser of US$400/oz Au or the prevailing market price per ounce of gold delivered. There are no royalties or other similar payments made on the Ontario Operations mine properties within the Sudbury Basin other than that payable to Wheaton Precious Metals.
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Vale holds Order-in-Council (OIC) permits that allow it to export nickel, copper and precious metals products outside of Canada for further refinement. Each permit is granted for a five-year period, and to date, the permits have been renewed as required. The OIC permit for copper expires in April, 2027. The nickel and precious metals OIC permit is current until December, 2025. These permits are necessary for Vale to further refine its product to sell demanded products. There is a reasonable expectation that the OIC permits can continue to be renewed for the duration of the life-of-mine (LOM).
Vale holds applicable water take permits to support operations. Water take is permitted for the Vermilion River in the Sudbury mine, smelter, and refinery areas. The Port Colborne Refinery sources its water from the Welland Canal. While permits are in place to allow water extraction from the Swansea canal and the River Tawe for the Clydach Refinery, the water needs for the Clydach Refinery are met via a complex recycled, closed-loop, cooling water circuit.
1.6 | Geology and Mineralization |
Deposits within the Sudbury Igneous Complex (SIC) are type examples of nickel–copper mineralization arising from a meteorite impact.
The Sudbury magmatic copper–nickel sulphide deposits are part of the Paleoproterozoic Sudbury Structure which comprises the SIC and associated dykes, and the overlying Paleoproterozoic Whitewater Group rocks. Footwall rocks to the Sudbury Structure are Archean gneisses and granitic and mafic igneous rocks to the north and Paleoproterozoic metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks of the Huronian Supergroup to the south.
The Sudbury Structure is exposed as an elliptical ring with a northeast-trending long axis of ~72 km and a short axis of ~27 km. The upper northeast-trending contact of the surface expression of the SIC is often referred to as the North Range, similarly the South Range is associated with the areas along or near the southern surface exposure of the SIC contact. Margins of the SIC are characterized with an average inward dip of about 45º along the north part of the SIC; however, they are generally steeply dipping or overturned in the south and east sections.
Major components of the SIC include the differentiated norite–gabbro-granophyre Main Mass and a group of minor intrusions, collectively termed the Sublayer. Three major variants of the Sublayer are recognized: the first comprises igneous-textured gabbro–noritic material, the second consists of igneous-textured quartz diorite, while the third variant comprises a wide variety of metamorphic-textured rocks collectively known as “footwall breccia”. The Sublayer is localized either at the contact between the Main Mass and footwall rocks or within radiating and concentric dykes cutting footwall rocks. Sublayer units are characterized by disseminated to massive sulphide and by the presence of a variety of xenoliths of both local and unknown or “exotic” derivation.
Rocks of the Whitewater Group are found only within the central portion of the Sudbury Structure. The Whitewater Group consists of three conformable formations, in ascending order, the Onaping impact-generated breccias, Onwatin siltstone and wacke, and Chelmsford turbidite.
All rocks defined as footwall to the Sudbury Structure are cut by occurrences of the Sudbury Breccia. This breccia occurs as small veins, irregularly-shaped patches and large bodies, which may extend for many kilometers along strike. The breccia consists of inclusions of locally-derived footwall lithologies within comminuted footwall rock.
The Sudbury Structure is cut by a number of regional and local mafic dyke swarms. The Murray and Creighton granitic plutons, part of the Cartier batholith, intrude the Huronian Supergroup, and predate the impact.
The Sudbury deposits host three principal styles of mineralization contact style, offset style and footwall style. However, the three mineralization environments can be quite variable, can be transitional, and many exhibit characteristics fitting more than one mineralization environment description.
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Two types of Footwall-style deposits are identified in the North Range. These are massive sulphide copper–platinum group element (PGM) deposits and low-sulphide high-PGM deposits. Low-sulphide–high-PGM, and to a lesser extent massive sulphide copper–PGM deposits occur in the South Range.
Pyrrhotite is the most common sulphide mineral. Chalcopyrite is the main copper-bearing mineral and second most common sulphide mineral. Chalcopyrite is typically (but not always) associated with elevated PGEs and precious metals. Pentlandite is the main nickel mineral and is present in all ore types.
The Ontario Operations continue to actively explore within the current mining operations area, and the majority of deposits remain open at depth. Brownfield exploration is focused on areas in the Sudbury basin within a reasonable radius of existing infrastructure. Greenfields exploration is conducted throughout the Ontario Operations area to identify new stand-alone nickel and copper deposits.
1.7 | History |
The Ontario Operations have over 100 years of active mining history, and exploration activities date back to 1856 when nickel was first discovered. Vale obtained its interest in the operations in 2006, with a takeover of Inco, formerly the International Nickel Company of Canada, Limited.
1.8 | Exploration, Drilling, and Sampling |
1.8.1 Exploration
Each mine has its own mine grid. Survey information is generally collected in Imperial units.
The primary geophysical exploration methods applied include University of Toronto Electro Magnetometer (UTEM-4), televiewer, radio imaging method (RIM) and down-hole induced polarization (IP). These methods are used to identify areas of sulphide mineralization. The geophysical information is integrated with the drill hole database to improve deposit model interpretations and to act as vectors for exploration drilling.
1.8.2 Drilling
Drilling totals 61,375 core drill holes for 8,979,307 m of drilling on properties listed with current mineral resources. Total drilling for all Vale-owned properties within the Sudbury Basin includes 84,979 core drill holes for 13,218,063 m of drilling.
Drill holes are spaced at intervals as required by the type of mineralization and the information required (i.e., exploration or resource definition drilling), with the typical spacing being >100 m for exploration and 10–50 m for resource definition drilling. Current underground drill programs for exploration and operations purposes typically use a core size of BQ (36.4 mm diameter). AQTK (35 mm diameter) core has been used historically. Surface exploration drill programs are typically completed using NQ sized core (47.6 mm diameter).
Core recovery is generally good at all deposits. Areas of poor recovery are typically limited to fault and shear zones.
On surface, global positioning system (GPS) coordinates are used for collar locations, while underground, drill collar locations are measured from survey control points. Depending on the program, down-hole survey instrumentation could include single shot or multi-shot gyroscopic orientation tools. Earlier programs used acid tube tests. Historical boreholes with acid tube test surveys are occasionally resurveyed using a gyroscopic instrument for trajectory verification.
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1.8.3 Sampling
The core sampling interval is established by minimum or maximum sampling lengths and geological and/or structural criteria. The minimum sampling length is 15 cm while the maximum is 3 m. The typical sample length in the Contact-style massive sulphide zones is 1.5 m. In the Footwall-style copper zones, a 0.3 m sampling length is typical due to the presence of narrow, massive chalcopyrite veins. Samples of barren rock bracketing the mineralized zone are 1.5 m in length, regardless of the zone they are bracketing. The core from underground drilling is typically sampled in its entirety. Surface exploration programs split most mineralized intersections and store half of the core. Representative samples of each mineralized intersection are taken for future reference. One sample is taken for every 3 m of core or when the lithology changes. These “rep” samples are typically 10–15 cm in length and are not assayed.
1.8.4 Density Determinations
Density is currently estimated based on a multivariate regression of nickel, copper, and sulphur data which can be approximated using the following formula:
· | Density = 100 ÷ (100 ÷ 2.88 + 0.0166 x Cu - 0.1077 x Ni - 0.328 x S). |
Density data were reported using US customary tons per cubic foot (ton/ft3). Values ranged from a minimum of 0.0874 ton/ft3 to a maximum of 0.156 ton/ft3, with averages ranging from 0.097–0.107 ton/ft3.
1.8.5 Sample Preparation and Analysis
Vale used both internal and external laboratories for its sample analysis.
Analytical methods have varied over time. These have included, during the Inco operating period a multi-element X-ray fusion (XRF) method for copper, nickel, cobalt, iron, sulphur and arsenic; fire assay with silver bead being arced on an ARL spark emission spectrometer, direct current plasma and inductively-coupled plasma (ICP) analysis for gold, platinum and palladium, and occasionally for rhodium and silver; a base metal suite using Na2O2 fusion followed by ICP analysis; and PGM via fire assay/ICP- atomic emission spectroscopy (AES). Analytical methods requested by Vale include copper, nickel, cobalt, iron, sulphur, arsenic, lead, and zinc using a sodium peroxide fusion with an ICP-AES finish; lime, magnesia and silica could also be requested by the same method; PGM via lead collection fire assay fusion/ICP-AES finish; and arsenic and lead using an aqua regia digestion followed by an ICP-AES finish.
1.8.6 Quality Assurance and Quality Control
The sample preparation, analysis, quality control, and security procedures used by the Ontario Operations have changed over time to meet evolving industry practices. Practices at the time the information was collected were industry-standard, and frequently were industry-leading practices. The Qualified Person is of the opinion that the sample preparation, analysis, quality control, and security procedures are sufficient to provide reliable data to support estimation of mineral resources and mineral reserves.
1.9 | Data Verification |
Checks were performed by software data checking routines that rigorously verify data acceptance. All new assay data being added to the database were monitored daily and validated monthly for accuracy and consistency by comparing the data transferred to the Mines Exploration Borehole System (MEBS) database to the assay certificates received from ALS Vancouver. Several steps are employed to validate data and ensure the integrity of the MEBS database, the majority of which are performed by software data-checking routines. It is the operation qualified person’s responsibility to ensure that the database is validated and its integrity maintained by the direct supervision of one person (the database manager) who reports directly to the operation qualified person.
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Vale had data collection procedures in place that included several verification steps designed to ensure database integrity. Vale staff also conducted regular logging, sampling, laboratory, and database reviews. In addition to these internal checks Vale contracted independent consultants to perform laboratory, database, and mine study reviews. The process of active database quality control and internal and external audits generally resulted in high-quality data.
Vale currently uses a system of “layered responsibility” to ensure that only appropriately verified data are used for estimation purposes. The concept of a system of “layered responsibility” is that individuals at each level within the organization assume responsibility, through a sign-off or certification process, for the work relating to preparation of mineral resource and mineral reserve estimates that they are most actively involved in. Mineral reserve, mineral resource and exploration target estimates are prepared and certified by qualified persons at the mine site level, and are subsequently reviewed by qualified persons at the Vale Base Metals corporate level. Where there is more than one mine, the mine qualified persons prepare and sign on the estimates for their mine and provide them to the operations qualified persons, and then to the qualified persons at the Vale Base Metals corporate level.
Vale staff perform a number of internal studies and reports in support of mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation for the various Ontario Operations mines. These include reconciliation studies, mineability and dilution evaluations, investigations of grade discrepancies between model assumptions and probe data, drill hole density evaluations, long-range plan reviews, and mining studies to meet internal financing criteria for project advancement.
Vale and its predecessor companies commissioned a number of audits and third-party reviews of block models, mineral resources and mineral reserves.
As a result of these activities, data that have been verified on upload to the database, and checked using the layered responsibility protocols, are acceptable for use in mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation.
1.10 | Metallurgical Testwork |
The mineralogy and metallurgical performance of the sulphide deposits at the Ontario Operations are generally well understood due to the extensive drill hole coverage, mill performance records and mineralogical and metallurgical studies conducted over the last 100 years. These metallurgical studies, ranging from bench-scale to multi-tonne pilot testing, have included academic and industrial research and development of mineral separation. Based on these studies, flowsheet evolution and optimization has included processes such as magnetic separation, regrind circuits and various reagent additions.
The anticipated metal recoveries at the Clarabelle Mill are based on an empirical mill process model based on ore attributes (nickel: pyrrhotite ratio, nickel grade, etc.) which were developed internally by Vale personnel. The model rejects the same percentage of pyrrhotite from all the mineralization going to the mill at the same metal grades (annually adjusted to plan). Similarly, the rock tailings are rejected at the same metal grades (annually adjusted to plan) for all mineralization. The model contains assumptions as to the behaviour of typical ores based on grade and pyrrhotite content. Maximum allowable values for recoveries are set for ores that may exceed the known expected recoveries.
Tests were performed on samples that are considered to be representative for the different orebodies/zones and the mineralogy of the various orebodies and zones.
The deleterious elements for smelting are arsenic, lead, zinc, and chromium. With these typical deleterious element concentrations, the mill concentrate feed (nickel concentrate currently) for the smelter routinely meets smelter specifications. The element of the greatest concern is arsenic, and the overall blended feed into the plant is kept below 0.008% As.
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1.11 | Mineral Resource Estimates |
1.11.1 Estimation Methodology
Vale has a set of protocols and guidelines in place to support the estimation process, which the estimators must follow.
Estimation was performed as a team effort involving several technical disciplines.
All mineralogical information, exploration boreholes and background information were provided to the estimators by the geological staff at the mines or by exploration staff. Commercially-available Datamine software was used for estimation.
The mineral resource confidence categories were initially assigned based on a combination of factors, including geological understanding and confidence, drill hole support, grade estimation confidence relative to planned production rates, and identified risk factors. The initial assignments were reviewed to assess the impacts of factors such as metallurgical recoveries, geomechanical studies, mine design work, and representative mineability and recovery reconciliation analysis. Where mining has occurred or is currently active, the mined-out volumes were wireframed, classified as either void or fill, and overprinted upon the resource model to account for mining depletion.
For each mineral resource estimate, an initial assessment was undertaken that assessed likely infrastructure, mining, and process plant requirements; mining methods; process recoveries and throughputs; environmental, permitting, and social considerations relating to mining and processing methods; waste disposal; and technical and economic considerations in support of an assessment of reasonable prospects of economic extraction. All material is assumed to be blended at the Clarabelle Mill, and milling throughput rates will depend on the blending strategy in place at the mill at the time the material is processed.
Commodity prices used in mineral resource estimation are based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. This approach is considered reasonable for support of mineral resource estimates. The estimated timeframe used for the price forecasts is the 22-year LOM that supports the mineral reserve estimates.
The mineral resources are reported at varying cut-off values, which are based primarily on the mining method that will be used. Process and G&A costs are based on the assumption that material will be sent to, and blended at, the Clarabelle Mill.
1.11.2 Mineral Resource Statement
Mineral resources current as at 31 December, 2022, are reported using the mineral resource definitions set out in SK1300, and are reported exclusive of those mineral resources converted to mineral reserves. The reference point for the estimate is in situ.
The measured and indicated mineral resource estimates for the Ontario Operations are provided in Table 1-1. The inferred mineral resource estimates are included in Table 1-2. The Qualified Person for the estimate is Mr. Darren Hodder, P.Geo., a Vale employee.
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Areas of uncertainty that may materially impact all of the mineral resource estimates include: changes to long-term metal price and exchange rate assumptions; changes in local interpretations of mineralization geometry such as pinch and swell morphology, extent of brecciation, presence of unrecognized mineralization off-shoots; faults, dykes and other structures; and continuity of mineralized zones; changes to geological and grade shape, and geological and grade continuity assumptions; changes to unfolding, variographical interpretations and search ellipse ranges that were interpreted based on limited drill data, when closer-spaced drilling becomes available; changes to metallurgical recovery assumptions; changes to the input assumptions used to derive the potentially-mineable shapes applicable to the assumed underground and open pit mining methods used to constrain the estimates; changes to the forecast dilution and mining recovery assumptions; changes to the cut-off values applied to the estimates; variations in geotechnical (including seismicity), hydrogeological and mining method assumptions; and changes to environmental, permitting and social license assumptions.
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Table 1-1: Ontario Operations, Measured and Indicated Mineral Resource Statement
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Table 1-2: Ontario Operations, Inferred Mineral Resource Statement
Mine/Area | Category | Tonnage (kt) |
Grade | |||||
Cu (%) |
Ni (%) |
Co (%) |
Pt (g/t) |
Pd (g/t) |
Au (g/t) | |||
Blezard | Inferred | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Coleman | Inferred | 679 | 3.0 | 0.5 | 0.01 | 2.8 | 3.8 | 1.2 |
Copper Cliff | Inferred | 2,357 | 1.5 | 0.9 | 0.02 | 1.3 | 1.3 | 0.6 |
Creighton | Inferred | 3,784 | 2.8 | 3.5 | 0.07 | 1.4 | 1.9 | 0.4 |
Garson | Inferred | 1,497 | 1.7 | 1.5 | 0.06 | 0.6 | 0.7 | 0.2 |
Copper Cliff Pit | Inferred | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Stobie | Inferred | 7,818 | 0.4 | 0.5 | 0.03 | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0.1 |
Totten | Inferred | 1,488 | 1.6 | 0.8 | 0.02 | 1.5 | 1.4 | 0.4 |
Victor | Inferred | 605 | 3.4 | 0.7 | 0.01 | 0.5 | 0.8 | 0.3 |
Total | Inferred | 18,227 | 1.4 | 1.3 | 0.04 | 0.9 | 1.0 | 0.3 |
Notes to accompany mineral resources tables:
1. | Mineral resources are reported using the mineral resource definitions set out in SK1300. The reference point for the mineral resource estimate is in situ. The estimate is current as at 31 December, 2022. The Qualified Person for the estimate is Darren Hodder, P.Geo., a Vale employee. |
2. | Mineral resources are reported exclusive of those mineral resources converted to mineral reserves. Mineral resources that are not mineral reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability. |
3. | The estimate uses the following key input parameters: open pit mining methods or underground bulk stoping or narrow vein cut-and-fill mining methods; copper sale price of US$6,100–8,150/t, nickel sale price of US$13,376–18,800/t, cobalt sale price of US$45,000–52,911/t, platinum sale price of US$1,124–1,290/oz, palladium sale price of US$925–1,400/oz, gold sale price of US$1,000–1,650/oz; variable copper recovery ranging from 75–88%, variable nickel recovery ranging from 67–92%; mine operating costs ranging from US$24–US$178/t mined, process costs ranging from US$35–193/t milled; general and administrative (G&A) costs ranging from US$2–$5/t milled; mining recovery ranging from 83–97%, and mining dilution of 3–20%. Costs, metallurgical recovery, and pricing data are shown as ranges, due to the variability in specific deposit requirements and timing of the associated estimate. |
4. | Numbers have been rounded. |
1.12 | Mineral Reserve Estimates |
The forecast mine life for the mineral reserves is 22 years (2023–2044).
1.12.1 Estimation Methodology
To publicly report a mineral reserve estimate, Vale Base Metals must intend to mine the mineralization as demonstrated by the inclusion of the mineral reserves in an operation or project's “Mineral Reserves only” LOM plan. The mineral reserve estimate must be supported by a mine plan, an annual technical report, and supporting files (including and not limited to: safety plan, driving layouts, execution schedules, production schedules, cost reports, capital outlay/procurement schedule and asset integrity system) for mineralization that is to be exploited from existing mine infrastructure (typically funded with operating costs or limited sustaining capital).
Mining plans and engineering studies were completed for all mineral reserve estimates. All engineering studies were at a minimum prefeasibility-level studies.
1.12.1.1 | Underground |
Mineral reserves that were estimated using underground mining methods typically assume a combination of bulk mining and cut-and-fill approaches. For each mine and mineral zone with mineral resources to be mined, a mining plan was developed that included selection of mining method, stope production sequencing, consideration of development, equipment and infrastructure requirements, and estimation of capital and operating costs.
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Based on the selected mining method, and using the resource block model, a mine design was prepared for each individual stope. Only measured and indicated mineral resources were converted in the stope design to estimate proven and probable mineral reserves. No measured mineral resources were converted to probable mineral reserves.
Economic cut-off grades were estimated for each mine and mining area and used to optimize the design of each stope. The mineralized zones contain multiple metals, each with different metal prices, resulting in a net processing return (NPR) formula being used to assign a dollar value to mineralization. The full mining operating cash cost per short ton is compared to the NPR value per short ton to determine if a given amount of material is ore or waste. Following stope design, the mineral resources contained within the stope outline were determined. Internal (planned) dilution was included in the mineral resource estimates.
Mining recovery (mineability) and external dilution factors were applied. These factors were estimated based on historical experience with the various mining methods at each of the mines, and were applied to each stope on a stope-by-stope basis after consideration of both the mining method and any local considerations at each mine that could impact mining.
The resulting mineral reserves in each stope for each mine were scheduled in the mine operations life-of-mine production plan. The LOM plan included capital, operating and corporate costs estimates, and was assessed for economic viability. All mineable units or stopes that were scheduled for mining were included in the mineral reserves and were tested in the overall Ontario Operations production plan. Material within any stopes that did not meet economic criteria following the financial analysis of the production plan were not converted to mineral reserves.
1.12.1.2 Open Pit
Only measured and indicated mineral resources were converted to proven and probable mineral reserves. For the Copper Cliff Pit the measured mineral resources were converted to probable mineral reserve based on uncertainties about the local historic underground workings and cave zones and the actual condition of the existing pit walls that are currently underwater.
Copper Cliff Pit mineral reserves were estimated using conventional open pit mining methods. Dilution of 5% was included in the optimization and the mining schedule. The assumed mining recovery for the Copper Cliff Pit was 98%. A marginal cut-off grade of C$10.00/t was used as the discriminator between ore and waste at the pit rim in the Copper Cliff Pit design and schedules.
Open pit mining for the proposed Copper Cliff Pit is planned at a rate of 7,500 t/d. There is a high waste stripping requirement. The proposed pit requires the existing pit to be dewatered (currently in progress) and expanded.
Pit designs were maximized to mine as much ore as practicable from within the pit constraints. The overall final pit strip ratio is 8.9:1 (waste to ore). The majority of waste rock stripping will occur in Years 1–4 and the majority of ore will be mined in Years 5–8. The target ore production rate is projected to be reached in Year 4, and will be maintained up until the final year of production when the mineral reserves are depleted. The ultimate pit for the Copper Cliff Pit is split into three operating phases that will be mined concurrently to provide greater scheduling and operational flexibility.
1.12.2 Mineral Reserve Statement
Mineral reserves were reported using the mineral reserve definitions set out in SK1300. The reference point for the mineral reserve estimate is the point of delivery to the process plant. Mineral reserves that are reported in Table 1-3 are current as at December 31, 2022. The Qualified Person for the estimate is Tiffany Dube, P.Eng., a Vale employee. Tonnages in the table are metric tonnes.
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Table 1-3: Proven and Probable Mineral Reserve Statement
Notes to accompany mineral reserves table:
1. | Mineral reserves are reported using the mineral reserve definitions set out in Subpart 1300 of Regulation S-K. The reference point for the mineral reserve estimate is the point of delivery to the process plant. The estimate is current as at December 31, 2022. The Qualified Person for the estimate is Tiffany Dube, P.Eng., a Vale employee. |
2. | The estimates use the following key input parameters: bulk stoping or narrow vein cut-and-fill mining methods; copper sale price of US$6,100–7,500/t, nickel sale price of US$13,376–18,800/t, cobalt sale price of US$45,000–50,000/t, platinum sale price of US$1,200–1,225/oz, palladium sale price of US$925–1,400/oz, gold sale price of US$1,300–1,450/oz; variable copper recoveries ranging from 86–92%, variable nickel recoveries ranging from 75–88%; mine operating costs ranging from US$105–185/t mined; process costs ranging from US$80–195/t milled; mining recovery ranging from 83–87%, and unplanned dilution of 14–20%. Costs, metallurgical recovery, and pricing data are shown as ranges, due to the variability in specific deposit requirements and timing of the associated estimate. |
3. | Numbers have been rounded. |
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Areas of uncertainty that may materially impact all of the mineral reserve estimates include: long-term commodity price assumptions; long-term exchange rate assumptions; long-term consumables price assumptions; changes to mineral resources input parameters for those mineral resources converted to mineral reserves; changes to constraining stope designs; changes to cut-off grade and NPR assumptions; changes to geotechnical (including seismicity) and hydrogeological factors; changes to metallurgical and mining recovery assumptions; the ability to control unplanned dilution; and assumptions as to the continued ability to access the site, retain mineral and surface rights titles, maintain environment and other regulatory permits, and maintain the social license to operate.
1.13 | Mining Methods |
The Ontario Operations use conventional bulk stoping or narrow vein cut-and-fill mining methods, depending on the mine and geological setting. Conventional open pit mining is planned for the Copper Cliff Pit.
Underground mines are Owner operated, and use conventional equipment. The planned open pit will also use conventional equipment and be either Owner operated or operated by third-party contractor.
1.13.1 Underground Operations
Vale has technical guidelines and procedures in place to ensure that valid geotechnical data are collected and interpreted using appropriate methods, and that existing or planned risk mitigation measures that support mine designs are based on those data and interpretations. Geotechnical data collection and rock mass characterization are used to define geotechnical domains.
For each domain, ground support designs are specified that take into account geotechnical conditions, excavation service life and geometry, proximity to present and future openings, personnel exposure, local historical experiences, and local regulations. Geotechnical recommendations for vertical development, lateral development, and mining stopes, are provided. Legacy workings and drill holes with respect to mine plans are considered to ensure these hazards are mitigated.
All underground mines must have an effective Ground Control Management Plan, also referred to as the “Mine Design Package”, which is a single coherent document that must be developed through application of sound geotechnical engineering practices, conform to local mining regulations, and be aligned with Vale’s safety standards. Within the mine design package of each seismically active mine, there is a Seismic Management Plan. Five mines, Coleman, Creighton, Copper Cliff, Garson and Totten, are seismically active at year-end 2022. In December 2021, an independent Geotechnical Review Board was established to provide regular assessments and recommendations for managing geotechnical hazards at the underground operations and projects.
Either sand or mill tailings are used as a hydraulic backfill, with the type of fill materials dependent on the proximity of a mine to the Clarabelle Mill, and the availability of proximal alluvial sand sources. High-density (paste) backfill is only used at the Main zone of the Garson mine.
Hydrological planning relies on historical norms and information. Most of the water that reports to the underground operations is from three sources: pumped in, surface runoff and ground water. A large percentage of a mine’s process water is pumped in (approximately 50–70%); about 30–50% is derived from surface depending on the season, and, other than the Garson mine, only minor amounts are contributed from ground water.
Mines are accessed using a combination of shafts, declines, and internal ramps.
Several mining methods are used across the Ontario Operations: these include variations on open stoping (longitudinal, transverse, slot–slash, vertical retreat, uppers retreat), and mechanized cut-and-fill (post-pillar cut-and-fill, narrow vein cut-and-fill, drift-and-fill). Each mine has a substantial history of which mining methods work best under various geological and geotechnical conditions. This production record is considered when selecting the mining method.
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The ore and waste handling system varies at each mine. Ore can be transported using load–haul–dump vehicles to a central loading area or ore pass, and then trucked to an underground crusher, from where it is hoisted to surface; or, if the mine has decline access, it is trucked to surface. Most of the waste rock is used underground as fill, although some hoisting of waste rock can occur.
Each mine has a ventilation system in place. Some ventilation circuits are shared with Glencore operations.
1.13.2 Open Pit Operations
All open pit mines must have an effective Ground Control Management Plan, which is a single coherent document that must be developed through application of sound geotechnical engineering practices, conform to local mining regulations, and be aligned with Vale’s safety standards. The document covers a wide range of technical topics, similarly to the underground mines management plan. For the planned Copper Cliff Pit, a preliminary Ground Control Management Plan will be developed as part of the feasibility study.
The planned Copper Cliff Pit geotechnical design criteria will be refined as part of the planned feasibility study.
Significant water inflows into the Copper Cliff Pit are expected during mining, and a robust pit dewatering system was incorporated into the mine design.
The open-pit mining cycle includes drilling and blasting of ore and waste, ore loading and hauling to the process plant for processing or to stockpiles for process plant feed later in the mine life, and waste rock loading and hauling to a designated waste rock storage facility.
The planned Copper Cliff Pit will require special considerations for the drill-and-blast plan because the proposed pit is in proximity to other infrastructure, including the public Municipal Road 35, the Canadian Pacific rail corridor, several industrial sites, and historical underground mining operations. The designed pit will mine through a significant amount of inactive underground workings. The main concern with mining through underground workings is that there is a risk of sinkholes developing in the pit and that the presence of voids could lead to over blasting.
Ore control for Copper Cliff Pit will include geological mapping, assessment of production blasthole drill hole cuttings, production blasthole conductivity probing, block modelling of probe results for metal grade estimates and blast control, geologist visual ore/waste sorting of broken material where possible, and bench survey reconciliations.
1.13.3 Mine Life
Each mine has a production schedule that incorporates production and cost information for each producing area within the mine, based on mineral reserve estimates. Production schedules were limited by process and infrastructure constraints such as ventilation, drift development, load–haul–dump (LHD)/haulage, backfilling, and muck circuit/storage. The assemblage process activities were used to derive costs based on a combination of historical and budgeted rates. These plans were collated into an overall production schedule for the Ontario Operations. Based on this schedule, the forecast mine life is 22 years (2023–2044).
1.14 | Recovery Methods |
The process plant design was based on a combination of metallurgical testwork and familiarity gained during historical processing. The Clarabelle Mill was originally built in 1971 and subsequently underwent a number of major modifications. The hourly design throughput of the plant was based on a yearly throughput of approximately 8 M tons. The utilization calculation was based on the assumption that the plant would operate 350 days per year, with an availability of 92%, for a net utilization of 88.2%.
At the concentrator, the ore is crushed and ground and fed to the froth-flotation cells. The multi-staged froth flotation separates the sulphide minerals into a nickel concentrate and a copper concentrate. The tailings are disposed of in tailings ponds. The nickel concentrate typically averages 11% Ni and 4% Cu. The copper concentrate typically averages 31.5% Cu and 0.4% Ni. The plant is operated in such a way to place as much copper into the saleable copper concentrate as possible, then recover remaining copper and maximum possible nickel into a high-grade nickel–copper bulk concentrate to maximize the product net smelter return values.
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The copper concentrate is filtered and shipped to market buyers. The nickel–copper bulk concentrate is dewatered at the smelter, and upgraded to Bessemer matte by processing through fluid-bed roasters, electric furnaces, and Pierce–Smith converters. The magnetic metallics (containing nickel, copper, and precious metals) are sent to the Copper Cliff Refinery. The nickel sulphides are roasted in a fluid-bed roaster to produce nickel oxides which are then sent to the Copper Cliff Refinery in Ontario, or the Clydach Refinery in Wales.
The Copper Cliff Refinery complex includes three areas: nickel refinery converter (NRC), Inco pressure carbonyl (IPC) and electrowinning (EW). Nickel sulphides and oxides from the smelter complex and other feeds are blended and fed to top blown rotary converters, which produce a high-grade nickel matte. This matte is granulated and fed into one of three carbonylation reactors in the IPC, where nickel and trace iron are extracted by reaction with carbon monoxide. The mixture is separated into a pure nickel carbonyl stream and an iron/nickel carbonyl stream. Material from both streams is decomposed at high temperature to produce pure nickel pellets, pure nickel powders and ferro-nickel pellets, which are sold directly to market. The residue left in the reactor, high in copper, cobalt, and precious metals, is ground and pumped to the EW plant as a slurry.
In the EW process, copper is removed from IPC residue. Copper cathodes are plated from solution and sold to market. Three other products are made at EW: a nickel–cobalt carbonate slurry, a slurry-rich in precious metals containing platinum-group metals, silver and gold and a slurry enriched in platinum-group metals and selenium–tellurium. These are sent to Port Colborne for further processing.
Consumables used in the Clarabelle Mill include grinding media, lime, xanthate, electrical materials, lubricants, and maintenance supplies. Consumables used in the smelter and refineries include spare parts, electrical materials, maintenance supplies, refractories, sand, lime, soda ash, sodium hydroxide, acid, and chlorine. Water requirements and water sources vary by smelter/refinery location. The Clarabelle Mill, Copper Cliff Smelter, and Copper Cliff Refinery source freshwater from the Vermilion River, and recycle process water from plant operations or the Upper Pond Area (UPA). The Port Colborne Refinery sources its freshwater and process water needs from the Welland Canal. Water for use at the Clydach Refinery is sourced from a closed-loop recycling system.
1.15 | Infrastructure |
All major infrastructure to support the Ontario Operations mining activities envisaged in the LOM is in place.
No accommodations camps are operated. Personnel live either in Sudbury or in surrounding settlements.
Major infrastructure for the underground mine sites includes head frames; open, cold, and heated warehouses; mechanical and electrical shops; hoist room buildings; fan houses; sand plants; paste fill plants; backfill plants; first aid/security stations; training rooms; offices and change/shower facilities; management and technical services offices; sewage treatment plants; process water storage tanks and pump houses; fuel storage facilities; mine water treatment systems; surface repair facilities; slick line systems; dewatering pipelines; and fresh and return air ventilation systems.
Additional facilities will be required to support the Copper Cliff Pit, including ore handling and fine ore storage infrastructure (surface crushing facility; covered storage dome between crusher and rail load-out; rail spur connection to the existing rail line that is within 2 km of the Clarabelle Mill); waste storage area; maintenance facilities; and services and other support infrastructure (power supply and facilities; mine dewatering; office and dry facilities; automation and communication).
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Ontario Operations infrastructure also includes a tailings impoundment area, a slag disposal area, and an oxygen plant.
The processing facilities in Sudbury include a concentrator, a combined nickel and copper smelter, matte processing facilities, a carbonyl nickel refinery, a copper anode casting plant, a sulphuric acid plant and a sulphur dioxide liquefaction plant. Processing facilities at Clydach consist of a carbonyl nickel refinery. Processing facilities at the Port Colborne Refinery include an electro-cobalt refinery and precious metals upgrading facility.
The Copper Cliff tailings impoundment or Central Tailings Area became operational in 1936 and has become the primary management site for tailings generated from the Ontario Operations. The facility encompasses some 2,430 ha, and is divided into several areas according to eras of tailings disposal. The UPA and associated Upper Pond Dam received tailings from operations prior to the 1930s. The dams were subsequently used as water reservoirs for smelter operations.
Vale meets the requirements of the Ontario Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry Lakes and Rivers Improvement Act, uses safety guidance provided by the Canadian Dam Association, and internal risk management frameworks to ensure dam safety. Vale has undertaken numerous studies on the Central Tailings Area to update various aspects of the facility to meet current dam engineering practices. A detailed Operations Manual was developed and is regularly updated.
The smelter operation generates approximately 0.5 Mt of slag annually. Slag is taken to one of three locations on the Copper Cliff property, emptied, and the slag is allowed to cool. It is then broken up and sent to storage in one of two storage areas in the central and northeastern areas of the smelter that are designated for storage of cooled slag.
The general water management strategy for several facilities peripheral to the Central Tailings Area involves collecting and treating impacted runoff. The strategy is common to the Copper Cliff, Creighton and Stobie mines, Clarabelle Mill, the Central Tailings Area, UPA, Copper Cliff Smelter complex, Copper Cliff Refinery, and the Copper Cliff and Nolin Creek waste water treatment plants. Surface water over areas potentially affected by acid rock drainage is managed using two systems; the Copper Cliff and Nolin Creek water management systems.
Electrical power for the Ontario Operations is primarily sourced from grid supply (approximately 80%). Power is transmitted on the Hydro One transmission system and is connected to two locations in Sudbury and one in Port Colborne. In Sudbury, all incoming grid-connected power and hydroelectric generation is distributed to mines and processing plants through Vale’s electrical distribution network, consisting of 69 kV distribution power lines, substations, transformers, breakers, disconnects and other electrical equipment. This distribution system is owned, operated, and maintained by Vale. A portion of the demand (about 20%) is met by Vale’s hydroelectric power facilities. Vale consumes 100% of its self-produced hydro generation behind-the-meter, i.e., Vale does not supply power to the Ontario grid. The Clydach Refinery obtains all of its power from a local utility.
1.16 | Market Studies |
Vale has established contracts and buyers for the products from the Ontario Operations. Vale has an internal marketing group which monitors markets for its key products. Together with public documents and analyst forecasts, these data support that there is a reasonable basis to assume that for the LOM plan, that the key products will be saleable at the assumed commodity pricing.
None of the products from the Ontario Operations are subject to product specification requirements from end users to be saleable.
Vale uses a combination of contract pricing, knowledge of its key markets from a long production record, short-term versus long-term price forecasting, public documents and analyst forecasts when considering long-term commodity price forecasts. The long-term commodity price forecasts for the Ontario Operations are:
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· | Nickel: US$17,725/t; |
· | Copper: US$7,950/t; |
· | Cobalt: US$56,250/t; |
· | Platinum: US$1,175/oz; |
· | Palladium: US$1,175/oz; |
· | Gold: US$1,525/oz. |
The long-term C$:US$ exchange rate assumptions is:
· | 1.25. |
The terms contained within the refined nickel sales contracts are typical and consistent with standard industry practice and are similar to contracts for the supply of nickel throughout the world. Depending on the specific contract, the terms for the refined nickel sales are predominantly negotiated annually, or in the case of spot agreements, based on market terms negotiated at the time of sale. There are some instances where a longer contract duration may be negotiated, but this is typically the exception. The differences between the individual contracts are generally in relative quantity of refined nickel that is covered under the sale.
Vale has agreements at typical copper concentrate industry benchmark terms for metal payables, treatment charges and refining charges for concentrates produced. Treatment costs and refining costs vary depending on the concentrate type and the destination smelter. The terms contained within the concentrate sales contracts are typical and consistent with standard industry practice and are similar to contracts for the supply of copper concentrate throughout the world. Depending on the specific contract, the terms for the copper concentrate sale are either annually negotiated, benchmark-based treatment and refining charges, or in the case of spot agreements are based on fixed treatment and refining charges based on market terms negotiated at the time of sale. The differences between the individual contracts are generally in relative quantity of concentrates that are covered under annually negotiated treatment and refining charges.
The majority of the cobalt production is sold under annual or multi-year contracts. These contracts are based on market pricing using a negotiated formula based on the Fastmarkets cobalt price plus a premium or discount. The remaining production is sold on a spot basis. These sales are based on the current market pricing at the time of sale, using similar pricing methodology as described previously, or at a spot or fixed current market price. Any finished cobalt sales to affiliated parties are sold at market pricing similar to external parties.
PGM concentrate and gold sands are typically sold using spot pricing terms with end-users based on prevailing market conditions. As metals contained in copper products, the terms for gold and PGMs are determined through a payable mechanism on metal content based on typical market terms. As typical for concentrates, the product is generally contracted under a medium-term contract. A portion of Sudbury gold production is sold under a multi-year streaming agreement.
Intercompany agreements between Vale affiliates are negotiated at arm’s length based on market terms and rates that would be achieved had the contract been negotiated with an unaffiliated third party.
Contracts may be entered into with third-parties for goods and services required to operate underground mining operations. On occasions, mining contractors may be employed for specific mine development projects. The largest in-place contracts include transportation, purchase of fuel, reagents and other process consumables, ground support and mining equipment leases. The terms contained within the contracts are typical of, and consistent with, standard industry practices.
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1.17 | Environmental, Permitting and Social Considerations |
1.17.1 Environmental Studies and Monitoring
Vale’s Ontario Operations are one of the largest integrated mining complexes in the world, including both mines and processing operations, some dating back to the early- and mid-1900s. Environmental regulations and awareness have progressed significantly from the beginning of the Ontario Operations, and Vale has engaged in baseline studies, various improvement and legacy reclamation initiatives and other activities to ensure compliance as the regulatory regime changes.
All pertinent baseline information as per standard of the day is available in the closure plans for the mine sites and surface plants, including land use, topography, regional geology, local geology and mineralogy, soil, climate and hydrology, hydrogeology, terrestrial plant and animal life and aquatic plant and animal life, with relevant updates provided in the subsequent closure plan amendments.
As the mines and plant sites have continued to expand, supporting environmental studies have been completed to assess site environmental conditions, and to support permit applications and decision-making processes.
Characterization studies were completed for environmental media including soil, water, waste, air, noise and closure. Plans were developed and implemented for all Ontario Operation mine sites to address waste management, spill prevention and contingency planning, water management and fugitive dust management.
1.17.2 Closure and Reclamation Considerations
Vale has 16 closure plans for aspects of the Ontario Operations, covering the Central Tailings Area, Clarabelle Mill, the Copper Cliff Refinery, Crean Hill mine, Creighton mine, Frood–Stobie mine, Garson mine, Levack–Onaping–Coleman mines, Copper Cliff North mine, Port Colborne Refinery, Shebandowan mine and mill, Copper Cliff Smelter complex, Copper Cliff South mine, Whistle mine and Totten mine. Closure plans for all operating sites were submitted to the relevant regulatory authorities, and there are plans in place for three closed sites (Whistle mine, Shebandowan mine and mill site, and Crean Hill mine) in accordance with Part VII of the Ontario Mining Act. In 2022, Vale has continued to make final closure plan submissions to the Ministry of Mines. As of December 2022, three updated closure plans have been “Deemed Filed” by the Province (Copper Cliff North mine, Port Colborne Refinery, and the Levack/Onaping closure plan).
While the Ontario Operations uses "self-assurance" as its form of financial assurance for some surface facilities, a performance bond of C$297 million, in the form of letters of credit, was provided for 12 properties. Such bonding is a requirement in Ontario when the half-life of a mine is exceeded or where a facility has formally ceased operations. Vale is now approaching the half-life of all facilities in Ontario and, by the end of 2023, will no longer qualify for the “self-assurance” method of providing financial assurance.
Vale developed closure cost estimates associated with the chosen rehabilitation strategy for each property. The estimate also includes an expected schedule for closure-related expenditures. Closure costs are included in the mine site financial models as cash costs, on an annual basis for all sites. The largest closure costs are associated with the process plant and mining infrastructure. The escalated closure cost estimate for the Ontario Operations, as at year-end 2022, is US$2,633 million.
1.17.3 Permitting
All known and anticipated permits and approvals are in place to support operations. These include permits for air quality, noise emissions, taking and discharging water, and tailings, waste rock and waste disposal.
Where permits have specific terms, renewal applications are made of the relevant regulatory authority as required, prior to the end of the permit term.
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For new mining projects that may be incorporated into future mine plans, assuming mineral resources can be converted to mineral reserves with the appropriate supporting studies, the expectation is that environmental/impact assessments (if required) will be near completion, and the permits required for mine development will be understood and advancing, where possible, with baseline and supporting studies completed to facilitate application submissions and detailed design.
1.17.4 Social Considerations, Plans, Negotiations and Agreements
Vale routinely engages with five Indigenous communities in the Sudbury Basin including Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation, Wahnapitae First Nation, Sagamok Anishnawbek First Nation, Whitefish River First Nation, and the Métis Nation of Ontario – Region 5. Vale has signed agreements with Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation, Wahnapitae First Nation, Sagamok Anishnawbek First Nation and the Métis Nation of Ontario – Region 5. There are currently no known consultation obligations which would materially impact the mineral reserve estimates. However, consultation obligations may need to be satisfied before new areas that currently only have mineral resource estimates can be developed. In 2023, Vale intends to negotiate new agreements with Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation and Wahnapitae First Nation. With respect to the Totten mine, Vale has a signed Impact Benefit Agreement with the Sagamok Anishnawbek First Nation.
Vale does not currently have agreements or established relationships with Indigenous communities near the Port Colborne Refinery. This is largely due to the fact that the Crown has not identified any impact from the Port Colborne Refinery to Indigenous traditional territories in the region. However, Vale is proactively seeking to establish relationships and engagement routines with Indigenous communities in the region.
Due to the proximity of Vale’s Ontario Operations to local communities, the company continues to engage the local communities of interest that may be impacted by future development. There are a variety of communication channels for community engagement including Annual Reports to the Community, annual Open Houses, a Community Liaison Committee, a company website, local media relations and advertising. Vale has also established a grievance mechanism known as the Community Concerns Line to receive community concerns, complaints, and other matters; there are also a number of email communication channels to register grievances. These grievances are recorded in a grievance database and tracked for mitigation and conclusion.
1.18 | Capital Cost Estimates |
Capital costs are based on recent prices or operating data. Unit costs for in-house mine development are based on historical actual costs. Mobile equipment that is leased is included in operating costs. Lease periods typically range from two to five years. Lease costs are charged to capital while the equipment is doing capital work. Purchased equipment is allocated for in the capital plan. Mobile equipment and fixed asset costs are based on supplier quotations and/or current examples.
Sustaining capital cost forecasts are based on forecast mine development and construction needs, mobile equipment re-build/replacement schedules and fixed asset replacement and refurbishment schedules.
The overall capital cost estimate for the LOM is US$7,245 million as shown in Table 1-4.
The capital cost estimates presented in this Report demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve. This information may differ from other capital cost estimates Vale publishes on an annual detailed basis.
1.19 | Operating Cost Estimates |
Operating costs are based on actual costs from operations, and are projected through the LOM plan.
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Historical costs are used as the basis for operating cost forecasts for supplies and services unless there are current contract terms for these items.
Labour and energy costs are based on budgeted rates applied to headcounts and energy consumption estimates.
The long-term mine operating cost model accounts for the impact of varying production rates on the direct variable costs. As a mine approaches the end of mine life, indirect and distributed costs are reduced in line with the projected lower production rates.
The processing operating cost estimates are the budget year cash costs applied to the mineral reserves mined throughout the LOM plan. Such processing costs include both variable and fixed plant components. The mineral reserves throughput for the processing plant decreases relative to the strategic plan that includes externally purchased feeds and transfers of feed form other Vale operations over the LOM plan. As a result, the fixed cash cost component of the processing plant is stepped down in a logical progression as the feed decreases.
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Table 1-4: LOM Capital Cost Estimate
Area | Capital Cost Type | Unit | Value |
Mining | Annual capital development | US$ M | 1,221 |
Stoping and development | US$ M | 629 | |
Asset integrity | US$ M | 582 | |
Copper Cliff Mine Phase 3 Project | Project | US$ M | 540 |
Copper Cliff Mine Phase 4 Project | Project | US$ M | 831 |
Copper Cliff Open Pit Project | Project | US$ M | 316 |
Creighton Phase 5 Project | Project | US$ M | 1,001 |
Milling | Sustaining | US$ M | 761 |
Smelting and Refining | Sustaining | US$ M | 719 |
Other | Sustaining | US$ M | 643 |
Total | US$ M | 7,245 |
Note: Numbers have been rounded. Other costs include provision for elements such as the power department (electrical power generation and distribution), the divisional shops (custom parts repair and manufacturing), the transportation department, the environment department, and the central engineering department. Copper Cliff Phase 3 Project consists of mining studies on the 178 and 191 zones; Copper Cliff Phase 4 Project consists of mining studies on the 712 zone; Creighton Phase 5 Project consists of mining studies on mineralization below the 8590 Level.
Operating costs total US$18,395 million over the LOM (Table 1-5).
The operating cost estimates presented in this Report demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve. This information may differ from other operating cost estimates Vale publishes on an annual detailed basis.
1.20 | Economic Analysis |
1.20.1 Introduction
The aim of the economic evaluation presented in this Report is to demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve. The production rates, operating efficiencies, costs and expenditures, taxes and other information presented may differ from other information Vale publishes. The planned mine production may vary due to continuous mineral exploration and technical studies to add new mineral reserves.
1.20.2 Methodology and Assumptions
The financial model that supports the mineral reserve declaration is a standalone model that calculates annual cash flows based on scheduled ore production, processing recoveries, metal sale prices, a C$/US$ exchange rate, projected operating and capital costs and estimated taxes. The financial analysis is based on an after-tax discount rate of 7.5% following a mid-year convention and a long term C$/US$ exchange rate of 1.25. All costs and prices are in unescalated “real” dollars. The currency used to document the cash flow is US$. Operating cost estimates are based on fixed and variable expense definitions that are driven by planned activities and volumes. Capital cost estimates are derived from the budget rates and project studies and applied to planned development, construction, asset purchase and refurbishment requirements.
Revenue is calculated from the recoverable metal and the long-term forecast of metal prices and exchange rates. All inputs to the economic analysis are derived at a minimum of a pre-feasibility level of confidence.
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Table 1-5: LOM Operating Cost Estimate
Note: All numbers have been rounded.
Vale Canada Limited is subject to income and mining taxes, which are both profit-based taxes. The financial estimates are based on a combined federal and provincial income statutory tax rate of 25% and a provincial mining tax rate of 10%, before processing allowance. Depreciation rates for corporate income tax purposes have been applied, on a declining balance basis, at the base rates of 25% for depreciable tangible capital property and 30% for mine development. For mining tax purposes, depreciation has been approximated on a declining balance basis for mining (30%) and processing property (15%). Provincial mining processing allowance is further deducted as applicable. The mining tax paid is deductible for corporate income tax purposes.
The LOM plan assumes that active mining operation ceases in 2044; however, closure costs are estimated to 2148.
1.20.3 Economic Analysis
The post-tax NPV7.5% is US$995 million. As the cashflows are based on existing operations where all costs are considered sunk to 1 January 2022, considerations of payback and internal rate of return are not relevant. The financial analysis is based on an after-tax discount rate of 7.5% following a mid-year convention.
1.20.4 Sensitivity Analysis
A sensitivity analysis was performed on metal prices, metal recovered, capital costs and operating costs. Ontario Operations are most sensitive to the following, arranged in order from most to least sensitive, nickel price, nickel grade, operating costs, capital costs, copper price, and copper grade.
1.21 | Conclusions |
Under the assumptions presented in this Report, the Ontario Operations have a positive cash flow, and mineral reserve estimates can be supported.
1.22 | Recommendations |
The QPs make the following recommendations, which will require a budget of about US$116 million:
· | Complete the feasibility study and early works capital for Copper Cliff mine Phase 3 Project. This project envisages the development of the 178 and 191 zones to sustain production through the North shaft at the Copper Cliff mine. The recommended multi-year budget is about US$60 million, and includes provision for engineering and advanced development for collection of geological, geotechnical, and metallurgical data; |
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· | Complete a feasibility study to develop the Copper Cliff Pit. The deposit has the potential to provide low-cost mill feed from an open pit mine and use available capacity at the Clarabelle Mill. The proposed budget is approximately US$11 million; |
· | Complete a feasibility study on the development of the 400 and 310 zones, located at depth in the Creighton mine. A two-year budget allocation of about US$28 million is recommended, and work will focus on studying extension of ramp network at depth, to mine high-grade mineralization below the 8590 Level; |
· | Complete, in conjunction with Glencore, an updated feasibility study on developing the 24N, BL28, and NR14 zones, located at 1,500–2,800 m below surface at the Victor property. The study should focus on using existing Nickel Rim South mine infrastructure for the development evaluation. The proposed two-year budget is approximately US$17 million. |
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2 | INTRODUCTION |
2.1 | Registrant |
This technical report summary (the Report) was prepared for Vale S.A. (Vale) on the Ontario Operations in the Sudbury district of Ontario. Vale uses its wholly-owned subsidiary, Vale Canada Limited (Vale Canada), as operator of the Ontario Operations. Figure 2-1 is a location plan for the operations.
2.2 | Terms of Reference |
2.2.1 Report Purpose
The Report was prepared to be attached as an exhibit to support mineral property disclosure, including mineral resource and mineral reserve estimates, for the Ontario Operations in Vale’s Form 20-F for the year ending 31 December, 2022.
Mineral resources are reported for the Blezard, Coleman, Copper Cliff, Copper Cliff Pit, Creighton, Garson, Stobie, Totten and Victor deposits.
Mineral reserves are reported for the Coleman, Copper Cliff, Copper Cliff Pit, Creighton, Garson, and Totten deposits.
2.2.2 Terms of Reference
The Ontario Operations consist of operating underground mines (Coleman, Copper Cliff, Creighton, Garson, and Totten), a proposed open pit mine at Copper Cliff and a potential open pit operation at Stobie, processing and refining facilities in Ontario (Clarabelle Mill, Copper Cliff Smelter and Nickel Refinery, Port Colborne Refinery), supported by the Clydach Refinery in Wales, non-operating mines, and non-producing properties.
The term “Vale Base Metals" refers to Vale’s base metals division led by Vale Canada, comprising nickel and copper mining, smelting, and refining assets in Canada, Brazil, Indonesia, the United Kingdom and Japan, including the production and sale of cobalt, platinum group metals, and other precious metals as by-products of nickel and copper mining and processing operations. Vale Canada is the corporate head and holding company for its base metals operations and assets globally.
Unless otherwise indicated, all financial values are reported in United States (US) currency (US$) including all operating costs, capital costs, cash flows, taxes, revenues, expenses, and overhead distributions. The Canadian currency is the Canadian dollar (C$).
Ontario Operation’s day to day work and database records are in the U.S. Customary system of units, which are used to refer to mining equipment capacities, skip, hoist, and ore pass capacities, back fill rates, development rates and mine level designations as well as some analytical results.
Unless otherwise indicated, the metric system is used in this Report.
Mineral resources and mineral reserves are reported using the definitions in Subpart 229.1300 – Disclosure by Registrants Engaged in Mining Operations in Regulation S–K 1300 (SK1300).
The Report uses Canadian English.
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Figure 2-1: Ontario Operations Location Plan
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2021.
2.3 | Qualified Persons |
The following Vale employees serve as Qualified Persons (QPs):
· | Mr. Darren Hodder, P.Geo., Manager–Long Term Geology and In-Mine Exploration North Atlantic; |
o | Responsible for Chapters 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.6, 1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 1.11, that portion of Chapter 17.1.4 that pertains to social considerations, 1.22; Chapter 2; Chapter 3; Chapter 4; Chapter 5, Chapter 6; Chapters 7.1, 7.2; Chapter 8; Chapter 9; Chapter 11; Chapter 17.5; Chapter 20; Chapter 21; Chapters 22.1, 22.2, 22.3, 22.4, 22.5, 22.6, 22.7, 22.8, that portion of Chapter 22.16 that pertains to social considerations,22.20; Chapter 23; Chapter 24; and Chapter 25; |
· | Ms. Tiffany Dube, P.Eng., Manager–Long-Term Planning and Mine Design North Atlantic; |
o | Responsible for Chapters 1.1, 1.2, 1.12,1.13, 1.15, 1.16, 1.17.2, 1.17.4, 1.18, 1.19, 1.20, 1.21, 1.22; Chapter 2; Chapter 12; Chapters 13.1, 13.4, 13.5, 13.6, 13.7, 13.8, 13.9, 13.10, 13.11, 13.12; Chapters 15.1, 15.2, 15.3, 15.5, 15.7, 15.8, 15.9; Chapter 16; Chapter 17.3, 17.4, 17.5; Chapter 18; Chapter 19; Chapters 22.1, 22.11, 22.12, 22.14, 22.15, that portion of 22.16 that pertains to closure and social considerations, 22.17, 22.18, 22.20, 22.21; Chapter 23; Chapter 24; Chapter 25; |
· | Mr. Charles (Charlie) Buck, P.Eng., Manager–Milling and Technology North Atlantic; |
o | Responsible for Chapters 1.1, 1.2, 1.10, 1.14, 1.22; Chapter 2; Chapter 10; Chapter 14; Chapters 22.1, 22.9, 22.13, 22.20; Chapter 23; Chapter 24; Chapter 25; |
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· | Dr Xiaolin (Mike) Yao, P.Eng., Manager–Rock Engineering North Atlantic; |
o | Responsible for Chapters 1.1, 1.2, those portions of Chapters 1.13.1 and 1.13.2 that pertain to geotechnical and hydrological considerations, 1.22; Chapter 2; Chapters 7.3, 7.4; Chapters 13.2, 13.3; Chapters 25.1, that portion of Chapter 25.12 that pertains to geotechnical and hydrological considerations, 22.20; Chapter 23; Chapter 24; Chapter 25; |
· | Ms. Lisa Lanteigne, P.Eng., Manager–Environment North Atlantic; |
o | Responsible for Chapters 1.1, 1.2, 1.17.1, 1.22; Chapter 2; Chapter 15.6; Chapters 17.1, 17.2; Chapters 22.1, that portion of Chapter 22.16 that pertains to environmental considerations, 22.20; Chapter 23; Chapter 24; Chapter 25; |
· | Ms. Monica Ansah-Sam, P.Eng., Manager–Tailings and Dams North Atlantic; |
o | Responsible for Chapters: 1.1, 1.2, that portion of Chapter 1.15 that pertains to tailings storage and tailings storage facilities, 1.22; Chapter 2; Chapter 15.4; Chapters 22.1 and that portion of Chapter 22.14 that pertains to tailings storage and tailings storage facilities, 22.20; Chapter 23; Chapter 24; Chapter 25. |
2.4 | Site Visits and Scope of Personal Inspection |
Mr. Darren Hodder has visited all of the Ontario Operations mine sites on numerous occasions since 2020 in his role as Manager (2020–current), visiting all mines and Stobie core facility discussing grade control, geological mapping, exploration and delineation drill practices, diamond drill core logging, quality assurance and quality control (QA/QC), reconciliation and mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation practices.
Ms. Tiffany Dube has visited the Ontario mining operations both surface and underground on many occasions since 1993. She has worked at most of the mine’s operations and/or worked on many mining projects including FEL studies over her career. Her most recent visit was on 2 December 2022 where she visited the Copper Cliff mine, and the Copper Cliff South mine offices to discuss annual mine plans and integration of long-term plans for the complex.
Mr. Charlie Buck undertakes regular visits to the Ontario Operations. His most recent visit was December 13, 2022. Visits included reviews of metallurgical performance, equipment condition from a process performance point of view, and metals accountability.
Dr. Mike Yao has visited the Ontario mining operations on a regular basis, most recently on October 19, 2022. During the most recent site visit, Dr. Yao inspected the Creighton Alimak raise, and underground drifts at Creighton mine, reviewing recondition plans at #3 Shaft, reviewing the engineering design of Cooling Plant and Garage designs, mining plan for blocks in Phase 4. Dr. Yao also participated in the development of actions to address the geomechanics needs in the Phase 4 study identified for this study by all stakeholders.
Ms. Lisa Lanteigne has held the role of Environment Manager for first the Ontario Operations and subsequently Canadian Operations since 2010, though has worked within the environment team in various capacities since 1995. She is situated in Sudbury and is routinely in the field to conduct site visits and inspections. Field visits to all of the mines and plants are conducted, with a different area of the operations inspected weekly, to verify critical controls for significant environmental aspects, assess/monitor current and legacy environmental impacts, monitor progress of remediation projects, and engage with contractors undertaking the work, as well as to ensure compliance/adherence to all regulatory requirements and permit conditions. Site visits in 2022 include Coleman, Garson, Totten, North (as well as closed sites Crean Hill and Whistle) mines, Copper Cliffs Refinery, the Copper Cliffs Smelter, the Central Tailings Area, and the Clarabelle Mill. Port Colborne Refinery visits were conducted from April 3–5 2022, May 29–June 1 2022, and November 16–18 2022.
Ms. Monica Ansah-Sam has visited the Ontario Operation on numerous occasions, most recently on December 9, 2022. Emphasis during the various visits has been on the ‘Old Stack dams’ and R-Area tailings storage facility (TSF). Other areas of the facilities have also been inspected and visited by Ms. Ansah-Sam throughout 2022, with discussions on tailings management and dam safety practices with the Operations and Projects teams.
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2.5 | Report Date |
Information in the Report is current as at 31 December, 2022.
2.6 | Information Sources |
The reports and documents listed in Chapter 24 and Chapter 25 of this Report were used to support Report preparation.
2.7 | Previous Technical Report Summaries |
Vale filed a technical report summary on the Ontario Operations in 2021:
· | Gauld, C., Gardner, N.A., Hossack, A., and Puro, G., 2021: Technical Report Summary, Sudbury Property, Ontario Operations, Canada: report current as at December 31, 2021, prepared for Vale S.A., dated April 7, 2022, 232 p. |
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3 | PROPERTY DESCRIPTION |
3.1 | Property Location |
The Ontario Operations are located in the Sudbury district of Ontario. Sudbury is about 330 km north–northeast of Toronto.
The centroid for the Ontario Operations is approximately N46°29'29.0, W81°04'05.0, being the geographical co-ordinates of the bulk of the estimated mineral reserves and resources.
The geographical co-ordinates for the main districts within the Ontario Operations that are included in this Report are summarized in Table 3-1.
Geographical co-ordinates for the mine sites are provided in Table 3-2 and the locations of the smelting and refining sites are included as Table 3-3.
3.2 | Property and Title in Ontario |
3.2.1 Introduction
Until 1913, surface rights and mineral rights were acquired with land purchase. At that time, the Ontario government enacted legislation reserving land mineral rights to the Crown and granting leases to individuals or companies seeking to extract minerals. Where mineral rights are privately owned due to granting prior to 1913, they can be sold independently of surface rights, so that surface and mineral rights on the same property can be held by different owners.
The Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry is the main regulatory body for the administration of mineral property title and mining in the Province. The Canadian Federal Government may also be involved in the mining process where Indigenous matters arise, or where the subject lands are federally regulated, such as when the lands are classified as navigable water bodies.
Much of the Ontario area was originally subject to the Dominion Land System. The base of this system is the township, which contains 36 square miles. Townships are divided into 36 “sections”, each containing one square mile (640 acres or approximately 260 ha). Each section is further divided into four 160-acre quarter-sections. The townships are arranged in a grid system and are numbered consecutively from south to north beginning with Township 1, running along the US–Canada border. To provide the grid index from east to west, each north–south tier of townships is designated a range, and numbered consecutively, generally from east to west, from one of six meridians. Much of the Sudbury area is demarcated into townships using this practice.
3.2.2 Mineral Title
There are four main types of mineral title: mining claim, mining lease, patented claim, and mining licence of occupation. Vale’s Ontario Operations’ landholdings include each of these title types.
3.2.2.1 | Mining Claim |
A mining claim is a square derived from the Ontario Mineral Tenure Grid from an area of open Crown land (land that belongs to the Province of Ontario) or Crown mineral rights that a licensed prospector can stake online. The Ontario Mineral Tenure Grid (mining claims) splits the province into more than 5.2 million cells on a latitude and longitude grid, ranging in size from 17.7 ha in the north to 24 ha in the south. A cell claim is a mining claim that relates to all of the land included in one or more cells on the provincial grid. Cell claims can be amalgamations of up to 25 claim cells.
The Government of Ontario requires that work be performed on mining claims to retain an interest in the mineral rights. This work must amount to between C$200–C$400 per cell claim per year and be reported to the Mining Lands section of the Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry. Claims are forfeit if the claimant does not perform and report the work.
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Table 3-1: District Locations
Property | Latitude (north) |
Longitude (west |
Area (ha) |
General Location of Mining Rights (Townships) |
Copper Cliff | 46º30’7” | -81º5’24” | 2,295 | Snider and McKim |
Kelly Lake | 46º26’39” | -81º04’03” | 620 | McKim, Snider, Waters and Broder |
Creighton | 46º28’23” | -81º11’06” | 1,147 | Snider and Creighton-Davies |
Stobie | 46º32’22” | -80º59’28” | 711 | Blezard and McKim |
Garson | 46º33’41” | -80º51’39” | 820 | Garson |
Coleman | 46º40’1” | -81º21’1” | 368 | Levack |
Totten | 46º22’59” | -81º26’55” | 444 | Drury |
Ellen | 46º25’41” | -81º19’23” | 66 | Denison |
Capre | 46º41’49” | -80º50’18” | 414 | Capreol and MacLennan |
Copper Cliff Pit | 46º31’05” | -81º03’33” | 706 | Snider and McKim |
Victor | 46º40’31” | -80º48’50” | 353 | Capreol and MacLennan |
Crean Hill | 46º25’55” | -81º20’34” | 278 | Denison |
Cryderman | 46º35’01” | -80º46’19” | 304 | Falconbridge |
Blezard | 46º33’30” | -80º58’43” | 278 | Blezard |
Table 3-2: Mine Locations
Mine | Latitude (north) |
Longitude (west) |
Coleman | 46°40'37” | -81°20'21” |
Copper Cliff | 46°29'29” | -81°04'05” |
Creighton | 46°28'23” | -81°11'06” |
Garson | 46°34'02” | -80°51'26” |
Totten | 46°22'55” | -81°27'09” |
Table 3-3: Smelter/Refinery Locations
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3.2.2.2 | Mining Lease |
A mining claim can be converted into a mining lease. To convert a mining claim into a lease a letter of intent must be submitted to the Provincial Recording Office's Technical Services Unit any time after assessment work has been performed on the land and the work has been submitted and approved. After submitting the letter of intent, the land covered by the mining claim must be surveyed and the surface rights to the land must either already be owned by the lease applicant, be acquired if Crown land, or an agreement for surface lands use must be executed with the non-Crown landowner.
A lease grants the lessee with mineral resource rights ownership within the leased land, permits the extracting and sale of extracted mineral resources and removes the requirement to perform yearly assessment work. A mining lease cannot be transferred or mortgaged by the lessee without the prior consent of the Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry. Transfers require the lessee to submit various documentation and pay a fee.
To maintain a lease, rent must be paid annually. A lease expires after 10 or 21 years. In the case of 21-year leases, they can be renewed if the lessee can demonstrate that the required expenditures were carried out on the lease or on other contiguously-owned mining rights during the 21-year term of the lease. The 10-year mining leases can be renewed for additional 10-year terms by submission of a renewal application and fee.
3.2.2.3 | Patented Claims |
The title owner of freehold lands in Ontario holds a fee simple real property interest. Historically, the holder of a mining claim interested in removing minerals from the ground could, instead of obtaining a mining lease, apply to the Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry to acquire the freehold interest in the subject lands through the granting of a mining patent.
Such patents can include surface and mining rights or may only comprise mining rights. They give the patentee all of the Crown’s title to the subject lands and/or to all mines and minerals, as applied for, relating to such lands, subject to any reservations set out in the patent.
No regulatory consent is required for the patentee to transfer or mortgage those lands.
Patented claims are subject to annual Ontario mining taxes and, where surface rights are held, Ontario mineral land and municipal property taxes.
3.2.2.4 | Mining License of Occupation |
Mining licenses of occupation allow the holder to use the land in the manner specified in each license, including the right to dig, excavate and remove ores and minerals from and under the land. The Province of Ontario has the right to revoke licenses of occupation on 30 days prior notice.
3.2.3 Order In Council
In Canada, an Order-in-Council (OIC) is an executive instrument which, following formal approval by the Lieutenant Governor, functions as the official recorded Order of the Lieutenant Governor in Council. The instrument originates as a Recommendation to Council signed by a Minister or Premier, and is presented to Executive Council for consideration and subsequent approval by the Lieutenant Governor.
Subsection 91(1) of the Mining Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. M.14 provides that “all lands, claims or mining rights patented, leased or otherwise disposed of under this or any other Act or by any authority whatsoever, are subject to the condition that all ores or minerals raised or removed therefrom shall be treated and refined in Canada so as to yield refined metal or other product suitable for direct use in the arts without further treatment”. Given Vale’s refining processes includes operations outside of Canada, Vale regularly obtains exemptions from the operation of subsection 91(1) under OICs for the export of a portion of its production (see Chapter 3.5.5).
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3.2.4 Surface Rights
Surface rights refer to any right in land that is not a mining right. The process of acquiring surface rights for mining purposes depends on the owner of the rights:
· | No action is required if the surface rights are owned by the claim holder; |
· | Ownership of the surface rights will be granted to the claim holder during a lease application process if the Crown owns the surface rights; |
· | If the surface rights are privately owned by an individual or company then an agreement to allow the claim holder to use the land must be made with the surface rights holder. The agreement should include the compensation given if the land covered by the surface rights sustains any damages. Confirmation of an agreement with the surface rights owner is required for grant of a mining lease, or, upon application by the claim holder, the issuance of an order of the Mining Lands Commissioner indicating that surface rights compensation, if any, has been paid, secured, or settled. Under the Ontario Mining Act, a claim holder may apply to the Mining Lands Commissioner for expropriation of surface rights necessary for mine production from a surface rights holder in exchange for fair market value |
3.3 | Ownership |
The Ontario Operations are wholly-owned by Vale Canada, a Vale subsidiary.
3.4 | Mineral Title |
3.4.1 Overview
In each township, Vale is the registered owner of mining rights and surface rights or a combination of both held under patented mining claims, mining leases, mining licenses of occupation and unpatented mining claims. Table 3-4 provides a summary of the number and types of licenses with defined mineral resource/mineral reserve estimates, with the respective area in hectares.
Vale owns approximately 80,383 ha of patented mining rights and approximately 59,742 ha of patented surface rights which includes a combination of approximately 1,369 ha of mining and surface rights co-owned with other parties.
Municipal taxes and mining land taxes for each mine were paid in full for 2022. All assessment work due annually on the patented and unpatented mining claims was filed as at December 31, 2022.
Mining rights cover a portion of, or all of the areas of, the townships shown in Figure 3-1. Mining operations within the townships are also indicated in the figure. The total mineral rights area of the mineral resource and mineral reserve estimate footprint, determined by projecting mineral envelopes to surface and by itemizing mineral envelope boundaries by license changes, is 172 licenses (approximately 9,062 ha). Of these licenses, 168 are registered patents, two licenses are 21-year mining leases, one license is a mining license of occupation, and one license is an unpatented mining claim. Figure 3-2 to Figure 3-12 show the locations of the mining rights.
3.4.2 Mining and Surface Rights on Lands Leased to Vale
Vale holds approximately 14,026 ha of land leased from the Province of Ontario. These leased lands, which include a combination of mining and surface rights, are leased for either 10 or 21 years. Annual rentals of C$3.00/ha are paid to the Province of Ontario to keep the leases in good standing. Leased lands that have mineral resource/mineral reserve estimates were included in Table 3-4 by deposit.
Based upon experience in renewing similar leases, Vale does not expect any problems in obtaining renewals of the leases covering any of the land noted above which Vale would want to renew on a timely basis, since the only requirement for renewal is payment of a nominal renewal fee.
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Table 3-4: Mineral Title Summary, Ontario Operations
Notes: This table reflects relevant titles supporting disclosed mineral reserves and resources. Total Ontario licenses outside of the mineral resource and mineral reserve footprint total 97,032 ha. Some of the licenses are jointly held by Vale and third parties. Date format is month, day, year. Patent expiry dates renew annually but vary per patent. They are not included here for brevity of presentation.
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Figure 3-1: Townships with Land Depositions, Ontario Operations
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020.
Figure 3-2: Ontario Mineral Resource and Mineral Reserve Rights
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2021.
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Figure 3-3: Mineral Rights – Blezard Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020.
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Figure 3-4: Coleman Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2015.
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Figure 3-5: Copper Cliff Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2022.
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Figure 3-6: Copper Cliff Pit Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2021.
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Figure 3-7: Creighton Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2015.
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Figure 3-8: Frood–Stobie Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020.
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Figure 3-9: Garson Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2018.
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Figure 3-10: Kelly Lake Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020.
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Figure 3-11: Totten Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020.
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Figure 3-12: Victor Property
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2019.
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3.4.3 Mining Licenses of Occupation
Vale holds mining licenses of occupation covering approximately 2,952 ha in Ontario of which approximately 17 ha are held jointly with other parties.
Annual rentals of C$5.00/ha are paid to the Province of Ontario to keep these mining licenses of occupation in good standing.
Mining licence of occupation listings with mineral resource/mineral reserve estimates were provided in Table 3-4 by deposit.
3.4.4 Unpatented Mining Claims
Vale currently holds unpatented mining claims covering approximately 9,676 ha in Ontario of which approximately 6,596 ha are held jointly with other parties. Unpatented mining claims are issued by the Province for the purpose of exploring the mineral potential and require that assessment work be performed to continue holding the claims.
The mining claims in the Sudbury area were established based on Method 118 for Sectional Townships with Single Fronts under Survey Methods, R.R.O. 1990. Reg. 1029 under the Ontario Surveys Act, R.S.O. c. S.30.
3.5 | Property Agreements |
Vale has a number of third-party property agreements in support of the Ontario Operations.
3.5.1 Roadways and Easements
Given the patchwork property holdings of mining companies within the Sudbury area, Vale has multiple road and property easements with various mining companies, in particular Glencore Canada Limited (Glencore), to grant access between each party’s properties for operation and exploration activities necessary for each other’s operations.
3.5.2 Access Agreements
Vale and Glencore have various corridor agreements permitting development of underground corridors by the requestor through the permittee’s subsurface rights area allowing access to the requestor’s deposit area.
3.5.3 Glencore Canada Limited Bowtie Agreement
In order to facilitate the conduct of their respective mining and mineral processing businesses in the Sudbury, Ontario area, including at or about the Vale lands and the Glencore Fraser mine lands, Vale and Glencore entered into an agreement, the Bowtie Agreement, in 2011 under which Glencore will:
· | Use its infrastructure (including the Fraser mine), local Sudbury work force and operational expertise to mine the adjacent Vale deposit; |
· | Purchase the ore from Vale, all pursuant to and in accordance with the terms of the Agreement. The agreement permits ore extraction through an economically viable process. |
3.5.4 Ventilation
Under the Bowtie Agreement, Glencore and Vale agreed to provide ventilation capacity necessary for each party’s operations in the area.
3.5.5 Export Agreements
Vale holds OIC permits (see definition in Chapter 3.2.3) that allow it to export nickel, copper, and precious metals products outside of Canada for further refinement. Each permit is granted for a five-year period, and to date, the permits have been renewed as required. The OIC permit for copper expires in April 2027. The nickel and precious metals OIC permit is current until December, 2025. These permits are necessary for Vale to further refine its product to sell demanded products. There is a reasonable expectation that the OIC permits can continue to be renewed for the duration of the life-of-mine (LOM).
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3.6 | Surface Rights |
Surface rights held by Vale are discussed with the mineral tenure in Chapter 3.4. Surface rights were shown in Figure 3-3 to Figure 3-12.
3.7 | Water Rights |
Vale holds applicable water take permits to support operations (see also discussion in Chapter 15.6).
The permit for the Vermilion River is valid to 2030 and allows for an extraction rate of approximately 82 ML per day. There are reasonable expectations that the extraction permit could be renewed. The water is used by the mines, Clarabelle Mill, Copper Cliff Smelter, and Copper Cliff Refinery.
The Port Colborne Refinery water usage is grandfathered in and currently has no expiry date.
Water supply for the Clydach Refinery is permitted from the Swansea Canal and the Tawe River. The canal licence allows for a maximum water taking of 19,748 m3/day and has no expiry date. The river licence allows for a maximum water taking of 2,273,000 m3/a, and has no expiry date. The Eel Screen Exemption Notice currently in-place for the Swansea Canal has an expiry date of December 31, 2023, and the Eel Screen Exemption Notice currently in-place for the Tawe River has an expiry date of 31 December, 2025. A complex recycled, closed-loop, cooling water circuit was installed and phased into operation for the Clydach Refinery in mid-2022. Consequently, there is no longer a need to source water from either the river or the canal. The water licenses have been retained for emergency back-up purposes while the new system is fully integrated into the operation.
3.8 | Royalties and Streaming Agreements |
3.8.1 Royalties
There are no royalties or other similar payments made on the Ontario Operations mine properties that are the subject of this Chapter, other than those discussed below.
3.8.2 Streaming Agreements
Vale and Silver Wheaton Corp (now Wheaton Precious Metals) executed an agreement in 2013 wherein Vale agreed to sell to Wheaton Precious Metals an amount of gold equal to 70% of the gold production from certain of its Sudbury mines, including the Coleman, Copper Cliff, Garson, Stobie, Creighton, and Totten mines and the Victor project for a period of 20 years.
Wheaton Precious Metals made a total upfront cash payment to Vale in March, 2013 of US$570 million plus warrants to purchase 10 million shares of Wheaton Precious Metals common stock at a strike price of US$65, with a term of 20 years. In addition, Wheaton Precious Metals will make ongoing payments of the lesser of US$400/oz Au or the prevailing market price per ounce of gold delivered.
3.9 | Encumbrances |
Various utility and communication easements and rights-of-way traverse the surface rights held by Vale that provide utilities (gas, hydro-electric, water) and communications (telephone landlines, cell) to the surrounding communities. There are no known encumbrances that would impact the LOM.
3.10 | Permitting Requirements |
Permitting and permitting conditions are discussed in Chapter 17.4 of this Report for the Ontario Operations.
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There are no relevant permitting timelines that apply to the Ontario Operations; the operations as envisaged in the LOM plan are fully permitted.
There are no current material violations or fines as understood in the United States mining regulatory context that apply to the Ontario Operations.
3.11 | Significant Factors And Risks That May Affect Access, TITLE, Or Work Programs |
To the extent known to the QP, there are no other known significant factors and risks that may affect access, title, or the right or ability to perform work on the properties that comprise the Ontario Operations that are not discussed in this Report.
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4 | ACCESSIBILITY, CLIMATE, LOCAL RESOURCES, INFRASTRUCTURE AND PHYSIOGRAPHY |
4.1 | Physiography |
The major topographic feature of the area is the Sudbury Basin that forms an elliptical ring some 72 km in the northeast direction by 27 km wide. The topographically-higher outer portions of the Sudbury Basin are formed by igneous rocks of the Sudbury Igneous Complex (SIC). The northern, southern, and eastern parts of the rim are referred to as the North Range, South Range and East Range respectively.
Elevations range from 222–445 m above sea level with local relief in the order of 30–60 m.
The topography of the “rim” of the Sudbury Basin consists of relatively rocky hills with intermittent swamps and marshes, covered to varying degrees with mixed forest along the south range of the basin, and predominately coniferous to mixed forests on the north side of the basin.
The central part of the basin is occupied by low-lying flat agricultural land. The dominant vegetation type is temperate boreal forest.
4.2 | Accessibility |
Excellent transportation routes access the Sudbury Area. Highway 17 is the main branch of the Trans-Canada Highway connecting the city to points east and west. Highway 69, also a branch of the Trans-Canada Highway, leads south to Parry Sound, where it connects to the Highway 400 freeway to Toronto. Highway 144 leads north to Highway 101 west of downtown Timmins.
Access to the various mine and deposit sites is through a system of numbered municipal roads:
· | The Blezard deposit is located approximately 9 km north of the city of Sudbury. Access to the deposit area is via Regional Road 80N from downtown Sudbury. The deposit is then accessed by turning right onto a gated gravel road adjacent to Highway 69N approximately 1 km east of the entrance to the abandoned Glencore Thayer-Lindsley mine; |
· | The Coleman mine is located near the town of Levack, approximately 45 km northwest of the city of Sudbury. Access to the mine site is via Highway 35 (old Highway 144 then through the town of Levack. The private mine road from the town to the mine site is paved. For emergencies, a second road access is available to the mine site through Glencore’s operations; |
· | The Copper Cliff mine is located in the town of Copper Cliff and has two head frames. Access to North Head frame is via Highway 35 (old Highway 144), then west on Clarabelle Road. Access to the South Head frame is via Highway 55 (old Highway 17), then south on Power Street; |
· | The Creighton mine is located on the west side of the Greater Sudbury area. Access to the site is via McNaughton Street from Regional Road 24 or Main Street; |
· | The Garson mine is located immediately northeast of the town of Garson. Access to the site is via Church St. and Mine Road from Regional Road 86; |
· | The McConnell deposit part of the Garson mine and is accessed through the Garson mine. The deposit is located approximately 14 km northeast of the city of Sudbury. Access to the mine is via the Greater Sudbury Regional Road 55 and Falconbridge Regional Road 86 to the town of Garson. It is then approximately 3 km north on Church Street followed by Pine Street to the paved, private Garson mine road. The McConnell deposit is then accessed via the Garson mine portal; |
· | The Copper Cliff Pit deposit is part of Copper Cliff mine and is accessed through Copper Cliff mine, which is located 8 km west of the city of Sudbury. Access to the mine is via Regional Road 35 from downtown Sudbury, then Clarabelle Road which is a private gated Vale road. The mine is located approximately 3 km along the Clarabelle Road on the right side of the road. The Copper Cliff Pit deposit is located 3 km northeast of the Copper Cliff mine via an unpaved mine access road; |
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· | The Stobie mine is located close to the city centre of Sudbury. The mine is accessed from Frood Road (Rural Route 42) at the intersection of Lasalle Boulevard; |
· | The Totten mine is located approximately 40 km west of the City of Sudbury on the Worthington Offset dyke. Access to the property can be gained via Municipal Road 4 from Highway 17 West or by the Canadian Pacific Railway line that runs east west through the property immediately north of the Totten No. 2 shaft; |
· | The Victor deposit is located approximately 34 km northeast of the city of Sudbury. Access to the property is via the Greater Sudbury Regional Road 55 from downtown Sudbury, then Regional Road 86 through the town of Garson, and Skead Road passing Sudbury Airport and turning onto the Nickel Rim South mine road, and then a further 7 km north following the Victor mine road. |
Prospects and exploration areas are accessed via a network of municipal and local private roads.
The mill, refineries and smelter are accessed as follows:
· | The Clarabelle Mill is located approximately 7.5 km northwest of the city of Sudbury. Access to the mill facilities is via the Greater Sudbury Regional Road 49, 38 and 35 for 6 km, and turning left onto Clarabelle Road which is a gated private Vale road. The mill is located approximately 1.5 km along the road, on the left side; |
· | The Copper Cliff Smelter is located approximately 8.5 km northwest of the city of Sudbury. Access to the smelter is via Greater Sudbury Regional Road 49 and 55 from downtown Sudbury, turning right onto Balsam Street and following Benjafield Road turning right onto Veterans Road which is a private Vale road to the smelter entrance; |
· | The Copper Cliff Refinery is located approximately 12 km southwest of the city of Sudbury. Access to the refinery is via Greater Sudbury Regional Road 49 and 55 from downtown Sudbury for 11 km, turning left onto Noront Road and then left onto Industrial Road, which is a private Vale road for approximately 2 km; |
· | The Port Colborne Refinery is located in the city of Port Colborne, Ontario. Access to the refinery is via Clarence Street from downtown Port Colborne for 1 km, turning right onto Welland Street and then left onto Nickel Street for approximately 1 km. The refinery is situated at the corner of Davis and Nickel streets; |
· | The Clydach Refinery is located in the city of Clydach, Wales. Access to the refinery from downtown Clydach is via Hebron Road/B4603 for approximately 1 km, at the roundabout, take the second exit onto Ynyspenllwch Road/B4291. At the second roundabout, take the second exit and stay on Ynyspenllwch Road/B4291 until the refinery gate is reached. |
The Greater Sudbury Airport is served by regional carrier lines. Sudbury is also served by rail. There are no other means of transportation that are used to access the operations.
4.3 | Climate |
Sudbury has a humid continental climate with warm and often hot summers and long, cold, snowy winters. The annual average temperature is 5.5ºC. Precipitation is on average 861 mm annually.
Mining operations are conducted year-round.
4.4 | Infrastructure |
The City of Sudbury is the closest major regional centre.
The processing facilities in Sudbury include a concentrator, a combined nickel and copper smelter, matte processing facilities, a carbonyl nickel refinery, a copper anode casting plant, a sulphuric acid plant and a sulphur dioxide liquefaction plant. A copper refinery was closed in 2006. Major additional Ontario Operations infrastructure includes a tailings impoundment area, a slag disposal area, and an oxygen plant.
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An electro-cobalt refinery and precious metals upgrading facility are located at Port Colborne, Ontario. A portion of the production is sent to a carbonyl nickel refinery in Clydach, Wales.
The Ontario Operations currently have all infrastructure in place to support mining and processing activities (see also discussions in Chapter 13, Chapter 14, and Chapter 15 of this Report). Those Report Chapters also discuss water sources, electricity, personnel, and supplies.
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5 | HISTORY |
Exploration and development undertaken in the Sudbury district from the date of the initial nickel discovery in 1856 is summarized in Table 5-1 to 2010. The majority of this work was undertaken by Vale’s predecessor company Inco (formerly International Nickel Company). Vale obtained ownership of Inco in 2006. The period from 2010–2022 includes additional details to cover the most recent decade of mining.
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Table 5-1: Exploration and Development Summary Table
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Year | Comment |
2013 | CORe commissioning completed in October. Smelter complex to reduce to one furnace; later deferred to 2017. Underground expansion project completed at the 170 zone at Coleman. Totten changed status from a project to a mine. Mining studies at Copper Cliff Offset. |
2014 | Totten mine formally opened. Ellen operations transitioned from open pit to underground. Mining studies underway at Copper Cliff and Creighton. |
2015 | Production affected by seismicity at Stobie and Coleman Mines. Matte processing capability affected by electrical switch room fire. |
2016 | Production at Stobie affected by seismicity. Creighton mine production focused on new Division 6 area. Coleman transitioned from cut-and-fill to bulk mining methods. |
2017 | Transition at the smelter complex to a one furnace operation. Execution of the Clean AER project. Super stack will be decommissioned in 2019 and replaced by two smaller 450 ft. stacks. Stobie mine placed on care and maintenance. |
2018 | Completion of the Clean AER project. Commenced construction of first phase of Copper Cliff mine Expansion (South shaft construction). Production at Creighton, Copper Cliff and Garson affected by seismicity. Production interruption at Coleman to repair shaft. Mining studies underway on Copper Cliff (725/740 deposits). Closure of Acton precious metals refinery. |
2019 | Production at Garson affected by seismicity. Mining studies underway at NRD/Victor, Copper Cliff Pit, Capre and Cryderman. |
2020 | Five operating underground mines: Copper Cliff, Creighton, Coleman, Garson, Totten. One mill: Clarabelle Mill. One smelter: Copper Cliff Smelter. Three refineries: Copper Cliff, Port Colborne and Clydach. |
2021 | Production affected by labour disruption. Production interruption at Totten due to damage to shaft. Mining studies underway at NRD/Victor, Copper Cliff mine (Copper Cliff Pit, 178/191/712 deposits), Creighton mine, Blezard and Stobie. |
2022 | Completion of the Copper Cliff mine Phase 1 Project and first ore hoisted. Totten mine shaft repairs completed, and ore pass returned to functioning state. Production at Garson affected by seismicity. Mining studies continuing at Creighton mine, Coleman mine, Copper Cliff mine (Copper Cliff Pit, 191/178/712 deposits), NRD/Victor, and Stobie. |
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6 | GEOLOGICAL SETTING, MINERALIZATION, AND DEPOSIT |
6.1 | Deposit Type |
Deposits within the SIC are type examples of nickel–copper mineralization arising from a meteorite impact.
Deposit models for the Sudbury nickel deposits are based on the various relationships that arose in response to factors such as (Morrison et al., 1994):
· | Meteorite impact; |
· | Crustal melting; |
· | Long-lived differentiation of superheated sulphide saturated silicate magmas; |
· | Gravitational accumulation of sulphides; |
· | Remobilization of sulphides into dilational structures in the footwall. |
Nickel sulphide mineralization is located proximal to the base of the SIC in three main environments (Lightfoot, 2007):
· | Sublayer: Mineralization occurs in both small embayments (~500 m wide, 500 m long, and ~200 m deep) and sometimes as more continuous zones within troughs (~1 km wide, ~1 km deep, and extending for over 3 km); |
· | Radial quartz diorite dykes: Mineralization occurs in plunging lenses of inclusion-rich quartz diorite distributed at irregular intervals along the Offset Dykes; |
· | Footwall: Mineralization forms sharp-walled veins that cross cut the Archean gneisses for distances of several hundred meters away from the original base of the SIC and as continuous zones for distances of up to 1 km; locally these veins are associated with patches of trace disseminated sulphides that carry elevated precious metal abundance levels. |
Figure 6-1 is a schematic section illustrating the various deposit type models.
The geological exploration models are supported by deposit-scale surface and borehole geophysical surveys that effectively image the strongly-conductive sulphide mineralization in contrast to barren sulphides that can be hosted in the surrounding country rock (Lightfoot, 2007).
The meteorite impact model is appropriate for exploration purposes.
6.2 | Regional Geology |
The Sudbury magmatic copper–nickel sulphide deposits are part of the Paleoproterozoic Sudbury Structure which comprises the SIC and associated dykes, and the overlying Paleoproterozoic Whitewater group rocks. Footwall rocks to the Sudbury Structure are Archean gneisses and granitic and mafic igneous rocks to the north and Paleoproterozoic metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks of the Huronian Supergroup to the south.
6.3 | Local Geology |
6.3.1 Geology and Stratigraphy
The SIC is interpreted to be a differentiated impact melt sheet from a bolide collision that occurred approximately 1,850 million years ago. The Sudbury Structure is exposed as an elliptical ring with a northeast-trending long axis of about 72 km and a short axis of approximately 27 km. The upper northeast-trending contact of the surface expression of the SIC is often referred to as the North Range, similarly the South Range is associated with the areas along or near the southern surface exposure of the SIC contact.
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Figure 6-1: Deposit Models
Note: Figure from Lightfoot (2007).
Margins of the SIC are characterized with an average inward dip of about 45º along the north part of the SIC; however, they are generally steeply dipping or overturned in the south and east sections.
Major components of the SIC include the differentiated norite–gabbro-granophyre Main Mass and a group of minor intrusions, collectively termed the Sublayer. Three major variants of the Sublayer are recognized: the first comprises igneous-textured gabbro–noritic material, the second consists of igneous-textured quartz diorite, while the third variant comprises a wide variety of metamorphic-textured rocks collectively known as “footwall breccia”. The Sublayer is localized either at the contact between the Main Mass and footwall rocks or within radiating and concentric dykes cutting footwall rocks. Sublayer units are characterized by disseminated to massive sulphide and by the presence of a variety of xenoliths of both local and unknown or “exotic” derivation.
Rocks of the Whitewater Group are found only within the central portion of the Sudbury Structure. The Whitewater Group consists of three conformable formations, in ascending order, the Onaping impact-generated breccias, Onwatin siltstone and wacke, and Chelmsford turbidite.
All rocks defined as footwall to the Sudbury Structure are cut by occurrences of the Sudbury Breccia. This breccia occurs as small veins, irregularly-shaped patches, and large bodies, which may extend for many kilometers along strike. The breccia consists of inclusions of locally-derived footwall lithologies within comminuted footwall rock. The Sudbury Breccia has been interpreted as pseudotachylitic, formed by in-situ milling processes during formation of the Sudbury Structure. The Sudbury Breccia is known to occur more than 100 km from the SIC.
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The Sudbury Structure is cut by a number of regional and local mafic dyke swarms. Archean footwall rocks on the North Range are crosscut by north–south-trending dykes of the Matachewan swarm. Northwest-trending olivine tholeiitic dykes of the Sudbury swarm crosscut the SIC and all rock units within and surrounding the Sudbury Structure. A set of east–northeast-trending lamprophyre dykes and a set of quartz–diabase dykes cut rocks of the SIC but are older than the olivine tholeiites.
The Murray and Creighton granitic plutons, part of the Cartier batholith, intrude the Huronian Supergroup, and predate the impact.
Figure 6-2 shows the general geology of the Sudbury Basin. Figure 6-3 shows a simplified stratigraphic column for the North Range and South Range of the Sudbury Basin.
Table 6-1 summarizes the major lithological and stratigraphic units. Table 6-2 summarizes the most common rock types proximal to, or hosting, the Sudbury-area deposits as logged by the mine geologists.
6.3.2 Structure
Rocks of the Sudbury Structure are variably affected by five major fault sets, as summarized in Table 6-3.
6.3.3 Mineralization
The classifications included in Table 6-4 are employed to describe the variety of sulphide mineralization types at the Ontario Operations.
Pyrrhotite is the most common sulphide mineral. Chalcopyrite is the main copper-bearing mineral and second most common sulphide mineral. Chalcopyrite is typically (but not always) associated with elevated platinum group elements (PGEs) and precious metals. Pentlandite is the main nickel mineral and is present in all ore types. Pentlandite occurs as flames in or at grain boundaries of pyrrhotite. It commonly forms megacrystic “eyes” or elongated blebs in massive sulphide and in veins.
The Sudbury deposits host three principal styles of mineralization: Contact-, Offset-, and Footwall-styles. These mineralization environments can be quite variable, transitional, and many exhibit characteristics fitting more than one mineralization environment description. An example schematic for the North Range, showing the general relationship of the various mineralization types to the SIC, is included as Figure 6-4.
6.3.3.1 | Contact-Style Deposits |
Contact-type deposits occur at the base of the SIC in association with the Sublayer. The Sublayer volumetric distribution is controlled by the shape and morphology of the basal contact of the SIC. It is absent in some areas and >700 m thick within trough and embayment features that are distributed around the basal contact of the SIC. Sulphide mineralization within the Sublayer is generally zoned from massive sulphide at the footwall to disseminated sulphide towards the hanging wall. The PGE–gold (PGM) content of the contact-style deposits is variable but low (<1 g/t combined PGE–Au).
6.3.3.2 | Offset-Style Deposits |
Offset-style deposits consist of Sublayer norite and quartz diorite with a variable footwall breccia component occurring as dyke-like structures radial or concentric to the contact of the SIC. They can extend for many kilometres into the Sudbury Basin footwall rock. Mineralization consists of zones of disseminated blebby and massive nickel–copper–PGM sulphide that are spatially associated with inclusion-rich phases of quartz diorite and with local dyke structural complexities.
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Figure 6-2: Regional Geology of Sudbury Basin
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2021. Red stars note the location of Vale mines operating in 2021.
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Figure 6-3: Sudbury Basin: Simplified Stratigraphic Column
Note: Modified by Vale after Bailey (2012).
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Table 6-1: Project Stratigraphy
Location | Group | Formation | Notes |
Hanging wall | Whitewater Group Rocks | Chelmsford Formation | A thick sequence of proximal turbidites that exhibit well-developed Bouma sequences. Uppermost preserved unit of the Whitewater Group. |
Onwatin Formation | Is, in the absence of the Vermilion Formation, in gradational contact with the Black member of the Onaping Formation. Consists of carbonaceous and pyritic, massive to laminated, argillite and siltstone with minor interbedded wacke deposited in a stagnant, anoxygenic environment. | ||
Vermilion Formation | Discontinuously overlies Onaping Formation. Consists of bedded carbonate, siltstone, argillite, and chert, locally containing significant concentrations of volcanogenic copper-lead-zinc-silver massive sulphide. Interpreted as an exhalite-rich sequence deposited during the waning stages of Onaping Formation sedimentation. | ||
Onaping Formation | Complex of heterolithic breccia units with a total estimated thickness of up to 1,600 m. Three major stratigraphic members: Basal, Gray and Black; each consisting of a variety of breccias in numerous units composed of any combination of country rock fragments, glassy material, finely comminuted matrix material and minor sulphide mineralization. Variably interpreted as a sequence of ash-flow tuffs and lavas, impact fallback breccia and melt or, more recently, as impact-generated breccias modified by internally generated volcano/sedimentary processes | ||
Sudbury Igneous Complex | Main Mass |
North Range: basal unit of poikilitic mafic norite with orthopyroxene as the only cumulus phase, a felsic norite unit with plagioclase, ortho- and clinopyroxene as cumulate phases, a quartz gabbro unit with plagioclase, clinopyroxene, magnetite and apatite as cumulate phases and an uppermost unit of granophyre. South Range: quartz-rich norite, south range norite, quartz gabbro and granophyre. Basal units of the SIC, i.e., the mafic norite on the North Range and the quartz rich norite on the South Range may contain minor, non-economic, disseminated sulphide mineralization | |
Sublayer |
Copper–nickel–PGE mineralized zones at Sudbury are spatially and genetically related to relatively small bodies of inclusion-rich material localized either at the contact between the main mass of the SIC and footwall rocks (contact sublayer) or within radiating and concentric dykes cutting footwall rocks (offset dykes). Three major variants of sublayer are recognized: igneous-textured gabbronoritic material; igneous-textured quartz diorite; and a wide variety of metamorphic-textured rocks collectively known as “footwall breccia”. Gabbronoritic sublayer typically occurs in contact deposits and in the proximal (0–2 km from SIC contact) portions of the North Range offset dykes. Quartz diorite is the main component of South Range offsets and of distal (>2 km from SIC contact) portions of North Range offsets. Footwall breccia occurs as sheets and discontinuous lenses concentrated along the lower contact of the SIC and as a major component of some of the offset dykes. Igneous- and metamorphic-textured sublayer are characterized by disseminated to massive sulphide and by the presence of a variety of xenoliths of both local and unknown or “exotic” derivation. | ||
Footwall | Footwall |
Defined as rock units characterized by deformational and metamorphic features related to the 1.85 Ga Sudbury impact event; i.e., those rocks that can be shown to contain one or more inclusions of Sudbury Breccia, shatter cones or shock-induced microscopic deformation features. The impact-related features may extend more than 80 km north and east of the SIC, and to the Grenville Front south of the SIC. North Range: Archean migmatitic gneisses (Levack Gneiss) and granitoids; variably metamorphosed to amphibolite or granulite facies. Small relict Archean greenstone belts are locally present while unconformable patches of Paleoproterozoic Southern Province (Huronian) sedimentary strata and Nipissing suite mafic intrusive rocks are preserved within half graben-like structures that define a partial rim-syncline within the Sudbury Structure. South Range: Paleoproterozoic, Southern Province, basic and felsic volcanic rocks, co-eval mafic and felsic sub-volcanic intrusions, cyclic sedimentary sequences of coarse to fine clastic sediments and later mafic intrusions of the Nipissing Diabase suite. |
Note: Table compiled from Muir and Peredery, 1984; Naldrett et al., 1970; Pattison, 1979; Lightfoot et al., 2002; Dressler et al, 1991.
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Table 6-2: Mine-Scale Lithologies
Unit | Notes |
Creighton Granite (CRGR, GYGR, GR) | Medium to coarse grained, pink to grey granite consisting primarily of quartz, feldspars, and biotite. Local porphyritic lenses. Typically, massive, but zones of foliation and shearing exist, with varying degrees of alteration in the form of chlorite, sericite, biotite, and epidote. Quartz and/or carbonate veining can be found throughout the pluton. |
Black porphyry (BKPR) | Aphanitic to fine grained black mafic matrix supporting medium to coarse-grained phenocrysts of Na-feldspar. Found sporadically throughout the footwall of the Creighton environment, and has similar whole rock and mineral chemistry as the footwall granites; interpreted as a phase of the larger Creighton granite intrusive pluton. |
Meta-gabbro (MTGB) | Fine to medium grained, dark to light green-grey color, typically massive, but can be strongly sheared. Includes amphibolites that may be of intrusive or volcanic origin. Quartz and/or carbonate veins are locally intense and zones of brecciation are frequently filled with a stockwork of hairline carbonate veinlets. This term is frequently applied to the Nipissing Gabbro and other pre-Sudbury event mafic intrusions. |
Meta-sediment (MTSD, QTE) | Represents Huronian sedimentary rocks and is common throughout the South Range deposits. The various formations consist of metamorphosed greywacke, quartzite, and argillite, often with gradational contacts; commonly strongly foliated and locally schistose, is very fine to coarse grained, and consists of mostly quartz and mica. |
Olivine diabase Dyke (OLDI) | Very fine-to-fine grained, black to dark grey, massive intrusive dykes that are mineralogically and texturally similar throughout the Sudbury Basin. Usually strongly magnetic due to abundant magnetite, and may have a plagioclase porphyritic texture. Aphanitic chill margins. Dated at ~1,240 Ma, and represent the youngest rock to cut the SIC. |
Quartz diorite (QD and IQD) | Semi-continuous (or offset) dykes or lenses within metabreccia zones. Generally massive, fine to medium grained, equigranular and black to dark grey green. QD has a variable inclusion content, with the higher content referred to as inclusion quartz diorite (IQD), and commonly sulphide accumulations are associated with increased inclusion content. QD dykes extend radially and concentrically from the SIC on a scale of several kilometers, and are host to several major Ni–Cu–PGE deposits. |
Sudbury Breccia (SUBX) – Metabreccia (MTBX) | Pseudotachylite unit forming irregular zones both parallel and perpendicular to the SIC. SUBX commonly has an aphanitic black matrix supporting sub-angular to sub-rounded fragments of footwall material. In the footwall zones the Sudbury Breccia is sometimes associated with chalcopyrite and PGE–Au mineralization. The Metabreccia variety has undergone varying degrees of thermal metamorphism and may be partially recrystallized. |
Sublayer norite (SLNR) | Occurs as discontinuous lenses in troughs or embayments of the Sudbury Basin. Typically, a heterogeneous breccia consisting of a fine to coarse-grained dark green to grey–green, variably mineralized noritic matrix that contains inclusions of footwall and occasionally “exotic” origin. The SLNR is host to most of the “Contact” type deposits. |
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Table 6-3: Key Structures, Sudbury Region
Fault Orientation | Fault Type | Note |
East–northeast to northwest-trending | Major, south-dipping, curvilinear, reverse faults | Form the South Range Shear Zone and include the Cliff Lake Fault |
North–northwest-trending | Steeply dipping structures with a generally sinistral sense of displacement | Cut the North Range of the Sudbury Structure. Faults crosscut the mineralization at the Coleman mine. Displacement of as much as to 914 m on the Fecunis Lake Fault |
Northerly-trending | Sinistral sense of displacement | Cut at a shallow angle on the east side of the Sudbury Basin |
East–west-trending | Steeply-dipping faults, displacement is right-lateral | Cut the South Range of the Sudbury Basin. Include the Murray Fault system and Creighton fault. |
Late-stage | Formed by the current tectonic stress field | Commonly infilled with galena, marcasite, and carbonate minerals; sometimes associated with poor ground conditions |
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Table 6-4: Sulphide Mineralization Styles
Sulphide Type | Notes |
Massive sulphide (MASU) | Generally, appears to be composed entirely by sulphide minerals, but commonly contains as much as 15% silicate as indiscrete clots and blebs plus variable amounts of magnetite. For the majority of deposit types, it contains approximately 80–85% pyrrhotite (Po), while pentlandite (Pn) and chalcopyrite (Cp) content is approximately equal. In the footwall hosted high copper vein-style deposits such as the Coleman 153 Orebody the MASU is essentially chalcopyrite with minor amounts of cubanite, pentlandite and silicate inclusions. The MASU grades into other sulphide mineralization types and locally occurs as inclusions in the quartz diorite. |
Breccia sulphide (BXSU) | Composed of subrounded to angular breccia of sublayer norite and lesser amounts of surrounding wall rocks within a fine-grained matrix. It generally contains less than 50% sulphide. The sulphide consists of the typical Po–Pn–Cp assemblage and is generally fine to medium grained. |
Gabbro–peridotite inclusion sulphide (GPIS) | Consists of a matrix of massive sulphide with more than 10% inclusions. The inclusions are generally derived from the sublayer but may include footwall rocks, and range up to 50 m in size. The inclusions generally differ from the adjacent footwall rocks and may represent cognate xenoliths, which may represent earlier crystallized deeper layers of the irruptive. The sulphide assemblage includes typical mineralogy (Po–Pn–Cp) and is generally medium grained. Many of the inclusions have highly altered serpentinized or talcose edges. |
Disseminated (DISS) | Low sulphide mineralization containing rounded to subrounded sulphide disseminations. It generally contains less than 30% sulphide and the sulphide is composed of the typical Po–Pn–Cp assemblage. |
Ragged disseminated sulphide (RGDI) | Similar to disseminated sulphide mineralization but the sulphide forms as irregular cuspate blebs within a sparse noritic matrix enclosing small, altered gabbroic inclusions. The inclusions may be related to the better preserved gabbroic and ultramafic inclusions found in gabbro–peridotite inclusion sulphide, and this mineralization type is commonly gradational to gabbro–peridotite inclusion sulphide. |
Inclusion massive sulphide (INMS) | Massive sulphide mineralization with >10% inclusions of footwall rocks, angular to sub-round in shape. The inclusions are entirely surrounded by sulphides, which includes the typical Po–Pn–Cp assemblage. INMS transitions to other sulphide mineralization types both gradually and sharply. |
Contorted schist inclusion sulphide (CSIS) | This is a high-sulphide content mineralization containing schistose fragments within a fine-grained sulphide matrix. The fragments are often rounded, crescent or s-shaped, and make up from less than 10% to more than 50% of the mineralization. The sulphide is finer grained than in other sulphide mineralization types and generally has a lower Cu/Ni ratio. CSIS may be transitional into MASU. |
Interstitial sulphide (INSU) | Similar to disseminated sulphide mineralization, but a less common mineralization type characterized by sulphide filling interstices between cumulus crystals of pyroxene and/or plagioclase. |
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Figure 6-4: Schematic Section Showing Mineralization Types
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020
Inclusion-rich quartz diorite is commonly located in the center of the dykes but, on occasion, may occur at the contact with footwall rocks. Contacts between the inclusion-bearing and inclusion-free phases may be diffuse to extremely sharp in character.
Sulphide mineralogy is dominated by pyrrhotite and less abundant pentlandite and chalcopyrite. Copper to nickel ratios are approximately one, and PGM values are >2.5 g/t.
6.3.3.3 | Footwall-Style Deposits |
Footwall-style deposits are emplaced in dilatant fractures within or near thermally-metamorphosed Sudbury Breccia. A physical connection between Contact and Footwall-style mineralization is not always preserved or recognized. Footwall-style deposits host highly fractionated mineralization compared to the contact-style mineralization. Copper, nickel, platinum, palladium, silver and gold grades increase from the Contact-style mineralization into the Footwall-style mineralization, while cobalt, ruthenium, rubidium, iridium and osmium grades decrease.
Two types of Footwall deposits are identified in the North Range. These are massive sulphide copper–PGM deposits and low-sulphide high-PGM deposits:
· | The massive sulphide copper–PGM Footwall mineralization has significant PGM content. It occurs as veins and stockwork systems. These deposits may occur up to 600 m into the Huronian footwall rocks in the North Range. Sulphide mineralization is primarily massive chalcopyrite or cubanite that varies from a few millimetres to >10 m wide. Veins that consist of massive intergrown bornite, chalcopyrite and millerite characterize the distal portions of these deposits; |
· | Low-sulphide high-PGM footwall mineralization occurs as disseminated sulphide and fracture fillings and quartz vein sulphide adjacent to the Footwall massive sulphide copper–PGM mineralization, and as large zones of fine-grained disseminations and narrow discontinuous fracture fillings in “footwall breccia” and Sudbury Breccia in the North and East ranges of the Basin. The low-sulphide high-PGE–gold footwall mineralization is dominated by chalcopyrite and minor millerite. |
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Low-sulphide–high-PGM, and to a lesser extent massive sulphide copper–PGM deposits occur in the South Range.
Most orebodies in the Sudbury area have experienced some degree of tectonic overprint. This has caused local remobilization of sulphides.
Deformation by the South Range Shear Zone tectonic overprinting has locally resulted in significant variations in the ore mineralogy by enhancement or depletion of nickel grades. Pyrite–marcasite has locally replaced pyrrhotite and pentlandite due to oxidation, and development of trace mineral assemblages, including cobaltite–gersdorffite, maucherite (Ni11As8), galena, and sphalerite.
Figure 6-5 and Figure 6-6 are generalized sections for the North Range and South Range respectively, showing the typical deposit types that can be found in each of these areas.
6.4 | Property Geology |
The deposits that have current mineral resource estimates are discussed in alphabetical order in the following sub-sections.
6.4.1 Blezard
The Blezard Contact-type deposit is in a primary trough at the base of the SIC, which is situated at the northeastern end of the South Range Breccia Belt between the Stobie and Garson complexes. The near-surface part of the deposit was mined from 1889–1893. The deeper part of the Blezard deposit is undeveloped within the Vale property holdings, and continues into the adjacent Lindsley contact and footwall deposits that were mined by Glencore from 1992–2009.
6.4.1.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
The Blezard Contact-type deposit is approximately 3,180 ft (969 m) long, ranges in width from 150–700 ft (46–213 m), averaging 450 ft (137 m), and ranges in thickness from 180–300 ft (55–91 m), averaging 200 ft (61 m). The deposit is currently delineated from surface to a depth of 2,200 ft (671 m), dips at about 45º, and plunges to the northeast at 45º.
6.4.1.2 | Lithologies |
The SIC in the Blezard area includes the Sublayer, South Range Norite and quartz gabbro. The Sublayer forms an irregular, discontinuous sheet at the base of the SIC. It can include fragments of norite, basalt, gabbro, granite, and ultramafic rocks set in a fine-grained matrix. The Sublayer has a sharp contact with the underlying tholeiitic basalt, mafic tuff and gabbro units. The upper contact is gradational with the South Range Norite.
The major host rock types to the sulphide mineralization include metamorphosed gabbronorite, amphibolite and diorite. In all cases, primary minerals and textures have been subjected to greenschist facies metamorphism and locally, lower-temperature alteration.
All rock types are cut by late mafic and olivine diabase dykes that are associated with northwest-trending brittle deformation zones within the footwall and SIC units.
6.4.1.3 | Structures |
Shearing, interpreted as post-mineralization, has formed zones of biotite schist along the footwall/Sublayer contact.
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Figure 6-5: Composite Cross-Section of North and East Range Deposit Types
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2016
Figure 6-6: Composite Cross-Section of South Range Deposit Types
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2016
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6.4.1.4 | Mineralization |
The Sublayer can contain 5–65% sulphides. The breccia matrix consists of pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite, pentlandite, minor quartz, and magnetite as disseminations, ragged masses, and veins, within fine-grained norite. Pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite, and pentlandite are the major sulphides. Pyrite is only a minor constituent. Galena and sphalerite can occur in late north-trending cross-cutting veins, in association with calcite and marcasite. Platinum group elements include michenerite (PdBiTe) and sperrylite (PtAs2).
A schematic geology section is provided in Figure 6-7. A representative drill section showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades is provided as Figure 6-8.
6.4.2 Coleman
The Coleman mine includes the original Coleman deposits, consisting of the Upper and Lower Coleman, and the High Shaft Copper deposit. No mining is currently conducted in these areas. It also includes the McCreedy East deposits, including the Main, West, 153 and 170 deposits where active mining is occurring. Other deposits include the inactive East and 7386/6166 Footwall Zone areas.
6.4.2.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
A summary of the deposit dimensions for the major zones in the Coleman mine is provided in Table 6-5. Zones are classified as Footwall- or Contact-type.
6.4.2.2 | Lithologies |
The Coleman mine is situated at the central and eastern limits of an extensively mineralized, 9 km long portion of the North Range of the SIC known as the Levack Embayment.
The main lithological units of the Levack Embayment include:
· | Main Mass of the SIC. Towards the base of the main SIC, overlying the embayment, the basal, mafic norite contain rare inclusions and sulphide disseminations; |
· | Sublayer norite, occurring discontinuously along the contact between the base- of mafic norite and the country rocks. Sublayer norite consists of 55–70% dominantly mafic, fine to medium-grained sub-rounded to rounded fragments within a mafic igneous matrix of noritic composition; |
· | Footwall/granite breccia, which is locally developed along the SIC-footwall rock interface as the basal unit of the Sublayer norite. The footwall/granite breccia is a matrix-supported heterolithic breccia with clast sizes ranging from 1 cm to hundreds of metres in diameter. The clasts are typically sub-angular to sub-rounded and represent approximately 70–80% of the rock mass. The composition of clasts ranges from gabbro, diabase, mafic gneiss to granitic gneiss and granite; |
· | Sudbury Breccia, occurring as veinlets and veins in fractured footwall rock to the SIC and form irregularly-shaped masses up to several hundreds of feet thick. The Sudbury Breccia is a matrix-supported fragmental rock with a black to light gray, aphanitic to fine-grained and variably re-crystallized matrix composed of feldspars, quartz, amphibole, biotite. Rounded and equant footwall clasts range to as much as 30 m in diameter and consist of gabbro, diabase, mafic gneiss, intermediate gneiss, granite gneiss and granite; |
· | Footwall rocks of the Levack Gneiss Complex, which is largely composed of granite and mafic gneiss. The granitic component of the complex is medium to coarse-grained and massive to incipiently foliated. Mafic gneiss is medium-grained, massive to incipiently foliated with 30–40% interstitial feldspar occurring as a mosaic laths interstitial to amphiboles. The gneissic banding can be regular or contorted and locally is continuous over tens of feet. Lenses of mafic gneiss commonly occur as boudins within granitic gneiss. |
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Figure 6-7: Schematic Geological Section, Blezard (17500 N)
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2018. Section looks east.
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Figure 6-8: Example Cross-Section, Blezard
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Table 6-5: Dimensions, Coleman Zones/Orebodies
Zone Designation | Type | Length (m) |
Width/Strike (m) | Thickness (m) | ||
Average | Range | Average | Range | |||
148 | Footwall Cu | 455 | 30 | 3–60 | 10 | 0.5–10 |
153 | Footwall Cu | 305 | 30 | 5–60 | 20 | 0.5–25 |
170 | Footwall Cu | 275 | 90 | 5–185 | 10 | 0.5–20 |
Main (MOB) | Contact | 580 | 60 | 5–175 | 50 | 10–150 |
6166 | Footwall Cu | 150 | 45 | 5–60 | 20 | 0.5–30 |
7386 CLM | Footwall Cu | 335 | 65 | 5–65 | 30 | 0.5–45 |
East OB | Contact | 220 | 15 | 2–35 | 10 | 2–30 |
W Chutes | Contact | 220 | 15 | 5–45 | 10 | 3–45 |
West OB | Contact | 215 | 30 | 5–50 | 30 | 2–30 |
Zone Designation | Depth (m) |
Dip (º) |
Plunge (º) |
|||
148 | 870–1205 | 30 | 5 W | |||
153 | 1250–1585 | 50 | 80 E | |||
170 | 1645–1830 | 40 | 55 N | |||
Main (MOB) | 1045–1330 | 40 | 40 SW | |||
6166 | 1080–1310 | 45 | 45 S | |||
7386 CLM | 1310–1435 | 30 | 15 S | |||
East OB | 995–1125 | 50 | 40 E | |||
W Chutes | 1310–1345 | 50 | 35 E | |||
West OB | 1165–1335 | 64 | 40 SW |
The basal contact of the SIC dips south-southeast at approximately 35º on the Coleman mine property. Footwall/granite breccia thickness range from <1 m to >30 m in “plumes” that cross-cut the basal SIC stratigraphy up into the sublayer norite and mafic norite. The sublayer norite displays similar range of stratigraphic thicknesses. Both footwall/granite breccia and Sublayer norite host Contact-style nickel-rich mineralization which is typically developed in troughs and irregularities at or near the basal SIC contact with the footwall rocks of the Levack Gneiss Complex. Contact-style mineralization grades into Footwall-style mineralization within Sudbury Breccia. Footwall-style mineralization extends as much as 450 m below the SIC-footwall contact.
An olivine diabase dyke cuts through the northeastern portion of the deposit. A diabase dyke occurs in the footwall area. It is locally fragmented and has been linked to several large magnitude seismic events.
6.4.2.3 | Structure |
There are three major structural features encountered at the Coleman mine:
· | Fraser #2 Fault: also known as the #2 East Fault, strikes approximately north to south and is steeply dipping (60–80°). A splay of the Fraser #2 Fault has intersected the upper Main Orebody and has caused some localized difficult mining conditions; |
· | Lunchroom Fault: strikes roughly north to south, with a variable dip of 50–70° to the northeast along its length. Encountered on nearly every cut on the Main Orebody; locally associated with bad ground; |
· | Bob’s Lake Fault: strikes roughly northwest, and dips to the east at approximately 70–90°; locally associated with bad ground. |
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6.4.2.4 | Mineralization |
Contact-style mineralization forms high-grade nickel-rich pods or sulphide concentrations, that are surrounded by a low-grade halo in the host sublayer norite or footwall/granite breccia. The sulphide mineral assemblage consists of pyrrhotite, pentlandite, chalcopyrite and minor pyrite. Variations in style and orientation of mineralization occur abruptly over small distances, resulting in a complex mode of sulphide occurrence. The sulphide is mostly present as fine disseminations, blebs, and stingers in breccia matrix, locally as fracture fillings, or as semi-massive and massive ores. The Cu:Ni ratio for the Coleman contact nickel ores is approximately 0.7.
Footwall-style copper–nickel–PGE mineralization is hosted in Sudbury breccia. It is characterized by a sulphide mineral assemblage dominated by chalcopyrite, with lesser pentlandite, millerite, cubanite, bornite and pyrrhotite. The copper content in all footwall deposits is very high, with the Cu:Ni ratio typically exceeding 6.5, with correspondingly high PGE tenors (Pt + Pd + Au > 7.7 g/t).
A schematic cross-section showing the geology of the Coleman and McCreedy areas is included as Figure 6-9 and Figure 6-10 respectively. A representative drill section showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades is provided as Figure 6-11.
6.4.3 Copper Cliff
The Copper Cliff deposit consists of numerous mineralized zones. The major zones include the actively-mined 120, 100, 900, 880, 865, 860, 830, 810 orebodies, and the currently inactive 191, 178, 138, 890, 850, 790, 740, 725, and 712 zones.
6.4.3.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
A summary of the deposit dimensions for the major zones in the Copper Cliff mine is provided in Table 6-6.
6.4.3.2 | Geology |
Copper Cliff is predominantly an Offset-style deposit with associated minor Contact- and Footwall-type mineralization styles. Mineralization is hosted in a quartz–diorite dyke, the Copper Cliff Offset, which strikes 15 km south into footwall rocks from the base of the SIC, is steeply dipping, and averages 40 m wide. The Copper Cliff Offset is cut by narrow aplitic, quartz diabase, and olivine diabase dykes, locally referred to as “trap dykes”.
Contact-style mineralization associated with Sublayer norite is present in the North Copper Cliff mine area. Sudbury Breccia occurs in footwall rocks adjacent to the Copper Cliff Offset.
6.4.3.3 | Structure |
The Copper Cliff Offset is affected by post-impact displacement along the Creighton and Murray faults and several smaller splay faults.
The Copper Cliff Offset is folded about northeasterly-trending open fold axes that have steeply-dipping axial planes. Folding of the quartz–diorite dyke is confined to part of the dyke south of the Creighton fault. West-trending diabase and northwest-trending olivine diabase dykes post-date the folding.
6.4.3.4 | mineralization |
The sulphide mineralization is mainly associated with coarser grained quartz diorite and rarely crosscuts footwall rocks. Mineralization consists of disseminated and ragged disseminated sulphides, interstitial sulphides, inclusion massive sulphides, gabbro peridotite inclusion sulphides, contorted schist inclusion sulphides and massive sulphides.
The major sulphides are pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite and pentlandite. Minor sulphides include pyrite, cobaltite, sphalerite, galena, and gersdorffite (NiAsS). The precious metal mineral assemblage includes sperrylite, froodite (PdBi2), michenerite, hollingworthite ((Rh, Pt, Pd) AsS), native gold, argentite (Ag2S) and hessite (Ag2Te).
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Figure 6-9: Coleman Mine 153 Orebody (schematic section looking east)
Figure prepared by Vale, 2016.
Figure 6-10: McCreedy East Section (north–south)
Figure prepared by Vale, 2016. M1–M5 denote mining divisions in the deposit.
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Figure 6-11: Example Cross-Section, Coleman (Lower 70 east)
Table 6-6: Dimensions, Copper Cliff Zones/Orebodies
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Sulphide content increases towards the centre of the ore zones and also increases with depth. Typically, chalcopyrite content increases from the centre along strike and down-dip. The Copper Cliff mine zones have variable copper to nickel and pyrrhotite to nickel ratios.
The local geology of the Copper Cliff deposit is shown in plan view in Figure 6-12. A representative drill section showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades is provided as Figure 6-13.
6.4.4 Copper Cliff Pit
6.4.4.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
The Copper Cliff Pit deposit is approximately 3,000 ft (914 m) long, ranges from 1,000–1,400 ft (305–427 m) in width, averaging 1,200 ft (366 m), and ranges in thickness from 50–250 ft (15–76 m), averaging 80 ft (24 m). The deposit is currently delineated from surface to a depth of 5,000 ft (1,524 m), dips at 40–50º, and plunges to the north at 40–60º.
6.4.4.2 | Geology |
Contact-style mineralization is hosted in Sublayer norite above Huronian metasedimentary rocks and the Murray granite pluton.
The Copper Cliff Pit sulphide mineralization occupies a lenticular embayment or trough in the footwall rocks on the south contact of the SIC. The Murray embayment/trough is 914 m wide at surface, decreasing to 610 m at the 1000 level, and 1,074 m wide at the 4000 level. It strikes northeast–southwest and dips variably at 40–60° towards the north. Towards the northeast, the embayment pinches, becoming a narrower zone of sulphide mineralization.
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Figure 6-12: Local Geology of Copper Cliff Deposit
Figure prepared by Vale, 2016.
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Figure 6-13: Example Cross-Section, Copper Cliff (865 orebody)
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6.4.4.3 | Structure |
Many of the identified and modelled structures in the vicinity of the Copper Cliff Pit are considered to be preliminary interpretations and may not be an accurate representation of all the structural geology in the Copper Cliff Pit area. Most of the existing structural wireframes created are based on drill hole intersections and logs with some guidance from televiewer surveys. Most of the drill holes in the area are historic drill holes (>60 years old) and most of these drill holes do not have detailed logs/comments, and core photos are limited to the sampled zones.
The historic surface geological mapping indicates the presence of two post-mineralization olivine diabase dykes on the east side of the mineral model. Due to the sub-vertical, north–south orientation of the dykes, the rock units appear in a limited number of drill holes near surface above ~1500 Level. The 2014–2020 core drill programs intersected the dykes in variable locations. Only the eastern-most dyke, which is 150 ft (46m) thick, was used to deplete the block model. The additional dyke(s) are considered too narrow to be selectively segregated due the bulk open-pit mining process. However, the accuracy of the location, orientation and dip of these dykes is recognized as variable.
A major fault, the Main X-fault was mapped from surface to a depth of 3,000 ft. The fault crosscuts the entire deposit geology, strikes east–west and dips between 30–50° north. It is defined by a 10–30 ft wide zone of highly sheared rocks and up to 1 ft of fault gouge. The Main X-Fault corresponds to the South Range Shear Zone—a large, variably developed ductile shear zone at the contact between the SIC rocks and the metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks of the Huronian Group.
6.4.4.4 | Mineralization |
Mineralization is typically zoned, the lowest zone consisting of inclusion massive sulphide containing variable amounts of irregular angular wall rock fragments with rare high-grade copper and nickel stringers of sulphide that project into the footwall rocks.
A geological composite section showing the geology in relation to the mineralization is provided in Figure 6-14. A representative drill section through the deposit showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades is provided in Figure 6-15.
6.4.5 Creighton
The Creighton deposit consists of the actively mined 310, 400, 461 orebodies and the inactive Creighton Deep 404, 315, 320 and 6100 zones.
6.4.5.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
Deposit dimensions for the major zones that are currently being mined are provided in Table 6-7.
6.4.5.2 | Geology |
The Creighton deposit hosts Contact- and Footwall-style mineralization. Mineralization is hosted within the Creighton Embayment and is controlled by two troughs or indentations into the footwall region. Quartz diorite, quartz diabase and olivine diabase dykes occur. Footwall rocks consist of the Paleoproterozoic Creighton Granite/Gabbro that intrudes lower Huronian Metavolcanic rocks and metasediments. Sudbury Breccia occurs within the footwall rocks.
6.4.5.3 | Structure |
The Creighton Fault cuts the Creighton embayment just south of the Creighton deposit. It is a steeply-dipping, east–west-trending fault system and has been interpreted as primarily dextral strike slip with a lesser normal component of displacement.
The Cliff Lake Fault is a major, shallow south–southeast dipping thrust structure related to the South Range Shear Zone. Drilling at Creighton mine has intersected the Cliff Lake Fault at a depth of approximately 10,000 ft (approximately 3.1 km). Displacement has been interpreted up to 4 km.
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Figure 6-14: Geological Section, Copper Cliff Pit
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2022.
Figure 6-15: Example Cross Section, Copper Cliff Pit (13,300 m east)
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Table 6-7: Dimensions, Creighton Zones/Orebodies
Zone Designation | Type | Length (m) |
Width/Strike (m) | Thickness (m) | ||
Average | Range | Average | Range | |||
300 | Contact | 1,065 | 250 | 55–300 | 30 | 3–155 |
310 | Contact | 520 | 210 | 55–270 | 10 | 3–70 |
315 | Footwall | 100 | 40 | 7-55 | 5.5 | 3-9 |
320 | Footwall | 325 | 125 | 10–175 | 10 | 3–60 |
400 | Contact/ Footwall | 670 | 240 | 45–295 | 10 | 5–190 |
404 | Footwall | 250 | 50 | 10–80 | 10 | 3–35 |
461 | Footwall | 230 | 95 | 30–130 | 10 | 3–50 |
Zone Designation | Depth From/To (m) |
Dip (º) |
Plunge (º) |
|||
300 | 2,135–3,200 | 70–90 | 90 | |||
310 | 2,420–3,000 | 90 | 45 E | |||
315 | 2,490-2,584 | 56 | 45 W | |||
320 | 2,650–2,980 | 70 | 90 | |||
400 | 2,295–2,965 | 70 | 90 | |||
404 | 2,460–2,695 | 90 | 90 | |||
461 | 2,410–2,635 | 90 | 90 |
Throughout the Creighton deposit, evidence of significant structural influence on footwall ore emplacement, geometry and sulphide fractionation is evident. Major shears include the 6 Shaft, 117, 118, 400 East, 1290 and 2000N shears. There are several other minor shears within the mine area.
6.4.5.4 | Mineralization |
Contact-style mineralization has a generalized sequence of sulphide styles from hanging wall to footwall of disseminated sulphide, interstitial sulphide, ragged disseminated sulphide, gabbro peridotite inclusion sulphide, contorted schist inclusion sulphide, inclusion-bearing massive sulphide and massive sulphide.
The major sulphides are pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite and pentlandite. Minor sulphides include pyrite, cubanite (CuFe2S3), cobaltite, sphalerite, galena, and gersdorffite. The precious metal mineral assemblage includes michenerite, hollingworthite, irarsite ((Ir, Ru, Rh, Pt) AsS), froodite, Pd-melonite (PdNiTe2), sperrylite and native gold. All of the zones contain low levels of arsenic, lead, and zinc. The Creighton zones have variable copper to nickel and pyrrhotite to nickel ratios.
Figure 6-16 shows a generalised geology plan and Figure 6-17 a composite cross-section of the Creighton deposit. A representative drill section showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades is provided as Figure 6-18.
6.4.6 Stobie
None of the zones in the Frood–Stobie mine are currently being mined. The zone of current interest for open pit potential is the Stobie 37 block.
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6.4.6.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
The Stobie 37 block is approximately 2,310 ft (705 m) long, ranges in width from 530-1040 ft (162–317 m), averaging 855 ft (261 m), and ranges in thickness from 15–450 ft (5–137 m), averaging 170 ft (52 m). The 37 block is currently delineated from surface to a depth of 1,400 ft (430 m).
Figure 6-16: Geological Plan, Creighton Mine Area
Figure prepared by Vale, 2016.
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Figure 6-17: Composite Cross Section, Creighton Mine
Figure prepared by Vale, 2023. Figure looks west.
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Figure 6-18: Example Cross Section, Creighton (4,500 east)
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6.4.6.2 | Geology |
The Frood and Stobie deposits have zones that have been classed as Contact, Footwall and Offset-style mineralization. The deposits lie within a breccia belt which is roughly parallel to the SIC Main Mass norite–footwall contact 1.5 km to the north. The breccia belt is composed of:
· | Fragments and blocks of Proterozoic footwall rock; |
· | Anastomosing network of Sudbury Breccia; |
· | Discontinuous pods of quartz diorite. |
The quartz diorite pods are assumed to be co-magmatic with the SIC and contain inclusions of country rock, exotic lithologies, and barren to weakly-mineralized quartz diorite. In addition to rock fragments, angular to rounded massive sulphide inclusions have been documented within the inclusion quartz diorite. Barren gabbro and peridotite inclusions to 45 m in diameter are found within the quartz diorite and Sudbury Breccia.
The breccia belt strikes northeast, and dips from 65–75º to the northwest. Two mineralized bodies are connected by a narrow bridge of disseminated sulphide mineralization that occurs above a “saddle” of unmineralized rock.
The 37 Block area of the Frood–Stobie deposit is hosted in an inclusion-bearing quartz diorite and consists of a low-grade, copper–nickel-bearing, disseminated-style mineralization.
6.4.6.3 | Structure |
Structure does not appear to play a significant part in the location of the mineralization at Stobie, but local shearing parallel to the walls of the structure sometimes create challenging ground conditions. Two main structures at Frood are as follows:
· | The “Main Cross Fault”, which has been traced from the south nose of the mineralized zone above 1000 Level downwards towards 2600 Level. At 1000 Level, the fault strikes normal to the ore zone and dips north at slightly less than 30º northward. The fault intersects progressively lower levels and the strike rotates through 90º. At 2600 Level the strike of the fault is indistinguishable from other sub-parallel faults at the same horizon. An apparent offset of up to 50 ft (15 m) is observed locally but on other areas no offsetting by the fault is apparent; |
· | Frood Proper Footwall Shear. The footwall has been extensively sheared throughout the length of the orebody, but shearing is particularly heavily developed in the metasedimentary rocks above 1200 Level. Localized mining-related slippage of 10–20 ft (3–6 m) that occurred along the shear plane into the Footwall has resulted in local ground problems |
There are two mining-related subsidence structures:
· | The 60 and 19 Block Footwall Structure is a major crack in the footwall of the Frood North Extension pit first noted in mid-2007; |
· | Ore Zone Structure consists of an area of parallel fractures dipping 30–50º towards the footwall. |
The Frood deposit is shaped like an elongated funnel, with a northeast to southwest strike axis, and a northwesterly dip of 70°. The mineralization is approximately 1,350 m in length and reaches a maximum width of nearly 300 m wide. The mineralization is continuous down-dip from surface to 2800 Level below which it splits in two along strike and progressively becomes narrower at depth until the orebody pinches out on the 3600 Level.
Chalcopyrite, pentlandite and pyrrhotite are found in discrete blebs in a silicate matrix in the upper zones of mineralization. Below the 2800 Level this disseminated mineralization merges with massive sulphides. Copper–nickel ratios are constant at 1:1, but locally change laterally and generally increase with depth in the brecciated zones. Copper content increases with depth.
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Two pendants of precious metal-enriched “siliceous” mineralization occur at the base of the Frood orebody, beneath the massive sulphide mineralization.
Most of the Frood deposit was mined or is no longer accessible. The remaining blocks of mineral resources were assigned to the Stobie mine, but were mined by the Frood Division. Currently no workings at the Frood mine below the 1400 Level is accessible.
6.4.6.4 | Mineralization |
The dominant mineralization styles at Frood–Stobie are disseminated and inclusion massive sulphide. Sulphide mineralization consists primarily of pyrrhotite, pentlandite and chalcopyrite. Secondary mineralization at Stobie consists of discontinuous veins of marcasite, galena, and carbonate, with minor occurrences of pyrite and violarite. At Frood, a cubanite-rich zone is present at the base of the massive and breccia sulphide, above the precious metal-enriched siliceous zone.
The continuity of the quartz diorite at Stobie is interrupted above the 1,000 Level by two large lobes of footwall rock extending downward into the disseminated mineralization. The mineralization to the north by this lobe of footwall averages 120 m in width, while in the south mineralization reaches a maximum width of 170 m at the 2000 Level. Below the 2200 Level, the mineralization gradually narrows and eventually bottoms above the 4100 Level.
Copper-nickel ratios are relatively constant throughout the Stobie deposit, averaging 0.92:1. There is no indication of copper enrichment at depth, but the copper content of the inclusion massive sulphide does increase at the extreme north end as mineralization narrows before pinching out completely.
Contacts with the surrounding footwall rocks are sharp, quite distinct, and generally regular.
The generalized geology is shown in plan view in Figure 6-19. Mineralized domains are shown in long section in Figure 6-20. A representative drill section showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades for the 37 Block is provided as Figure 6-21.
6.4.7 Garson
The Garson deposit includes the actively mined McConnell deposit, surface ramp (13 and 360), and Garson mine #1 Shear, #4 Shear deposits. Inactive deposits include the Garson ramp (600) zones.
6.4.7.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
Dimensions of the major zones within the Garson deposit are provided in Table 6-8.
6.4.7.2 | Geology |
Garson is a deformed Contact-style deposit. Contact-style mineralized zones are remobilized into a series of near-parallel ductile shear zones. Shear-hosted copper–nickel sulphides are offset by later stage dykes and possible late-stage shearing. The 1 Shear and 4 Shear are the primary mineralized zones.
The 1 Shear extends from surface to below 6500 Level, a distance of approximately 1,980 m. It has a strike length of 120–600 m, with strike length decreasing with depth. Hanging wall to footwall widths along the orebody vary between 3–60 m, with an average width of 10 m.
The 4 Shear extends from the 2800 Level to a currently known limit of 6700 Level, a distance of approximately 1,200 m. It has a strike extent of 685 m and an average width of 7 m. It strikes east–west and generally dips 70° south. The 4 Shear orebody runs parallel to the 1 Shear orebody, lying approximately 45 m to 60 m to the northwest.
Both shears dip at a slightly shallower angles than the SIC contact, which means that above the 4000 Level the shears are mostly hosted in the SIC with the dominant lithology being Sublayer Norite and below the 4000 Level the shears cut the metasedimentary and metavolcanic Huronian footwall rocks.
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Figure 6-19: Frood–Stobie Generalized Geology Plan
Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
Figure 6-20: Frood–Stobie Mineralization Type Distribution (long section)
Figure prepared by Vale, 2016.
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Figure 6-21: Example Cross-Section, Block 37 (3150 N)
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Table 6-8: Dimensions, Garson Zones/Orebodies
Zone Designation | Type | Length (m) |
Width/Strike (m) | Thickness (m) | ||
Average | Range | Average | Range | |||
1 Shear | Contact | 760 | 455 | 120–610 | 10 | 3–60 |
4 Shear | Contact | 1130 | 855 | 700–1065 | 10 | 3–20 |
360 | Contact | 150 | 90 | 45–185 | 20 | 10–20 |
McConnell | Offset | 434 | 131 | 61-174 | 18 | 9-30 |
13 OB | Contact | 245 | 305 | 150–365 | 10 | 3–20 |
Zone Designation | Depth From/To (m) |
Dip (º) |
Plunge (º) |
|||
1 Shear | 915–1,675 | 75 S | 70 E | |||
4 Shear | 1,220–1,980 | 60 S | 50 E | |||
McConnell | 0-411 | 75 | 70 S | |||
360 | 185–305 | 60 S | 90 | |||
13 OB | 90–255 | 60 S | 70 E |
The deposit is crosscut by two separate olivine diabase dykes. These dykes are sub-parallel to each other and range in width from 15–60 m.
6.4.7.3 | Structure |
The Garson region was subjected to significantly more structural activity than the rest of the Sudbury Basin. This structural activity caused the Huronian footwall rocks to overturn and form the hanging wall. This overturning caused a significant amount of shearing sub-parallel to the strike of the Garson Contact-style deposits producing a series of near-parallel shears.
Major geological structures include the Garson Fault, the 2500 Shear, and the 3500 Shear. The 2500 shear and the 3500 structures and are roughly 12–23 m wide, strike north–northwest and dip steeply to the east. Fractures are commonly filled with calcite, galena, marcasite, and sphalerite. Late-stage faults and fractures also deform the orebodies.
There are a number of “cross-over” sulphide zones that connect that the 1 Shear and 4 Shear Orebodies. These cross-over zones are near vertical and <3 m wide.
6.4.7.4 | Mineralization |
The mineralization is dominated by inclusion massive sulphide and massive sulphide lenses and stringers, contorted schist inclusion sulphide, ragged disseminated and sulphide breccia. Pyrrhotite is the most common sulphide mineral. Pentlandite is the main nickel-bearing mineral. Chalcopyrite is the main copper-bearing mineral, and is locally associated with elevated precious metals. Trace to minor amounts of cobaltite–gersdorffite, niccolite (NiAs), nickeliferous pyrite, marcasite, sphalerite, galena and argentopentlandite (Ag(Fe, Ni)8S8) are distributed throughout the 4 Shear.
Platinum-group minerals include michenerite, hollingworthite, irarsite, froodite, Pd-melonite and sperrylite. The oxide mineral assemblage is composed of magnetite, with magnetite content varying from 0.5–2%. Rare and local clustering of lead and zinc mineralization occurs as veinlets associated with late fracture zones and within major structures. The hydrothermal alteration assemblage consists of marcasite (FeS2) and violarite (FeNi2S4).
Arsenic-bearing mineral assemblages occur primarily along the strongly sheared hanging wall and footwall-sulphide contacts. Arsenic also occurs within the main sulphide zones associated with late-stage structural/schistose zones. Commonly, occurrences can be found associated with shear planes in the halo of the main mineral zone associated with low-grade disseminated and copper rich veinlets. The dominant As-bearing minerals are niccolite and cobaltite–gersdorffite. Maucherite (Ni11As8) has been reported but is relatively rare. Other arsenide and sulpharsenide minerals are present in trace amounts including sperrylite. Stockpiling and re-handling of high arsenic content ore is done to ensure processing requirements are achieved.
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A schematic cross-section showing the locations of the mineralized zones is provided in Figure 6-22. Representative drill sections through the deposit showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades are provided as Figure 6-23 and Figure 6-24.
6.4.8 Garson–McConnell
Although proximal to, and along strike from the Garson mine orebodies, the McConnell deposit is in a different geological setting with different geological and mineralogical characteristics and is classified as an Offset-type deposit.
6.4.8.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
The McConnell deposit is approximately 1,425 ft (434 m) long, ranges from 200–570 ft (61–174 m) in width, averaging 430 ft (131 m), and ranges in thickness from 30–100 ft (9–30 m), averaging 60 ft (18 m). The deposit is currently delineated from surface to a depth of 1,350 ft (411 m), dips at about 75º, and plunges to the south at 70º.
6.4.8.2 | Geology |
Mineralization at the McConnell deposit is associated with a narrow, concentric, quartz–diorite dyke that has intruded into metasedimentary units within the Stobie Formation. The dyke strikes at 85º east and dips at 70º south. The immediate foot and hanging walls consist of quartz diorite acting as an envelope around the mineralization. Beyond this, the country rocks consist of embedded greenstone and quartzite with zones of Sudbury Breccia.
6.4.8.3 | Structure |
No significant cross-cutting dykes or structures have been identified or interpreted; however, the presence of shearing has been noted.
6.4.8.4 | Mineralization |
The mineralization consists of massive sulphide and contorted schist inclusion sulphide with a high pyrrhotite/nickel ratio, above-average precious metals content and negligible arsenic content. The sulphides occur as 1–2 cm blebs within the quartz diorite, but mainly as disseminated sulphides in the surrounding breccia.
A representative drill section showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades is provided in Figure 6-25.
6.4.9 Totten
The Totten mine deposits consists of the actively mined Totten Main (215), and other mineralized zones including the 230, 260, 242, 235, 238, 238 West, Howland, and McIntyre zones.
6.4.9.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
Dimensions of the major zones within the Totten deposit are provided in Table 6-9.
6.4.9.2 | Geology |
The Totten deposit is hosted within the Worthington Offset Dyke which extends 12 km south from the SIC. The dyke attains a thickness of 45 m in the Totten mine area, strikes approximately 045°, and has steep variable dips.
Metasedimentary rocks and the Nipissing meta-gabbro sill underlie the Totten mine area. The sill is 365 m thick, trends east–west and dips at approximately 65° to the southeast. The Worthington Offset cuts both the metasedimentary rocks and the gabbro sill. Late quartz diabase and olivine diabase dykes crosscut all lithologies.
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Figure 6-22: Garson Mine Typical Cross-Section (looking east)
Figure prepared by Vale, 2016.
Figure 6-23: Example Cross-Section, Garson (level 3250 E)
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Figure 6-24: Example Cross-Section, Garson (level 3450 E)
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Figure 6-25: Example Cross Section, McConnell (level 2750 east)
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Table 6-9: Dimensions, Totten Zones/Orebodies
Zone Designation | Type | Length (m) |
Width/Strike (m) | Thickness (m) | ||
Average | Range | Average | Range | |||
215 (Main) | Offset | 1420 | 305 | 60–455 | 20 | 2–30 |
230 | Offset | 230 | 90 | 20–165 | 4 | 3–8 |
238 | Offset | 130 | 30 | 5–115 | 6 | 3–20 |
Zone Designation | Depth From/To (m) |
Dip (º) |
Plunge (º) |
|||
215 (Main) | 565–1,525 | 90 | 45 S | |||
230 | 1,205–1,290 | 90 | 30 N | |||
238 | 315–440 | 90 | 40 S |
The contact between meta-gabbro and Worthington Offset Dyke is characterized by a meta-gabbro breccia with fragments up to 10 m diameter. Locally the meta-gabbro is invaded by an inclusion quartz diorite stockwork and mineralized stringers. These breccia and stockwork features are not developed in metasedimentary rocks.
Two quartz diabase dykes occur in the immediate vicinity of the Totten mine and bound the majority of the high-grade mineralization hosted in the Totten Main orebody. The quartz diabase dykes are steeply dipping and vary in thickness from <3–10 m. Quartz diabase dykes are generally fractured especially along the contacts resulting in local poor ground conditions. Several olivine diabase dykes of variable width occur to the north of the Totten Main orebody.
6.4.9.3 | Structure |
The Worthington Offset has been displaced by two major faults. The Creighton fault strikes east–west, is vertical to steeply dipping to the north, and dextrally displaces the Worthington Offset Dyke by approximately 1 km. The Murray fault also strikes east–west, is vertically dipping and dextrally displaces the Worthington Offset by approximately 1 km.
Between the Creighton and Murray faults the local rock mass has been subjected to northwest–southeast fracturing and weak faulting. Minor displacement occurred locally on some of the larger fractures.
6.4.9.4 | Mineralization |
Copper–nickel–PGE–gold sulphides are hosted within an inclusion quartz diorite phase of the Worthington Offset. This sulphide zone consists of variable thicknesses of massive and semi-massive copper–nickel-bearing sulphides surrounded by a disseminated and blebby sulphide halo.
The massive sulphide varies in true thickness from 2–15 m and is dominantly pyrrhotite and pentlandite. The massive sulphide thins and splays into 2.5 cm to 1 m thick copper-rich stringer zones within the disseminated sulphide halo. Semi-massive sulphides are also typically pyrrhotite and pentlandite rich, but are spatially associated with chalcopyrite-rich patches. In areas where large meta-gabbro inclusions are present, metal grades tended to be higher than in portions of the dyke containing only amphibolite inclusions.
Thick, localized accumulations of ore are situated to the north and south of the quartz diabase dykes. Nickel and copper mineralization become progressively higher grade with depth and towards the core of the mineralization.
PGE–gold minerals are spatially associated with more copper-rich sulphides. Platinum and palladium grades increase with depth but the gold grade does not. The highest PGE–gold grades are concentrated at depth around a portion of the southernmost quartz diabase dyke.
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Mineral zone boundaries are locally characterized by arsenic-bearing minerals such as niccolite and gersdorffite. Niccolite stringers are also encountered in the quartz diabase dyke and sometimes in quartz diorite and inclusion quartz diorite proximal to the Worthington Offset.
Figure 6-26 shows the general geology along the Worthington Offset in the Totten mine area. Drill sections through the deposit showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades are provided as Figure 6-27 and Figure 6-28.
6.4.10 Victor–Nickel Rim South Extension
The Victor–Nickel Rim South Extension deposit includes the Main, NR14 N, 24 N, and BL28 N zones. The NR14 N and BL28 N zones are currently divided by a Glencore/Vale claim boundary.
6.4.10.1 | Deposit Dimensions |
Dimensions of the major zones within the Victor deposit are provided in Table 6-10.
6.4.10.2 | Geology |
The deposit footwall consists of felsic, intermediate, and mafic gneisses, diabase sills, and Sudbury breccia. The SIC lithologies include felsic norite, Sublayer norite (norite breccia), mafic norite (dark norite) and late granite breccia. The preferred host lithology for mineralization is the Sublayer. Late diabase dykes cut all earlier lithologies.
6.4.10.3 | Structure |
Five fault types are differentiated. Cataclasite faults range from a few centimetres in width to as much as 4 m, and have no significant displacement. They are post-SIC, competent structures that show sharp to variable contacts, and are often associated with quartz–carbonate veins and infilled joints. A second fault type, consisting of a low RQD fracture zone hosts numerous chlorite-coated fractures. The Victor Shear is characterized by pervasive epidote/chlorite alteration. The fourth major fault set consists of a set of 4–6 m thick parallel, brittle structures that do not appear to disrupt stratigraphy. Faults designated as “steep” are typically 10–30 cm wide, often associated with chlorite, and also do not show significant displacement.
6.4.10.4 | Mineralization |
Three copper–nickel sulphide mineralization types occur:
· | Nickel-rich Contact mineralization occurs at the base of the SIC, predominantly hosted by late-granite breccia and lesser amounts of dark norite breccia; |
· | Fractionated Contact mineralization migrated to the gneissic footwall and Sudbury breccia, typically exploiting planes of structural or lithological weakness form copper-rich footwall deposits; |
· | Hanging-wall nickel mineralization occurs above the base of the SIC, hosted predominantly in norite breccia and upper portions of a late-granite breccia (Glencore/Vale – Nickel Rim South Extension Project, 2020). |
In the Main zone, mineralization consists of massive to disseminated sulphide textures composed predominantly of pyrrhotite with accessory pentlandite and chalcopyrite with trace to patchy pyrite.
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Figure 6-26: Worthington Offset Regional Geology
Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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Figure 6-27: Example Cross Section, Totten (20,500 N)
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Figure 6-28: Example Cross-Section, Totten (21,700 N)
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Table 6-10: Dimensions, Victor Orebodies
The Footwall-style mineralization in the 24 N zone consists of a massive sulphide zone comprising massive chalcopyrite veins and accessory blebby pentlandite and streaks of millerite. The massive sulphide zone transitions into narrow (<10 m) zones of chalcopyrite stringer-stockwork style textures with occurrences of millerite and bornite.
Deep Copper Footwall-style mineralization occurs as variable width stringers / veins forming a stockwork with high rock inclusion content (50 to 70%). The mineralization consists of massive chalcopyrite-cubanite-bornite and chalcopyrite-millerite-pentlandite stringers and vein systems with a highly variable distribution and range in thickness from one inch to several meters.
A geological plan is included as Figure 6-29. Drill sections through the deposits showing the orientation of the drilling to the mineralization, and examples of mineralization grades are provided as Figure 6-30 and Figure 6-31.
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Figure 6-29: Geological Plan, Victor–Nickel Rim South Extension Area
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020.
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Figure 6-30: Example Cross Section, BL28 N (7,500 m east)
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Figure 6-31: Example Cross Section, Victor Main (7,600 m east)
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7 | EXPLORATION |
7.1 | Exploration |
7.1.1 Grids and Surveys
Each mine has its own mine grid. Survey information is generally collected in Imperial units.
7.1.2 Geophysics
The primary geophysical exploration methods applied include University of Toronto Electro Magnetometer (UTEM-4), televiewer, radio imaging method (RIM) and down-hole induced polarization (IP). These methods are used to identify areas of sulphide mineralization and to delineate targets for exploration drilling.
UTEM-4 is a geophysical tool that is good at defining massive sulphide conductors. Depending on the presence of conductive material, UTEM-4 can locate targets beyond and between boreholes. Imaging, modelling, and inversion methods are applied to these data to generate estimates of the location and attitude of the boundaries of sulphide mineralization.
A televiewer is an in-the-hole device that records an optical image of the walls of the drill hole and provides true three-dimensional orientations of contacts and planar features.
The RIM system generates a cross-section profile of conductivity variation between two parallel drill holes of comparable lengths.
Down-hole IP methods are deployed in areas with mineralization occurring as disseminated, ragged disseminated or interstitial sulphides.
The application of cosmic-ray muon tomography, a new technique for the Sudbury Basin is planned. This newer technology uses detectors, imaging, inversion technologies, and artificial intelligence to map the intensity of cosmic-ray muons under the earth’s surface. From this information three-dimensional shapes can be derived and used as exploration vectors.
7.1.3 Qualified Person’s Interpretation of the Exploration Information
The Sudbury Basin has been extensively explored for over 100 years, and a considerable information database has developed as a result of both exploration and mining activities.
The primary exploration method is core drilling and assay collection. However, advancements in geophysics, in particular, borehole geophysical surveys, have improved the amount and quality of data that can be used for geological interpretations and geological modelling. The geophysical information is integrated with the drill hole database to improve deposit model interpretations.
7.1.4 Exploration Potential
The Ontario Operations continue to actively explore within the current mining operations area. Areas that are planned to be drill tested include:
· | Coleman: two targets generated from machine-learning, including a copper target located below the 170 orebody, and a nickel target below the Main orebody. Other underground targets include the H2 zone, and the 160 orebody. The 148 orebody is currently being drilled from surface. |
· | Copper Cliff: depth extents to the 815, 830, 850, 900, 120 orebodies, and mineralization extensions to the north of the 810 orebody and to the west of the Copper Cliff Pit; |
· | Creighton: mineralization extensions down dip and to the east of the 400, and to the west of the 310 and 300 orebodies; |
· | Garson: drilling below 5500 level, in 5 Shear East and West, and below 5600 level in 4 Shear West; |
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· | Totten: continue to define the extents/cut offs of Totten main/deep and shelf areas, and the 230 and 238 orebodies. |
Exploration is conducted underground from existing infrastructure and services with the aim of discovering and delineating additional mineralization that is within reach of the active mine infrastructure.
Brownfields exploration is focused on areas in the Sudbury basin within a reasonable radius of existing infrastructure. Greenfields exploration is conducted throughout the Ontario Operations area to identify new stand-alone nickel and copper deposits.
7.2 | Drilling |
7.2.1 Drilling on Property
Drilling totals 61,375 core drill holes for 8,979,307 m of drilling on properties listed with current mineral resources. Total drilling for all Vale owned properties within the Sudbury Basin includes 84,979 core drill holes for 13,218,063 m of drilling. Drill totals do not include blasthole drilling.
The drilling for areas that have current mineral resource estimates are summarized in Table 7-1 to Table 7-3, by drill hole purpose, and do not include blast holes. Drill collar location plans are provided in Figure 7-1 to Figure 7-9.
The QP notes that due to the historical nature of some of the data, there may be drill holes that have not been captured in the current drill databases. Geotechnical and geomechanical drill holes are included as part of the exploration/resource definition category.
7.2.2 Drilling Excluded For Estimation Purposes
Drill data can be excluded if the data are considered questionable, see discussion in Chapter 11.3.
7.2.3 Drill Methods
The primary drill method is core drilling. Drill holes are spaced at intervals as required by the type of mineralization and the information required (i.e., exploration or resource definition drilling), with the typical spacing being >100 m for exploration and 10–50 m for resource definition drilling.
Current underground drill programs for exploration and operations purposes typically use a core size of BQ (36.4 mm diameter). Surface programs use NQ size (47.6 mm). AQTK (35 mm diameter) core was used historically.
7.2.4 Logging
Standardized logging procedures and software are used to record geological and geotechnical information including lithology, description of mineralization and percentage sulphide content, mineralogy, major structures, rock quality designation (RQD) and rock mass rating (RMR).
7.2.5 Recovery
Core recovery is generally good at all deposits. Areas of poor recovery are typically limited to fault and shear zones.
7.2.6 Collar Surveys
The required azimuth direction of the drill collar layout, for both surface and underground, are identified using front sight and back sights. On surface, global positioning system (GPS) coordinates are used for collar locations, while underground, drill collar locations are measured from survey control points.
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Table 7-1: Drill Summary Table, Blezard, Coleman, Copper Cliff, Creighton
Drill Type | Blezard | Coleman | Copper Cliff | Creighton | ||||
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) |
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) |
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) |
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) | |
Exploration | 264 | 102,781 | 1,037 | 443,355 | 2,617 | 1,237,218 | 1,282 | 511,713 |
Exploration and resource definition | — | — | 3,108 | 334,909 | 9,643 | 1,153,985 | 5,218 | 453,663 |
Infrastructure | — | — | 1,595 | 32,976 | 2,069 | 82,391 | 693 | 29,661 |
Unknown | — | — | 2,154 | 329,644 | 3,384 | 629,898 | 7,604 | 791,056 |
Totals | 264 | 102,781 | 17,842 | 4,811,082 | 17,713 | 3,103,492 | 14,797 | 1,786,093 |
Note: * exploration <1935 drill holes.
Table 7-2: Drill Summary Table, Garson, McConnell, Frood–Stobie, Copper Cliff Pit
Drill Type | Garson | McConnell | Stobie/ Stobie 37 Block |
Copper Cliff Pit | ||||
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) |
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) |
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) |
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) | |
Exploration | 548 | 123,811 | 137 | 37,387 | 490 | 74,262 | 526* | 123,824 |
Exploration and resource definition | 4,172 | 358,683 | 23 | 5,873 | 1,700 | 145,910 | 93 | 11,925 |
Infrastructure | 217 | 9,860 | — | — | 1,612 | 43,073 | — | — |
Unknown | 5,140 | 467,920 | — | — | 1,712 | 136,864 | 1,341 | 157,746 |
Totals | 10,077 | 960,274 | 160 | 43,260 | 5,514 | 400,109 | 1,960 | 293,494 |
Note: * exploration <1935 drill holes
Table 7-3: Drill Summary Table, Totten, Victor
Drill Type | Totten | NRS Extension (Victor) | ||
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) |
Number of Drill Holes |
Metres (m) | |
Exploration | 949 | 405,299 | 412 | 416,344 |
Exploration and resource definition | 1,186 | 226,695 | 90 | 53,532 |
Infrastructure | 84 | 5,090 | — | — |
Unknown | 265 | 40,441 | 10 | 1,519 |
Totals | 2,484 | 677,524 | 512 | 471,395 |
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Figure 7-1: Drill Collar Location Plan, Blezard
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Figure 7-2: Drill Collar Location Plan, Coleman
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Figure 7-3: Drill Collar Location Plan, Copper Cliff
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Figure 7-4: Drill Collar Location Plan, Creighton
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Figure 7-5: Drill Collar Location Plan, Frood–Stobie Block 37
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Figure 7-6: Drill Collar Location Plan, Garson
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Figure 7-7: Drill Collar Location Plan, Copper Cliff Pit
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Figure 7-8: Drill Collar Location Plan, Totten
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Figure 7-9: Drill Collar Location Plan, Victor–Nickel Rim South Extension
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7.2.7 Down Hole Surveys
The deviation and deflection from changing rock properties and/or lithological units is considered when determining the starting dip angle of a proposed drill hole. As a result, the starting dip and azimuth can be modified based on historical, local drill hole responses to ensure target locations are accurately acquired.
Currently, the trajectory of all surface holes and many of the underground holes are surveyed using multi-shot gyroscopic orientation tools. Non-magnetically susceptible instruments (e.g., north-seeking gyro) are conventional for exploration holes. Shorter definition holes typically use single shot and/or multi-shot surveys using tools such as FlexIt and VisionR. These tools are influenced by magnetic properties; therefore, azimuth data are calculated rather than measured.
Pre-2009 borehole dip measurements were taken using an acid tube test. Historical boreholes are occasionally resurveyed using a gyroscopic instrument for trajectory verification.
7.2.8 Comment on Material Results and Interpretation
Drilling and surveying were conducted in accordance with industry-standard practices at the time the drilling as performed and provide suitable coverage of the zones of copper–nickel mineralization. Collar and down hole survey methods used generally provide reliable sample locations. Drilling methods provide good core recovery. Logging procedures provide consistency in descriptions.
These data are considered to be suitable for mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation. There are no drilling or core recovery factors in the drilling that supports the estimates that are known to the QP that could materially impact the accuracy and reliability of the results.
7.3 | Hydrogeology |
7.3.1 Introduction
Information obtained during early-stage hydrological and hydrogeological evaluations is important for historical context, but is superseded by data obtained from monitoring during many years of mining activities. Vale has undertaken regular water sampling since 1999, and initiated hydrogeological studies and water monitoring protocols to allow the provincial authorities to grant Permits to Take Water and to support Vale in understanding hydrogeological conditions at and relative to its operations.
Hydrogeological models are prepared using industry-standard water modelling software in support of Permits to Take Water and to understand hydrogeological conditions at projects to inform mine design planning. The hilly topography in the Sudbury regional area creates numerous complex groundwater subsystems. Water entering a flow system in each recharge area may be discharged in the nearest topographic low or it may be transmitted to the regional discharge area in the bottom of a major valley. The dominant discharge is to the Vermilion River system in the central and northern portions of the Sudbury area, and to the Whitefish River system in the southern portion.
7.3.2 Sampling Methods and Laboratory Determinations
Monitoring is currently conducted at approximately 1,700 groundwater wells and about 700 surface water stations, located throughout the Ontario Operations area. Well and surface station numbers vary through time, because wells can be damaged or decommissioned, or new wells were installed.
The well and surface station sampling schedule is seasonal, with sampling conducted by third-party consultants in the spring and fall (ground and surface water), summer (surface water only). The third-party consultant that currently performs the work is Pinchin Ltd (Pinchin). Field parameters such as water levels within the wells, pH, conductivity, temperature, and oxidation–reduction potential (ORP) are measured in the field. Samples are submitted with field duplicates and blanks inserted in the sample stream.
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Water samples are analysed by Testmark Laboratories, in Garson, Ontario (Testmark). Testmark is independent of Vale, and holds Canadian Association for Laboratory Accreditation Inc. accreditations for selected analytical techniques. The following parameters are measured by Testmark: pH, conductivity, alkalinity, hardness, acidity, sulphate, nitrate, nitrite, ammonia, chlorite, dissolved metals (45-element suite), total dissolved solids, total suspended solids (surface water only), and turbidity (surface water only).
Hydrogeology data, including pore pressures and groundwater flow, can be collected during pre-construction studies and later from on-going data collection programs in operating mines. For rock types sensitive to moisture, tests may be conducted to evaluate moisture content and susceptibility to deterioration. Data collected during these programs are integrated into numerical simulations.
Dewatering measures can include advanced development (normally with drain holes) which may later be used for mining purposes, drain holes drilled from existing excavations, or development headings and sumps.
7.3.3 Comment on Results
Well and surface station sampling data are verified prior to upload and stored in a database. The water sample blank and duplicate data are evaluated by Testmark, and results provided to Pinchin who review the results within their quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC) practices. Regular reports for defined monitoring periods are provided by Pinchin to Vale in which the groundwater quality is compared to relevant provincial guidelines. Vale documents the findings to the provincial government as required to meet monitoring and regulatory reporting obligations.
BluMetric Environmental Inc., a third-party consulting firm, observed that the water level impacts of dewatering around Vale mines in the Sudbury Basin are typically limited to within a few hundred metres of the actual mine workings.
The underground mines are relatively dry, with only small groundwater inflows. Most of the water that needs to be pumped from the mines enters as fresh process water, or as contained moisture in the backfill slurry.
Water entering the mines from precipitation is minimal, except for the Copper Cliff and Creighton Mines. These mines have open pits or cave areas that are connected to the underlying working areas. They have been in operation for many years, and have developed systems and procedures to handle inflows from these areas. The Stobie mine, which is on care-and-maintenance, is being allowed to flood. While some short-term disruptions to production may occur from large precipitation events, as of the Report date these had not resulted in long-term disruptions.
7.4 | Geotechnical |
7.4.1 Overview
Geotechnical core logging and laboratory strength testing activities start during early-stage exploration and feasibility studies. Data collection continues once mines are operating in conjunction with definition drilling and expansion projects. This information is used as the basis for empirical, analytical, and numerical analyses to support mine design activities.
7.4.2 Sampling Methods
Geotechnical data collection, including core logging and geotechnical field mapping are the principal data collection methods. Currently, information is directly logged into databases at the core logging facilities. If surface access (e.g., open pit) or underground access (e.g., mine workings) is available, then the geotechnical core logging results may be confirmed or supplemented with field geotechnical mapping of broader exposures.
Typical data collected from core logging and mapping programs are intended to establish both the intact and the rockmass strengths of various lithological/geotechnical domains. Intact strength parameters are derived during geotechnical core logging using point load test machines and are validated with additional samples sent out for laboratory testing.
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The rockmass quality is assessed using well established characterisation systems, primarily the Q system (Barton et al., 1974), RMR (Bieniawski, 1974 and Laubscher, 1990). Data collected may include parameters such as RQD (Deere, 1968), joint frequency, number of joint sets, joint roughness, joint alteration, joint in-filling, persistence, point load tests, rock mass fabric characterization and information on discrete structural features.
Typical structural characterization consists of documenting joint sets (including bedding, foliation), faults, shear zones, and dykes via non-oriented core, acoustic and optical televiewer surveys, and field mapping. Data collected can include observations such as dip, dip direction, spacing, and persistence.
Three-dimensional geological structural models are being developed/updated at each individual mine site to investigate the effect of structures on mine seismicity.
In the deep mines, well-known indicators related to the field stresses are documented using observations such as core disking and borehole breakouts. Such observations are proven indicators that help to identify zones of high stress within the rock mass. Back analyses using microseismic data and numerical models can be undertaken to help establish confidence in forward looking stress models that are used to evaluate mine designs.
In active operations, data collection includes inspection of each active heading on at least a monthly basis, and one of the objectives of these inspections is to determine whether the support system installed is appropriate for the ground conditions. Underground site visit observations are recorded in a ground control logbook.
Microseismic arrays are deployed at all of the seismically active mines in Ontario to locate seismic events underground, and consist of a mix of uniaxial and triaxial sensors and geophones. In addition, a strong ground motion system is installed which picks up major seismic events.
mXrap is being used by the ground control engineers at all mine sites in support of seismic data analysis for the assessment of seismic hazards in all active mining areas.
Falls of ground, rockbursts, unusual seismicity, ground support failure, and significant changes in ground conditions are classified as ground control unusual occurrences, and data relating to the unusual occurrence are collected as a record.
Backfill materials are tested to measure the unconfined compressive strength of samples, which are taken at the discharge point and the preparation plant or underground. Where appropriate, other data collected may include slump tests, the temperature of the prepared samples, and water content of the solid material.
Cemented rock fill or cemented aggregate fill is also tested to evaluate the UCS of samples taken at discharge point. Moisture contents, the particle size distributions of aggregates or waste rock are also evaluated.
A backfill quality control program was implemented at each of the operating mines that use backfill. Backfill Management Plans are being developed for those mine sites.
A range of monitoring instrumentation including extensometers, either single-point or multi-point units, closure stations, and sloughmeters can be used to monitor displacements. A slope stability radar is also strategically deployed at one of the legacy open pits to monitor potential slope movements in real time. Loading devices, including stress cells, can be strategically installed to understand load/stress conditions of rock mass and/or ground support system. Drones can be used to assist with visual inspections and also allow for LiDAR surveys to be carried out in areas that were previously not accessible due to high worker exposure to hazardous areas.
7.4.3 Laboratory Determinations
Geotechnical testing, typically comprising Young’s modulus (or Elastic Modulus), Poisson’s ratio, and unconfined compressive strength tests, is currently performed at Golder’s Burnaby, British Columbia rock mechanics laboratory (Golder Burnaby). The laboratory may be requested to perform point load index, triaxial compressive strength, Brazilian tensile tests, or direct shear tests in specific instances. Golder Burnaby is independent of Vale. Historically, independent laboratories used for geotechnical work have included the Queen’s University Rock Mechanics Laboratory (Kingston), Laurentian University (Sudbury) and Wood (Mississauga). The laboratories are not accredited for geotechnical testwork; this is typical for the industry.
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Golder Burnaby uses the methodologies set out in ASTM D7012-14: Standard Test Methods for Compressive Strength and Elastic Moduli of Intact Rock Core Specimens under Varying States of Stress and Temperatures.
All laboratories, including laboratories currently used by Vale, and proposed to be used by Vale in the future, must meet ASTM testing standards.
7.4.4 Quality Assurance and Quality Control
The quality assurance in place at Golder Burnaby includes regular equipment calibration, accredited by Cal-Check Canada Inc, a third-party calibration inspection facility. Depending on the testing type, the quality program undertaken at Golder Burnaby may include senior peer reviews or auditing of laboratory and office procedures, to ensure that all information and recommendations are consistent.
There is a formal Ground Support Quality Control Program, and local ground control personnel manage this program at the individual mine sites. The Ground Support Quality Control Program includes review of contractual agreements with suppliers regarding specifications of support products and how these specifications are checked and assured. It also incorporates actions to be taken if material test results do not conform to the required specifications, the quantity and types of tests for the various support systems installed, delivery and storage practice of support products, how these products are protected against damage, quality control programs for shotcrete and backfill including information on types of testing, testing frequency and correction measures if the results are not within the design range, and by whom and how often task observations and inspections are conducted, and whether records of these observations and inspections are kept on file.
In addition to regular testing of the backfill materials, system audits, instrument calibration and test data analysis are part of the backfill/cemented rock fill/cemented aggregate fill quality control program.
7.4.5 Comment on Results
A combination of historical and current data, together with mining experience, are used to establish ground control strategies for different geotechnical conditions.
Analytical methods are used to evaluate structural behaviour of the rock mass. Classic static load factor-of-safety calculations (load demand versus support capacity) are employed in situations requiring site-specific discrete analysis.
Empirical designs use data collected on the past performance of the rockmass during mining activities. These data are also used in numerical model calibrations.
Numerical models are constructed to calculate the induced stress/strain levels around mined-out openings. The models incorporate multi-disciplinary data including the mine’s geology, rock mass properties and production sequence. Through comparison of the model forecasts with the resultant stability performance and mine seismicity record, modelling input parameters are refined and used to provide future stress/instability forecasts. The models are routinely used as part of the economic evaluation cycle to evaluate the stability of a mine design option and help minimize risk, particularly in seismically-active mines.
These data and mining experience support the geotechnical recommendations, including seismic hazard map generation, that support the mine plans discussed in Chapter 13 of this Report.
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8 | SAMPLE PREPARATION, ANALYSES, AND SECURITY |
8.1 | Overview |
Vale has corporate governance procedures in place in support of data collected that supports mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation.
Each operation has documented protocols and internal controls for drilling, sampling, sample preparation and assaying procedures that were approved by Vale’s Resource Management Group. Documentation of the protocols is maintained as current, and personnel receive adequate training to apply them. All data are properly identified by unique reference numbers so that drill hole information can be reliably reconstituted from independent collar, survey, geology, physical properties, and assay tables. All data are verified and checked prior to database entry. The sampling practices and assaying methodologies are clearly described and supported. The proficiency and technical capabilities of the sample preparation and assaying facilities contracted by the Ontario Operations are confirmed by periodic reviews and/or audits. The database contains all relevant information for use in mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation. The database used in estimation contains unbiased and representative data, and any major issues identified by QA/QC programs have appropriate corrective actions applied and disclosed.
Given the longevity of the Ontario Operations, sample preparation, analytical, QA/QC, database upload and verification, and sample security methods varied over time. The material procedures and protocols are presented in the following sub-sections by operator.
8.2 | Sampling Methods |
Drill core is visually examined for mineralization distribution. High and low-grade intervals are identified as separate samples. Continuous samples are collected through the entire mineralized zone with barren samples taken to bracket the mineralized zone on either side. Non-mineralized inclusions within the zone are also sampled to allow proper statistical evaluations of mineral distribution to be performed. Care is taken to ensure that mineralization from the high-grade sample intervals is not included in the low-grade sample intervals.
The sampling interval is established by minimum or maximum sampling lengths and geological and/or structural criteria. The minimum sampling length is 15 cm while the maximum is 3 m. The typical sample length in the Contact-style massive sulphide zones is 1.5 m. In the Footwall-style copper zones, a 0.3 m sampling length is typical due to the presence of narrow, massive chalcopyrite veins. Samples of barren rock bracketing the mineralized zone are 1.5 m in length, regardless of the zone they are bracketing.
The core from underground drilling is typically sampled in its entirety. Surface exploration programs split most mineralized intersections and store half of the core. Representative samples of each mineralized intersection are taken for future reference. One sample is taken for every 3 m of core or when the lithology changes. These “rep” samples are typically 10–15 cm in length and are not assayed. They are boxed in core trays, labelled, and shipped to the Copper Cliff mine core farm area for storage. The remaining unsampled core is discarded.
8.3 | Sample Security Methods |
Drill core is boxed and secured at the drill site with fibre tape. Core boxes are transported by Ontario Operations’ employees to surface and then stored on site before transport by courier to the Copper Cliff core logging facility where they are stored until logged. Both storage areas are monitored by security cameras and personnel 24 hr/day.
Coarse and pulp reject material from the underground drill core samples is stored at the sample preparation laboratory in Sudbury until all required checks and the assay verification is complete (typically for a period of up to one year) after which it is discarded. Pulp reject material from surface exploration drill core samples is stored at the sample preparation laboratory in Sudbury for a period of one year after which the pulps are returned for permanent storage, while the corresponding coarse reject material is disposed of after the analytical data verification.
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Skeletonized core from exploration drill holes is stored in core farms located at Copper Cliff mine and at the former Little Stobie mine.
8.4 | Density Determinations |
Density was estimated based on a multivariate regression of nickel, copper, and sulphur data which can be approximated using the following formula:
· | Density = 100 ÷ (100 ÷ 2.88 + 0.0166 x Cu - 0.1077 x Ni - 0.328 x S). |
Density data were reported using US customary tons per cubic foot (ton/ft3). Values ranged from a minimum of 0.0874 ton/ft3 to a maximum of 0.156 ton/ft3, with averages ranging from 0.097–0.107 ton/ft3.
Where sulphur data were not available, a nickel, copper, and cobalt regression was used.
Corrections to density values were also made if the data were collected prior to 1975, which assumed that of the nickel, cobalt and sulphur analytical data from that time period, the nickel data were the most likely to be accurate given the analytical methods and detection limits in place at the time. An example of a correction regression formula is:
· | Density = (100 ÷ (100 ÷ 2.88 + 0.0166 x Cu - 0.1077 x Ni - 0.328 x S)) ÷ 32.05. |
The estimated density values were periodically checked by comparing with water immersion specific gravity (SG) measurements collected during logging and sampling. The water immersion measurements were guided by a written procedure. A comparative analysis between the measured SG and estimated density for different lithological units and mineralization types was typically completed before block model creation at the exploratory data analysis stage.
8.5 | Analytical and Test Laboratories |
The analytical and test laboratories used for data that supports the mineral resource and mineral reserve estimates are summarized in Table 8-1. Except for the Inco Field Exploration laboratory, the Ontario Operations mine laboratory, and the Vale Technical Development (Canada) Limited laboratory, all laboratories that were used for sample preparation and analysis since 1999 were independent of Inco and Vale.
8.6 | Sample Preparation |
8.6.1 Inco
Inco diamond drill core samples were crushed in their entirety with a combination of different size jaw crushers to 75% -10 mesh. In some instances, a cone crusher was used after a coarse crush on the jaw crusher. A sample of ~150 g was split for pulverization to obtain a pulp of 95% passing 200 mesh.
8.6.2 Vale
The sample preparation procedure is to crush to a minimum of 70% passing 10 mesh (2 mm), followed by pulverizing to 85% passing 200 mesh (0.074 mm).
8.7 | Analysis |
8.7.1 Inco
Beginning in 1971, all of the Inco drill core from Sudbury was analysed by the Inco Field Exploration Laboratory using a Philips 1270 simultaneous X-ray fusion (XRF) unit which was equipped with 14 channels (Si, Fe, Mg, Co, Ni, Al, S, Cu, Ca, Ti, Mo, K, Zn, As). The XRF unit was calibrated using 200 samples which represented the various ore deposits in the Sudbury district.
Samples were pressed in aluminum cups with a binder for 12 seconds at 15 tons on a Herzog press.
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Table 8-1: Analytical and Test Laboratories, Ontario Operations
Laboratory Name | Year | Accreditation | Purpose | Note |
Ontario Operations mine laboratory (Central Process Technology laboratory), Copper Cliff, ON | Prior to 1999 (mostly pre-1970) | Not accredited | Sample preparation and analysis. | |
Inco's Field Exploration (ITSL) Laboratory, Copper Cliff, ON | Prior to 1999 (mostly 1971-1998) | Not accredited | Sample preparation and analysis. | |
ALS Geochemistry, Mississauga, ON/Vancouver, BC | 1999–2005 | ISO 9001: 2000 | Primary sample preparation | |
ALS Geochemistry, Sudbury, ON | 2005 to date |
ISO 9001: 2008 (until mid-2014) ISO/IEC 17025:2005/2017 (after mid-2014) |
Primary sample preparation | The sample preparation procedures adhere to a protocol designed for all operating mines in the Ontario Operations. |
ALS Geochemistry, Vancouver, BC | 1999 to date |
ISO 9001:2000 (until 2005) ISO/IEC 17025:2005/2017 |
Primary analytical laboratory | Used for assaying of all Ontario Operations samples. |
Central Process Technology laboratory, Copper Cliff, ON | 1999–2005 | ISO/IEC 17025:2005 | Secondary analytical laboratory | A representative portion of the samples analyzed by ALS Vancouver re-assayed. |
SGS Lakefield Research, Lakefield, ON | 2006–2015 | ISO/IEC 17025:2005 | Secondary analytical laboratory | A representative portion of the samples analyzed by ALS Vancouver re-assayed |
Vale Technical Development Limited, Mississauga, ON | 2016 to 2022 | ISO/IEC 17025:2005/2017 | Secondary analytical laboratory | A representative portion of the samples analyzed by ALS Vancouver re-assayed. |
Activation Laboratories Ltd., Ancaster, ON | 2022 to date | ISO/IEC 17025:2017 (Lab 266) | Secondary analytical laboratory | A representative portion of the samples analyzed by ALS Vancouver re-assayed. |
Results for the pressed pellets for diamond drill samples were reported for copper, nickel, cobalt, iron, and sulphur. The XRF program also calculated a specific gravity based on intensities from the 14 channels. Three control samples at various sulphide concentrations were routinely run to ensure that the calibration remained accurate.
Gold, platinum, and palladium were primarily assayed at Inco’s Central Process Technology laboratory by a combination of fire assay and a variety of analytical finishes, including the silver bead being arced on an ARL spark emission spectrometer, direct current plasma (DCP) and inductively-coupled plasma (ICP) analysis. In later years the laboratory also analysed for gold, platinum, palladium, rhodium, and silver using an arrested cupellation of the lead button from a fire assay fusion.
During the 1980s, a portion of core samples was sent for assaying to the Inco Central Process Technology Laboratory. The method used a Na2O2 fusion followed by ICP analysis of a base metal suite. Some mine samples were despatched to ALS Geochemistry (formerly Chemex and ALS Chemex) using the same Inco procedure for base metals, and assayed for precious metals by fire assay/ICP.
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Starting in late 1990s, all core drill samples were prepared and analysed at the ALS Geochemistry laboratory using the Na2O2 fusion/ICP procedure for base metals, iron and sulphur, whereas precious metals were analyzed by a fire assay/ICP method.
8.7.2 Vale
All samples were analyzed for copper, nickel, cobalt, iron, sulphur, arsenic, lead and zinc using a sodium peroxide fusion with inductively-coupled plasma (ICP) atomic emission spectroscopy (AES) finish (ALS method ME-ICP81). When requested, lime, magnesia and silica were also reported.
Platinum group element contents were determined by a lead collection fire assay fusion/ICP–AES technique (ALS methods PGM-ICP23 or PGM-ICP27) on a 30 g sample.
Arsenic and lead at the trace levels were reported from the aqua regia digestion followed by an ICP finish (ALS method ME-ICP41).
Any samples with concentrations exceeding the upper limits of the method were automatically re-assayed using ALS Vancouver’s default over-limit methods.
Lower detection limits by ALS are summarized in Table 8-2.
Activation Laboratories Limited uses analytical methods comparable to those of ALS (sodium peroxide fusion with ICP–AES finish for base metals and lead fire-assay with an ICP-AES finish for precious metals) with the same lower detection limits illustrated in Table 8-2.
8.8 | Quality Assurance and Quality Control |
8.8.1 Inco
8.8.1.1 | Survey |
Periodic field calibrations and checks of the north-seeking gyro used during the later Inco campaigns were done by the supplier/contractor with repairs completed as required.
8.8.1.2 | Logging |
The geologist and technologist responsible for the drill program completed an error check of the drill log. Prior to being uploaded to a master drill hole database the logging software performed a check of each drill hole. These checks ensured that potential errors such as incorrect hole azimuths and dips, sample number sequences, rock codes, and hole depths were minimized. The drill log was also compared with adjacent verified and validated drill hole information.
8.8.1.3 | Assays |
Inco’s quality control samples were reported along with the check results and compiled to ensure that the Inco results met internal standards. The Inco laboratory automatically repeated any outliers. Check samples that fell outside the expected precision (along with the original surrounding samples), were reviewed by the contract laboratory to determine if the error was systematic for a group of samples or merely isolated cases. Upon reconciling the differences, corrections were issued by the laboratory. The Inco program checked both the sampling and assaying procedures of the contract laboratory and encouraged the laboratory to minimize systematic and random errors. Precision and accuracy of these checks were routinely examined to ensure assays were within acceptable error limits.
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Table 8-2: Lower Detection Limits (ALS Geochemistry)
ME-ICP81 | ME-ICP41 | PGM-ICP23 | ||||||||||
Cu (%) |
Ni (%) |
Co (%) |
Fe (%) |
S (%) |
As (%) |
Pb (%) |
Zn (%) |
As (ppm) |
Pb (ppm) |
Au (opt) |
Pt (opt) |
Pd (opt) |
0.002 | 0.002 | 0.002 | 0.05 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.002 | 2 | 2 | 0.00003 | 0.0001 | 0.00003 |
Occasional assay checks of the original pulps were undertaken at the Inco laboratory ensure that accuracy at the assaying stage was acceptable. However, care had to be taken to avoid selecting older, oxidised samples, to avoid introducing an additional error source.
Prior to 1970, elements other than nickel and copper were estimated either from composite samples or factors. Composites were generally composed of from pulps of four to five sequential samples that were not necessarily characterized by the same type or degree of mineralization.
The sulphur and PGE–gold assay for the composite was then assigned to the individual samples that went to make up the composite. This practice tended to smooth values and prevented the full understanding of the distribution of PGE–gold minerals, particularly in a narrow seam environment.
The pre-1972 data for PGE–gold, sulphur, and cobalt are not used in resource modelling. The impact of these legacy data that have different sampling and analytical techniques is investigated primarily with regression analyses, and when required, a regression formula is applied.
8.8.2 Vale
8.8.2.1 | Geological |
There are three major quality control checks conducted during core logging, including:
· | Weight check (estimated weight versus measured weight by laboratory); |
· | Assay check (visually-estimated nickel and copper grade versus nickel and copper assay values); |
· | Sulphide check (visually-estimated sulphide content versus calculated sulphide). |
Should assay data correspond to geologists’ estimates, a geologist sign-offs on the drill hole quality control. This sign-off process is linked to drill hole finalization, which cannot be completed without the quality control sign-off. All drill holes that are not finalized are considered incomplete. A quality control review of all assay data received in a month is carried out by QA/QC personnel from the North American Mines Technical Services department for all operating mines’ data. The results of these assessments are communicated to mine personnel and reported monthly.
8.8.2.2 | QA/QC |
The QA/QC program includes insertions of standard reference material (SRMs) (2% insertion rate), blank samples (<1%) coarse reject duplicates (3%), field/split core duplicates (1–2%), and a check assay program using an external laboratory (2–3%). Insertion rates are in line with industry norms. The frequency of checks may be increased if it is determined that an extra control is required.
The sample preparation laboratory is audited annually, and the primary assay laboratory is audited on average every 2–3 years.
Until 2014, monitoring of ALS Vancouver’s internal control sample results augmented the QA/QC protocol used at the Ontario Operations. However, the geological QA/QC protocols for Ontario Operations have proven capable of revealing issues with the analytical service provider, and the issuance of annual reports of the laboratory's internal QC was transferred to the ALS Vancouver analytical laboratory.
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Vale’s Resource Management Group conducts an annual review of the QC sample results and issues a summary report to the Mines Technical Services group.
8.9 | Databases |
The sample and analytical database typically includes data on geology, survey, geophysics, geochemistry, sample assays, rock quality, tonnage factors and may also include information on mineability, mineralogy, metallurgy, and economics.
Data are stored and managed in the Mines Exploration Borehole System (MEBS). The database for mineral resource estimation is required to clearly identify interpreted data (e.g., calculated density) as such with respect to primary data (e.g., density measurements by the water displacement method).
Several steps are employed to validate data and ensure the integrity of the MEBS database, the majority of which are performed by software data-checking routines. It is the operation qualified person’s (see definition in Chapter 9.1.2) responsibility to ensure that the database is validated and its integrity maintained by the direct supervision of one person (the database manager) who reports directly to the operation qualified person.
The database is subject to regular back-ups.
8.10 | Qualified Person’s Opinion on Sample Preparation, Security, and Analytical Procedures |
The sample preparation, analysis, quality control, and security procedures used by the Ontario Operations have changed over time to meet evolving industry practices. Practices at the time the information was collected were industry-standard, and frequently were industry-leading practices.
Vale currently uses a system of “layered responsibility” to ensure that only appropriately verified data are used for estimation purposes (see discussion in Chapter 9.1).
The Qualified Person is of the opinion that the sample preparation, analysis, quality control, and security procedures are sufficient to provide reliable data to support estimation of mineral resources and mineral reserves.
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9 | DATA VERIFICATION |
9.1 | Internal Data Verification |
9.1.1 Data Validation
The Mines Geology department within the Ontario Operations performed monthly assay data validation through three principal quality indicators:
· | Weight checks; |
· | Assay checks; |
· | Sulphide checks. |
The Mines Geology department used several steps of data validation. Most of these checks were performed by software data checking routines that rigorously verify data acceptance. All new assay data being added to the database were monitored daily and validated monthly for accuracy and consistency by comparing the data transferred to MEBS to the assay certificates received from ALS Vancouver.
Vale had data collection procedures in place that included several verification steps designed to ensure database integrity. Vale staff also conducted regular logging, sampling, laboratory, and database reviews. In addition to these internal checks Vale contracted independent consultants to perform laboratory, database, and mine study reviews. The process of active database quality control and internal and external audits generally resulted in high-quality data.
Prior to use in mineral resource estimation, the data were downloaded from MEBS into a project file and reviewed for improbable entries and high values. Any errors were flagged and corrected. Quality control graphs were plotted at a minimum for assayed Cu+Ni versus estimated grade, measured sample weight versus estimated weight, and calculated sulphide (from assayed sulphur) versus estimated sulphide. Discrepancies were investigated, with re-assays requested where required.
Vale staff also conducted regular laboratory reviews and audits. However, annual reviews scheduled since 2020 were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Annual reviews are anticipated to resume in 2023.
9.1.2 Mineral Resource and Mineral Reserve Estimates
A system of “layered responsibility” was established within the Vale’s Base Metals Division for documenting the information supporting the mineral resource and mineral reserve estimates, describing the methods used, and ensuring the validity of the estimates. The concept of a system of “layered responsibility” is that individuals at each level within the organization assume responsibility, through a sign-off or certification process, for the work relating to preparation of mineral resource and mineral reserve estimates that they are most actively involved in.
Mineral reserve, mineral resource and exploration target estimates are prepared and certified by qualified persons at the mine site level, and are subsequently reviewed by qualified persons at the Vale Base Metals corporate level. Where there is more than one mine, the mine qualified persons prepare and sign on the estimates for their mine and provide them to the operations qualified persons, and then to the qualified persons at the Vale Base Metals corporate level.
Mineral reserves and mineral resources are estimated in accordance with the Vale Base Metals Guidelines and Standards for Mineral Resource Mineral Reserve Reporting protocols. Each year the corporate qualified persons update and revise these guidelines, which are then reviewed and approved annually by the Vale Base Metals Mineral Reserve and Mineral Resource Subcommittee. The guidelines may be subject to revisions as approved by the subcommittee any time throughout the year, based on certain circumstances such as external opinions, or amendments to external regulations.
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Operations qualified persons have responsibility for ensuring that the mineral reserve, mineral resource, and exploration target estimates, technical documents and other scientific and technical information for their operation are consistent with the guidelines. These qualified persons also supervise the sample and analytical database manager; establish and maintain core drill hole and assay QA/QC programs for the operation; ensure that production reconciliation are tracked and reported quarterly; ensure that mining adherence results are tracked and reported monthly to the Corporate Technology and Engineering Group for compilation and reporting (if applicable) and ensure mitigation actions are in place to address deviations from tracked plans; and provide supporting documentation related to material additions or changes in estimates of mineral reserves, mineral resources, and exploration targets. Operations qualified persons are expected to co-ordinate with, and where applicable, assist mine qualified persons in co-ordinating with other subject matter experts to obtain all information necessary to support estimation. Other experts include individuals in marketing, legal, tax, corporate affairs, finance, strategic and business planning and sustainability (environment, social, governance). These experts are responsible for providing such information as may be required by the operation qualified persons to ensure that the reports supporting mineral resource and mineral reserve disclosure contain all pertinent information.
Mines qualified persons have similar responsibilities to those outlined for the operations qualified persons. Mines qualified persons are typically responsible for coordinating with other specialists to obtain all information necessary to prepare the estimates. Specialists are knowledgeable in areas such as geostatistics, block modelling, sampling and assaying procedures, core drilling, geotechnical, geomechanical, hydrogeology, hydrology, metallurgy, mineralogy, scheduling, cost estimation, lands administration, economic analysis, finance, law, and environment.
Corporate qualified persons are responsible for ensuring that the required governance is satisfied for the estimation, reporting, and disclosure of Vale Base Metals mineral resources and mineral reserves, including compliance with the internal guidelines. The corporate qualified persons are responsible for developing and maintaining mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation and reporting standards and ensuring that such standards and guidelines follow industry best practices, and meet Vale’s corporate requirements as well as legal requirements.
Technical reviews of the mineral reserve and mineral resource estimates are performed by the Corporate Technology and Engineering Group annually (or as needed) for each operation and mine. The Corporate Technology and Engineering Group prepares and issues a technical review report to each mine and operation with risks identified and ranked. All identified risks require mitigation and addressing, consistent with the risk rating that has been assigned to them, to be consistent with the disclosure requirements of SK1300, and to be compliant with the Vale Base Metals corporate standards and guidelines for mineral resource and mineral reserve reporting, and the Vale Global Guidelines for Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves Management.
9.1.3 Studies
Vale staff perform a number of internal studies and reports in support of mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation for the various Ontario Operations mines. These include reconciliation studies, mineability and dilution evaluations, investigations of grade discrepancies between model assumptions and probe data, drill hole density evaluations, long-range plan reviews, and mining studies to meet internal financing criteria for project advancement.
9.1.4 Peer Review By Subject Matter Experts
The QPs requested that information, conclusions, and recommendations presented in the body of this Report be reviewed by Vale experts or experts retained by Vale in each discipline area as a further level of data verification.
Subject matter experts were requested to cross-check, where applicable, numerical data, flag any data omissions or errors they identified, review the manner in which the data were summarized and reported in the technical report summary, check the interpretations arising from the data as presented in the Report, and were asked to review that the QP’s opinions stated as required in certain Report Chapters were supported by the data and by Vale’s future intentions and Project planning.
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Feedback from the subject matter experts was incorporated into the Report as required.
9.2 | External Data Verification |
Vale and its predecessor companies commissioned a number of audits and third-party reviews of block models, mineral resources and mineral reserves. External audit requirements follow the Vale Global Guidelines for Mineral Resources and Reserves Management. Recent external data verification programs are summarized in Table 9-1.
9.3 | Data Verification by Qualified Person |
As part of data verification, Darren Hodder, P.Geo., performs reviews of surface and underground diamond drill coring activities, core logging data collection and sampling, chain of custody reports, QA/QC, grade control, geological mapping, and production reconciliation processes during site visits.
Mr. Hodder also reviews the following for the North Atlantic Operations: geological modelling and resource estimation practices including peer review memos, QA/QC verification reports, core drill program planning budgeting and program execution, production reconciliation results, drill spacing and geological support requirements for mineral classification, changes to mineral resource estimates, results of external and internal process audits, results of mineral resource and mineral reserve audits, geotechnical and metallurgical program requirements, and software and new technology selection and utilization.
9.4 | Qualified Person’s Opinion on Data Adequacy |
The QP is of the opinion that data that have been verified on upload to the database, and checked using applicable Vale protocols, are acceptable for use in mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation.
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Table 9-1: External Data Verification, Ontario Operations
Company | Year | Verification Type |
AMEC | 2005 | Audit of resource and reserve estimation methods, Creighton copper–nickel mine. |
AMEC | 2007 | Technical audit of 153 and 170 deposits, McCreedy East mine. |
SRK Consulting | 2009 | Garson Deep (5100 to 5600 Level) mineral resource and mineral reserve audit report. |
Golder Associates (Golder) | 2010 | Mineral resource and mineral reserve audit |
AMEC | 2014 | Mineral resource and mineral reserve audit, Copper Cliff mine |
Amec Foster Wheeler | 2015 | Review of mineral resources, mineral reserves, mine plans, and economic analysis supporting the mineral reserves |
RPA/SLR | 2020 | Mineral resource audit of Copper Cliff 191, Creighton Deep, Victor Deep Cu deposits. |
SRK | 2021 |
Mineral reserve audit of Copper Cliff mine. Mineral resource audit of Victor Main deposit. |
SRK | 2022 | Mineral Reserve audit of Creighton Phase 5 FEL2 Study |
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10 | MINERAL PROCESSING AND METALLURGICAL TESTING |
10.1 | Introduction |
The mineralogy and metallurgical performance of the sulphide deposits at the Ontario Operations are generally well understood due to the extensive drill hole coverage, mill performance records and mineralogical and metallurgical studies conducted over approximately the last 100 years. These metallurgical studies, ranging from bench-scale to multi-tonne pilot testing, have included academic and industrial research and development of mineral separation. Based on these studies, flowsheet evolution and optimization has continued.
Specific deposits and/or ore zones possess unique characteristics with respect to sulphide and gangue mineralogy. Geochemical domains are identified and documented by a mine or project geologist familiar with the deposit through assessment of:
· | Geological (mineralogical) mapping (e.g., high-grade copper zones, alteration zones, structural-influenced zones); |
· | MEBS assay results (copper–nickel, pyrrhotite–nickel, high PGM–low sulphide zones); |
· | Elemental ratio plots, for example sulphur against copper, nickel and PGM, assessing for bi- or multi-modal distributions; |
· | Normative sulphide mineralogical calculations and plots using the “normative mineralogy” functions available through Datamine Studio scripts. |
Documents from the geologists identifying the mineralogical domains are submitted to metallurgical specialists at Vale Technical Development (VTD), located in Mississauga, Ontario in conjunction with sample material for metallurgical testwork. These documents include a spatial and geological description, elemental scatter-plots, three-dimensional views of normative mineralogy and a reference to nearby samples previously analyzed.
Samples taken during exploration and strategic studies drilling are used for metallurgical testing during the scoping, prefeasibility and feasibility studies. For current orebodies where the ore types are well understood, drilling is performed to delineate the response from those particular areas. Where there is less geological information, definition-style drill holes, bulk or grab samples may be selected for additional metallurgical testing. The test samples typically consist of either drill core or sample rejects representative of a portion or complete deposit/zone.
10.2 | Test Laboratories |
Metallurgical testing is primarily done at Vale’s Sheridan Park testwork facility. This facility is not independent of Vale, or its predecessor company, Inco. There is no international standard of accreditation provided for metallurgical testing laboratories or metallurgical testing techniques. The analytical laboratory in Sheridan Park is ISO/IEC 17025:2017 accredited for technical competence in the field of chemical testing.
Vale uses a standard procedure that is calibrated against the Clarabelle Mill.
10.3 | Metallurgical Testwork |
Metallurgical testing programs were implemented and continue for all primary production ore zones as well as any future ore zones prior to development. Ore evaluation and full circuit simulation flotation studies are performed as a joint effort between the Ontario Operations technical services staff, and the Sheridan Park facility.
Vale has adopted standard test procedures to develop throughput and recovery models for the existing mine and future mineralized zones. These procedures are based on the existing processing flowsheet, operating conditions, and reagent suite, calibrated against the Clarabelle Mill.
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During 2005–2010 the Clarabelle Mill flowsheet was studied and modified to implement a simplified flowsheet, referred to as the “challenging ore recovery” (CORe) project. The main revisions to the flowsheet include the elimination of the magnetic pyrrhotite separation stage, new rougher–cleaner–scavenger circuits and the installation of an IsaMill for regrind purposes.
The metallurgical testwork procedure (FCS-full circuit simulation) after 2012 CORe implementation at Clarabelle Mill was modified to reflect the changes. The mineralogy and metallurgical recovery reports include the characteristics (i.e., mineral liberation, floatable silicates, hexagonal pyrrhotite, pyrite content, etc.) which is used to identify problematic ores and possibly mitigate negative effects.
Samples have been historically, and are currently, composited from ½ or ¼ contiguous drill core
The ore zones currently in production may be tested to investigate the following:
· | The expected metallurgical performance for non-typical ores, such as low sulphide content, copper-rich sulphides with elevated precious metals content, zones with high hexagonal pyrrhotite content, and lower nickel-tenor disseminated sulphide in norite; |
· | Reasons for local variations in recovery (liberation during grind and separation in the rougher scavenger circuit, differences in abundance of pyrrhotite polytype, PGM–sulphide–silicate intergrowth and natural grain size differences; |
· | The impact of deleterious elements (mineralogy and mode occurrence) on grade and recovery; |
Some drill core samples are submitted for grindability testing (i.e., Bond work index), but all samples have grind time determined in a laboratory rod mill, which supports the assessment of relative hardness.
Ore zones planned to be brought into production are subject to similar tests. The testwork is conducted sufficiently ahead of production scheduling to allow characterization of the material for inclusion in mine planning.
10.4 | Recovery Estimates |
The Ontario Operations produce nickel–copper–PGM ores that are blended and treated in the Clarabelle Mill to produce sulphide concentrates containing the valuable metals. The Sudbury ores contain cobalt, gold, silver, platinum, palladium, ruthenium, rhodium, and iridium that are typically associated with the valuable sulphides.
The forecast smelting and refining recovery factors are determined from the annual metals plan models, which incorporate current metallurgical factors, processing and unaccounted losses in smelting and refining processes.
The anticipated metal recoveries at the Clarabelle Mill are based on an empirical mill process model based on ore attributes (nickel:pyrrhotite ratio, nickel grade, etc.) which were developed internally by Vale personnel. The model rejects the same percentage of pyrrhotite from all the mineralization going to the mill at the same metal grades (annually adjusted to plan). Similarly, the rock tailings are rejected at the same metal grades (annually adjusted to plan) for all mineralization. The model contains assumptions as to the behaviour of typical ores based on grade and pyrrhotite content. Maximum allowable values for recoveries are set for ores that may exceed the known expected recoveries.
The milling recovery for nickel is estimated based on the nickel head grade and the calculated amount of pyrrhotite. The forecast milling recoveries for cobalt are scaled to nickel recovery and the forecast copper recoveries are estimated using the annual copper head grades in the feed. The milling recovery assumptions for platinum, palladium and gold are estimated based on historical actual recoveries and are driven by the head grade of each precious metal.
Table 10-1 shows a comparison of the actual recoveries to mill prediction for the period 2016–2022.
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Table 10-1: Clarabelle Mill Recoveries, 2016–2022
Year | Status | Clarabelle Mill Actual Data | Model Predicted | Actual Less Predicted | ||||||
Cu (%) |
Ni (%) |
S (%) |
Cu Rec (%) |
Ni Rec (%) |
Cu Rec (%) |
Ni Rec (%) |
Cu Rec (%) |
Ni Rec (%) | ||
2016 | Actual | 2.04 | 1.46 | 9.7 | 97.4 | 84.9 | 95.7 | 85.4 | 1.7 | -0.5 |
2017 | Actual | 2.24 | 1.60 | 10.0 | 97.1 | 83.8 | 97.1 | 86.4 | 0.0 | -2.5 |
2018 | Actual | 2.16 | 1.60 | 10.0 | 97.1 | 85.0 | 97.1 | 86.4 | 0.0 | -1.4 |
2019 | Actual | 2.26 | 1.46 | 9.2 | 97.0 | 85.2 | 96.7 | 85.2 | 0.3 | 0.0 |
2020 | Actual | 1.88 | 1.27 | 7.9 | 96.4 | 84.3 | 96.1 | 84.2 | 0.3 | 0.1 |
2021 | Actual | 1.90 | 1.26 | 8.1 | 95.7 | 84.0 | 96.2 | 84.1 | -0.5 | -0.1 |
2022 | Actual | 1.72 | 1.35 | 8.8 | 96.3 | 84.7 | 96.5 | 83.9 | -0.2 | 0.8 |
Note: Source of data is Clarabelle month end base-metal balances, model recoveries from mill budget model. 2020 through 2022 models include modelled for fresh hoist and observed results for low-grade stockpile materials.
The Ontario Operations have experienced increased variations in predicted versus actual nickel recoveries in recent years. The increased nickel recovery variation can be attributed to deficiencies in the ability of the recovery model to distinguish between monoclinic and hexagonal pyrrhotite recoveries.
In 2017, modeled copper recovery expectations were increased to account for sustained improvements in copper recovery associated with the CORe project and following optimization work. Based on the past model recovery predictions performance, it is believed that the mill recovery model can continue to be used to accurately predict the actual annual copper and nickel mill recoveries from the Clarabelle Mill.
Smelter and refinery recoveries for all metals are calculated monthly. These recovery rates include all recoveries from processing the nickel–copper concentrate to finished nickel and other intermediate metals or finished metals to customers. The actual smelter and refinery recoveries for 2016–2022 are provided in Table 10-2.
With the change in the processing flowsheet that resulted from the clean atmospheric emissions reduction project (Clean AER project), a technical limit has not been found at the forecast blended arsenic grades in the life-of-mine (LOM) plan. Some operational and cost implications have been found in relation to As:Ni ratios. These implications require As:Ni grade control in blended feed to minimize variability in As:Ni ratios and corresponding impacts at the Copper Cliff Refinery and matte processing. Incremental plant trials are under way to move from the previously-understood arsenic limit to a As:Ni limit sufficient to process forecast arsenic grades for the five-year mine plan. Plant trials conducted to date have identified additional work in downstream processes and is expected to be largely completed in 2023.
The slag cleaning converter, which is operated primarily to improve smelter cobalt recovery, was offline for the second half of 2019, but is expected to be reactivated in 2023.
Table 10-3 summarizes the predicted metallurgical recoveries for the LOM.
10.5 | Metallurgical Variability |
Tests were performed on samples that are considered to be representative for the different orebodies/zones and the mineralogy of the various orebodies and zones.
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Table 10-2: Combined Smelter and Refining Recoveries, 2016–2022
Year | Cu Rec. (%) |
Ni Rec. (%) |
Co Rec. (%) |
Pt Rec. (%) |
Pd Rec. (%) |
Au Rec. (%) |
2016 | 95.2 | 93.8 | 37.3 | 96.3 | 96.4 | 95.6 |
2017 | 94.7 | 92.3 | 38.1 | 94.7 | 94.6 | 93.9 |
2018 | 93.7 | 95.1 | 37.1 | 95.0 | 95.8 | 93.5 |
2019 | 93.2 | 94.3 | 36.7 | 95.7 | 96.0 | 93.9 |
2020 | 93.4 | 94.6 | 38.7 | 95.8 | 95.9 | 93.4 |
2021 | 92.6 | 94.4 | 34.1 | 95.9 | 95.8 | 93.7 |
2022* | 93.6 | 95.8 | 35.4 | 95.6 | 95.6 | 91.7 |
Note: 2022 September year to date recoveries for copper, nickel, and cobalt. 2022 July year to date recoveries for platinum, palladium, and gold.
Table 10-3: Long Term Average Processing Metal Recoveries
Metal | Mill Recovery to Bulk Concentrates (%) |
Smelter and Refinery Recovery of Ni Concentrate (%) |
Cu | 94.9 | 91.6 |
Ni | 85.6 | 93.0 |
Co | 78.7 | 42.8 |
Pt | 77.7 | 95.6 |
Pd | 83.3 | 95.6 |
Au | 69.6 | 94.0 |
Note: Data source is the 2022 mineral reserves financial model. Processing recoveries to marketable products only and does not include accountability factors on semi-refined product sales terms.
10.6 | Deleterious Elements |
The deleterious elements for smelting are arsenic, lead, zinc, and chromium. With these typical deleterious element concentrations, the mill concentrate feed (nickel concentrate currently) for the smelter routinely meets smelter specifications. The element of the greatest concern is arsenic and the overall blended feed into the smelter is kept below 0.08% As.
In the period from 2025–2026,
Garson ores are forecast to deliver significant volumes of arsenic to Clarabelle and may pose challenges in controlling the arsenic to
the correct levels so as to not impact smelter efficiency and operating cost. As an integrated operation, the Ontario Operations have
some flexibility in the control of their feed through stockpiling and blending strategies.
10.7 | Qualified Person’s Opinion on Data Adequacy |
Industry-standard studies were performed as part of process development and initial mill design. Subsequent production experience and focused investigations guided mill alterations and process changes.
Testwork programs, both internal and external, continue to be performed to support current operations and potential improvements. From time to time, this may lead to requirements to adjust cut-off grades, modify the process flowsheet, or change reagent additions and plant parameters to meet concentrate quality, production, and economic targets.
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Based on these checks, the metallurgical testwork and reconciliation and production data support the estimation of mineral resources and mineral reserves, and the inputs to the economic analysis.
The plant will produce variations in recovery due to the day-to-day changes in ore type or combinations of ore type being processed. These variations are expected to trend to the forecast recovery value for monthly or longer reporting periods.
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11 | MINERAL RESOURCE ESTIMATES |
11.1 | Introduction |
Mineral resources were estimated for selected zones within the Coleman, Copper Cliff, Creighton, Stobie, Garson (McConnell is included with Garson), Totten and Victor deposits.
Resource estimation follows a similar procedure for the Ontario Operations. Vale has a set of protocols, internal controls, and guidelines in place to support the estimation process, which the estimators must follow. These include: comprehensive lithological and mineralization domain characterization; selection of all representative samples inside the domain(s); compositing of drill hole information on a consistent support size (length, density, recovery), validation through statistics on lengths and variables before and after compositing; comprehensive understanding of the statistical characters of the variables; in each estimation domain and at the contacts between domains; characterization of the spatial continuity of each variable to be modelled (variograms/correlograms); understanding of the influence of outliers and variables with highly skewed distributions and selection of an appropriate handling strategy (capping, restricted neighborhood); selection of an appropriate selective mining unit (SMU) size for the geometry of mineralization, spatial distribution of borehole and sample data, potential mining method and production rates under consideration; selection of an appropriate modelling technique and definition of proper parameters and options to be used (e.g., interpolation technique, interpolation or kriging plan, search strategy, variogram models to be used, post-processing methods, in particular for indicator estimation); validation of the estimates (visual inspection, checks for global and local bias, confirmation of the kriging plan, and a check on the degree of grade smoothing resulting from the interpolation); and confidence classification.
Estimation was performed as a team effort involving several technical disciplines.
All mineralogical information, exploration boreholes and background information were provided to the estimators by the geological staff at the mines or by exploration staff. Commercially-available Datamine software was used for estimation.
The block size was based on the spacing of the core drill holes and the potential mining method. The block size generally represents the smallest possible SMU, and varies by deposit/zone, for example, the block sizes in the X, Y and Z directions include 3 x 2 x 3 m (10 x 5 x 10 ft) used at the Coleman Main zone, 6 x 3 x 6 m (20 x 10 x 20 ft) used at the Creighton 310 zone, and 3 x 6 x 6 m (10 x 20 x 20 ft) used at the Victor Main.
11.2 | Exploratory Data Analysis |
A rigorous review of the deposit drill hole database was conducted prior to initiating modelling. A statistical query of the various elements in the drill hole database was independently performed for all geological and grade domains.
Bivariate and multivariate statistical and spatial data reviews were conducted on the data for each zone estimated. The reviews checked for elements such as outlier values that would require influence restrictions, mean values, spatial geochemical trends, evidence of fractionation, and correlation discrepancies such as discrepancies due to historical correlation estimation methods.
11.3 | Geological Models |
Domain wireframes were constructed using data from surface and underground drill holes that had different age periods, ranging from discovery-style drilling to exploration and infill drill programs. Wireframes were verified to ensure there were no modelling construct issues such as merge, boundary, or crossover strings. The strings were checked to ensure they were snapped to relevant drill hole points and encompassed the interpreted mineralized system.
An example of a domain wireframe showing the drilling used to construct the domains is provided in Figure 11-1.
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Figure 11-1: Example Wireframe Domains vs Drill Data, Victor Contact
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2016
A thorough review of the drill holes and samples captured within the wireframes was completed to identify any drill holes with questionable data such as poor selection of the drill hole orientation, inconsistent geological interpretations, poorly-constrained drill trajectories, poor logging, and analytical methodologies, lost core intervals, and instances where the drill hole was never logged or assay data were pending. All drill holes considered inappropriate for use in resource modeling were removed from the estimation dataset, with the reasons for exclusion recorded in the dataset.
Intervals logged as “lost core” were assigned an absent value for all elements, unless such intervals were specifically identified as waste inclusions, in which case a value of 0.0 was assigned for all elements.
11.4 | Density Assignment |
As noted in Chapter 8.4, density data were calculated using a regression formula, and interpolated using the methods described in Chapter 11.9.
11.5 | Grade Capping/Outlier Restrictions |
A number of approaches were used to evaluate whether grade caps were warranted; for example, X–Y scatter plots or evaluation using Excel could be used to check nickel and copper values prior to undertaking compositing to determine outlier values.
A similar approach was used where the deposit had cobalt, platinum, palladium, or gold values that could be potentially economic. Vale typically reduced precious metal outliers to the 99.5 percentile; however, this may be modified if the individual deposit evaluation warrants that.
Vale’s estimation protocol was not to cap deleterious element grades.
11.6 | Composites |
Vale used a customary 5 ft (1.52 m) composite interval for all Sudbury nickel–copper–platinum group element resource models. However, in certain deposits, such as the Coleman mine MOB4, a 3 ft (0.91 m) interval was selected.
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All sample compositing was done using the Vale Ontario Operations Customization scripts “create sample composites”.
A validation script was used to check database fields, such as CU, NI, CO, PT, PD, AU, SULP, DENSITY and LENGTH.
11.7 | Unfolding |
Unfolding was used for the majority of the Ontario Operations deposits to compensate for changes in strike and dip and/or pinch–swell geometry of a deposit, and to compensate for poor grade sample constraints within a mineralized wireframe. The unfolding process helped produce more realistic grade representations within the block model. A scripted process, “create unfold composites” was employed.
Unfold strings were created and the composited samples were unfolded using a standard modeling process. The starting locations of all strings were verified, and all the samples were unfolded properly with the total sample length in the unfolded system matching the original sample length. The top of the unfold strings was set to follow the trend of the mineralization. A schematic showing the unfolded strings in relation to drill composites for the Copper Cliff Pit deposit is included as Figure 11-2.
The text output from the script and a visual inspection of the unfold strings relative to the composited drill hole sample data were used to verify the unfolding process had worked properly.
11.8 | Variography |
Experimental grade variograms were created using the “calculate grade variogram” process in Datamine. Typically, the model was a spherical, anisotropic two-structure model. If the variography indicated a clear plunge direction to the mineralization, the variograms were rotated to compensate for the plunge or the plunge was built into the unfold DTM and strings. Where relevant, the rotated variogram was used for the application of the variogram model and the search parameter directions.
11.9 | Estimation/Interpolation Methods |
The long-range distance or second structure of the variogram model was used to help determine the radius of the search ellipsoid for grade interpolation. The across strike direction was decreased to half of the value in order to avoid excessive grade spreading in that direction, as per current Vale resource modelling practice. As is customary Vale practice, the base metals (Ni, Cu, Co) were grouped together with the sulphide content and bulk density, the precious metals (Pt, Pd, Au) were grouped together, and the deleterious elements (As, Pb) were also grouped together for search distance purposes.
Grade estimation was conducted using ordinary kriging (OK), with search distances based on variography. The OK estimation process followed the methodologies developed by Ontario Operations and used customized Datamine scripts.
Due to insufficient data, unfolding and variography were not performed for the Coleman Main zone; instead, this area was estimated using a dynamic anisotropy inverse distance weighting to the second power (DA–ID2) method. DA–ID2 was also used for a portion of the Garson 4 Shear Orebody.
The models were typically estimated in three successive passes, and a final, fourth pass was completed to estimate blocks that were not informed during the first three passes. Blocks estimated during the fourth pass were not included in the classified resources, as they were intended for use in defining drill targets.
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Figure 11-2: Schematic Showing Unfolded Strings Relative to Composited Samples
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020. Oblique view, looking southeast. Composites shown as coloured cylinders, unfolded strings as lines.
Nearest neighbor (NN) models were constructed, and used primarily to validate the OK global estimates, check the smoothing ratios, and apply a global variance correction to the final estimated models where necessary. A second NN model set, where the samples were composited to one sample grade per borehole (1CNN), was created to help identify any instances of poorly-oriented holes improperly influencing estimated block model grades by comparing the global mean grades to those of the regular NN model. The NN2 model was spatially reviewed in 3D against the informing drill holes.
11.10 | Validation |
Validation was conducted according to the Vale Ontario Operations procedures. Validation steps included: checking block model volumes against the mineral wireframe volumes; checking of model grades against the drill hole grades; checking for over-smoothed grades and applying corrections where necessary; checking, if the model was unfolded, that all drill holes were appropriately captured; ensuring that all relevant samples were captured within the wireframes; checking that the OK and NN estimates were compared to the drill holes, that the block grades reasonably matched the drill hole grades, and, where applicable, the grade trends paralleled the footwall and hanging wall contacts.
Swath plots were used to review the distribution of the base, precious and deleterious metals along strike, through the vertical ranges, and from the footwall to hanging wall contact.
A DA–ID2 interpolation, created using Vale custom scripts, could also be used to check the OK estimates.
All resource estimates were subject to peer review by a review committee consisting of personnel from the relevant mine or exploration depending on deposit location, and representatives of the Mine Design and Evaluation and Resource Management departments.
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11.11 | Confidence Classification of Mineral Resource Estimates |
11.11.1 Mineral Resource Confidence Classification
The mineral resource confidence categories were initially assigned based on a combination of factors, including geological understanding and confidence, drill hole support, grade estimation confidence relative to planned production rates, and identified risk factors (e.g., metallurgy). The initial assignments were reviewed to assess the impacts of factors such as metallurgical recoveries, geomechanical studies, mine design work, and representative mineability and recovery reconciliation analysis. An example of the resulting confidence classifications is provided in Figure 11-3 for the Creighton 310 Deposit.
Where mining has occurred or is currently active, the mined-out volumes were wireframed, classified as either void or fill, and overprinted upon the resource model to account for mining depletion.
11.11.2 Uncertainties Considered During Confidence Classification
Uncertainties regarding sampling and drilling methods, data processing and handling, geological modelling, and estimation were incorporated into the classifications assigned. The areas with the most uncertainty were assigned to the inferred category, and the areas with fewest uncertainties were classified as measured.
11.12 | Reasonable Prospects of Economic Extraction |
11.12.1 Input Assumptions
For each resource estimate, an initial assessment was undertaken that assessed likely infrastructure, mining, and process plant requirements; mining methods; process recoveries and throughputs; environmental, permitting and social considerations relating to the mining and processing methods; waste disposal; and technical and economic considerations in support of an assessment of reasonable prospects of economic extraction. All material is assumed to be blended at the Clarabelle Mill, and milling throughput rates will depend on the blending strategy in place at the mill at the time the material is processed.
Key parameters used to constrain the resource estimates are summarized in Table 11-1.
11.12.2 Commodity Price
Commodity pricing forecasts in Table 11-1 used for reasonable prospects of economic extraction determination are based on the assumptions from the year the evaluation was completed using a consensus approach based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. The forecast is based on a 22-year timeframe.
11.12.3 Cut-off
The resources are reported at varying cut-off values, which are based primarily on the mining method that will be used and the timing of the estimate. Process and general and administrative (G&A) costs are based on the assumption that material will be sent to, and blended at, the Clarabelle Mill.
11.12.4 QP Statement
The QP is of the opinion that any issues that arise in relation to relevant technical and economic factors likely to influence the prospect of economic extraction can be resolved with further work. The mineral resource estimates are performed for deposits that are in a well-documented geological setting; the district has >100 years of active open pit and underground mining operations; Vale is very familiar with the economic parameters required for successful operations in the Sudbury area; and Vale has a long history of being able to obtain and maintain permits, social licence and meet environmental standards.
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Figure 11-3: Example Assigned Confidence Classifications, Creighton 310 Deposit
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2021
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Table 11-1: Input Parameters
Parameter 6 | Unit | Value or Range |
Cu sale price 1 | US$/tonne | 6,100–8,150 |
Ni sale price 1 | US$/tonne | 13,376–18,800 |
Co sale price 1 | US$/tonne | 45,000–52,911 |
Pt sale price 1 | US$/oz | 1,124–1,290 |
Pd sale price 1 | US$/oz | 925–1,400 |
Au sale price 1 | US$/oz | 1,000–1,650 |
Exchange rate 1 | USD/CAD | 1.26–1.34 |
Mining method | — | Various, including underground bulk stoping; underground narrow vein cut and fill and bulk stoping; underground bulk: slot/slash longitudinal stoping; underground blast hole (slot slash); top down; underground bulk longhole and underhand cut-and-fill cutter machine; and open pit |
Assumed throughput rate | tonnes/day | 150–9,085 |
Mining recovery 2 | % | 83–97 |
Dilution 2 | % | 3–20 |
Mine operating cost | US$/tonne mineralization mined | 24–178 |
Process cost 3 | US$/tonne processed | 35–193 |
G&A cost 4 | US$/tonne processed | 2–5 |
Cu recovery | % | 75–88 |
Ni recovery | % | 67–92 |
Co recovery | % | 28–30 |
Pt recovery | % | 55–78 |
Pd recovery | % | 61–81 |
Au recovery | % | 23–77 |
Cut-off |
US$/tonne Metal Eq |
4–298 3.5% CuEq |
Pit slope angle 5 | º | 40–50 |
Notes:
1. | Commodity prices used for reasonable prospects of economic extraction determination based on the assumptions from the year the reasonable prospects of economic extraction was evaluated. |
2. | Mining recovery and dilution are only a consideration for reasonable prospects of economic extraction determination but are not applied to the mineral resource estimates. |
3. | The overall process cost includes both operating cost and sustaining capital for all processing plants (mill/smelter/refineries) and varies considerably based on metal content of feed. |
4. | Delivery of finished products to market; Other G&A costs are included as distributions in mine and process costs |
5. | Ranges shown are for consolidated rock (competent to fractured rock mass). Shallower slope angles are used in zones of block caved or fill (unconsolidated) material. |
6. | The differences between foreign exchange and commodity price assumptions for resource mine design and economic analysis are due to timing. As of December 31, 2022, the assumptions used for mine design continue to provide a reasonable basis for establishing the prospects of economic extraction for mineral resources. |
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There is sufficient time in the 22-year timeframe considered for the commodity price forecast for Vale to address any issues that may arise, or perform appropriate additional drilling, testwork and engineering studies to mitigate identified issues with the estimates.
11.13 | Mineral Resource Estimate |
Mineral resources are reported as at 31 December, 2022, using the mineral resource definitions set out in SK1300, and are reported exclusive of those mineral resources converted to mineral reserves. The reference point for the estimate is in situ. The measured and indicated mineral resource estimates for the Ontario Operations are provided in Table 11-2. The inferred mineral resource estimates are included in Table 11-3. The Qualified Person for the estimate is Darren Hodder, P.Geo., a Vale employee.
11.14 | Uncertainties That May Affect the Mineral Resource Estimate |
Areas of uncertainty that may materially impact all of the mineral resource estimates include:
· | Changes to long-term metal price and exchange rate assumptions; |
· | Changes in local interpretations of mineralization geometry such as pinch and swell morphology, extent of brecciation, presence of unrecognized mineralization off-shoots; faults, dykes, and other structures; and continuity of mineralized zones; |
· | Changes to geological and grade shape, and geological and grade continuity assumptions; |
· | Changes to unfolding, variography and search ellipse ranges that were interpreted based on limited drill data, when closer-spaced drilling becomes available; |
· | Changes to metallurgical recovery assumptions; |
· | Changes to the input assumptions used to derive the potentially-mineable shapes applicable to the assumed underground and open pit mining methods used to constrain the estimates; |
· | Changes to the forecast dilution and mining recovery assumptions; |
· | Changes to the cut-off values applied to the estimates; |
· | Variations in geotechnical (including seismicity), hydrogeological and mining method assumptions; |
· | Changes to environmental, permitting, and social license assumptions. |
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Table 11-2: Ontario Operations, Measured and Indicated Mineral Resource Statement
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Table 11-3: Ontario Operations, Inferred Mineral Resource Statement
Mine/Area | Category | Tonnage (kt) |
Grade | |||||
Cu (%) |
Ni (%) |
Co (%) |
Pt (g/t) |
Pd (g/t) |
Au (g/t) | |||
Blezard | Inferred | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Coleman | Inferred | 679 | 3.0 | 0.5 | 0.01 | 2.8 | 3.8 | 1.2 |
Copper Cliff | Inferred | 2,357 | 1.5 | 0.9 | 0.02 | 1.3 | 1.3 | 0.6 |
Creighton | Inferred | 3,784 | 2.8 | 3.5 | 0.07 | 1.4 | 1.9 | 0.4 |
Garson | Inferred | 1,497 | 1.7 | 1.5 | 0.06 | 0.6 | 0.7 | 0.2 |
Copper Cliff Pit | Inferred | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Stobie | Inferred | 7,818 | 0.4 | 0.5 | 0.03 | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0.1 |
Totten | Inferred | 1,488 | 1.6 | 0.8 | 0.02 | 1.5 | 1.4 | 0.4 |
Victor | Inferred | 605 | 3.4 | 0.7 | 0.01 | 0.5 | 0.8 | 0.3 |
Total | Inferred | 18,227 | 1.4 | 1.3 | 0.04 | 0.9 | 1.0 | 0.3 |
Notes to accompany mineral resources tables:
1. | Mineral resources are reported using the mineral resource definitions set out in SK1300. The reference point for the mineral resource estimate is in situ. The estimate is current as at 31 December, 2022. The Qualified Person for the estimate is Darren Hodder, P.Geo., a Vale employee. |
2. | Mineral resources are reported exclusive of those mineral resources converted to mineral reserves. Mineral resources that are not mineral reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability. |
3. | The estimate uses the following key input parameters: open pit mining methods or underground bulk stoping or narrow vein cut-and-fill mining methods; copper sale price of US$6,100–8,150/t, nickel sale price of US$13,376–18,800/t, cobalt sale price of US$45,000–52,911/t, platinum sale price of US$1,124–1,290/oz, palladium sale price of US$925–1,400/oz, gold sale price of US$1,000–1,650/oz; variable copper recovery ranging from 75–88%, variable nickel recovery ranging from 67–92%; mine operating costs ranging from US$24–US$178/t mined, process costs ranging from US$35–193/t milled; general and administrative (G&A) costs ranging from US$2–$5/t milled; mining recovery ranging from 83–97%, and mining dilution of 3–20%. Costs, metallurgical recovery, and pricing data are shown as ranges, due to the variability in specific deposit requirements and timing of the associated estimate. |
4. | Numbers have been rounded. |
Specific factors that may affect individual estimates include:
· | Blezard: although recent drilling has decreased the weight of historical drilling there remains a significant volume (approximately 33%) defined by older (pre-1974) drillholes. Results of the 2020 core drilling campaign from surface confirmed the general lithological, spatial and grade distribution of the historical drillholes and previous estimates. The newer data reduce the risk associated with the older data, which may have over- or under-represent the grades locally within the zone; |
· | Coleman: wireframing based on discrete veins may be excluding mineralization above cut-off that occurs between the modelled veins; conversely, exclusion of this material may result in overestimation of grade within the wireframes; |
· | Copper Cliff: the quartz diorite dyke in the 860 zone is treated as a single domain for estimation purposes. Additional drilling may support sub-domaining within the dyke to differentiate lower-grade mineralization. There is a risk that the tonnage estimate in this area may be locally overstated; |
· | Creighton: detailed geological mapping from underground stations indicates the existence of local internal rock inclusions and/or embayments caused by the pinch and swell morphology that are not captured by wider-spaced drilling. There is a risk that the local geological interpretations do not adequately reflect these, and that resource models may be locally over or under estimating the tonnage and grade; |
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· | Garson: the deposit can have elevated arsenic levels, averaging 0.03–0.5% globally, but with spot highs that may reach as much as 30% As. These arsenic values are well above those for a typical Sudbury deposit, and may lead to exceedance of the mill limit (1,000*As/Ni). Mineral resource block estimates may not precisely reflect local variances in arsenic values. Similarly, elevated lead levels in the 2500 Structure domain may not be locally precise, which may exceed accepted thresholds for the mill. Historically, mine production and mill feed are blended to reduce the impact and mitigate the risk associated with deleterious mineralogy to downstream processes; |
· | Copper Cliff Pit: historical geological and mining reports have documented the presence of “talc” boulders. The expression “talc” was historically used to refer to variably-altered ultramafic inclusions consisting of silicates (actinolite, orthopyroxene, chlorite, micas, etc.) which negatively impact the metallurgical recovery process from slimes during mineral processing and by interfering with sulphide recovery during the flotation process. There is a risk that the metallurgical recovery used in assessing reasonable prospects of economic extraction may be overstated. However, magnetic sorters may be able to be used to selectively reject and reduce the amount of “talc” sent to the mill; |
· | Victor: some areas of the Contact zone model have lower data density, which affects wireframe interpretations especially in the extremities of the domains. The resource models may be over or under estimating the tonnage and grade due to the geological and structural controls on the mineralized system. The domains have pinch–swell–termination occurrences that could affect drill hole continuity interpretations and there is a risk that the geometry may change considerably over very short distances along strike and down dip. |
To the extent known to the QP, there are no other known environmental, permitting, legal, title-related, taxation, socio-political or marketing issues that could materially affect the mineral resource estimate that are not discussed in this Report.
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12 | MINERAL RESERVE ESTIMATES |
12.1 | Introduction |
Mineral reserves are reported for the Coleman, Copper Cliff, Creighton, Garson and Totten deposits using underground mining methods, and for the Copper Cliff Pit deposit using open pit methods.
To publicly report a mineral reserve estimate, Vale Base Metals must have a current intention to mine the mineralization as demonstrated by the inclusion of the mineral reserves in an operation or project's “Mineral Reserves only” LOM plan. For mineralization that is to be exploited at an operating mine using existing mine infrastructure (generally funded with operating costs or limited sustaining capital) the mineral reserve estimate is supported by a mine plan, an annual technical report, and supporting files (including and not limited to: safety plan, driving layouts, execution schedules, production schedules, cost reports, capital outlay/procurement schedule and asset integrity system). For mineralization that requires significant construction of new facilities a front-end loading (FEL) engineering study system is used to determine estimates and obtain approval to proceed. A minimum of a completed and approved FEL2 (pre-feasibility study) and in some cases a FEL3 (feasibility study) with a positive financial outcome is required to publicly report mineral reserves from these projects.
12.1.1 Underground
Mineral reserves were estimated using underground mining methods. For each mine and mineral zone with mineral reserves to be mined, a mining plan was developed that included selection of mining method, stope production sequencing, consideration of development, equipment and infrastructure requirements, and estimation of capital and operating costs. Mining plans and engineering studies were completed for all mineral reserve estimates. All engineering studies were at a minimum prefeasibility-level.
Based on the selected mining method, and using the mineral resource block model, a mine design was prepared for each individual stope. Only measured and indicated mineral resources were converted in the stope design to estimate proven and probable mineral reserves. In the Coleman mine’s 170 area only, measured mineral resources were converted to probable mineral reserves based on the uncertainty of the planned mining method.
Economic cut-off grades were estimated for each mine and mining area and used to determine the design of each stope. Following stope design, the mineral resources contained within the stope outline were interrogated. Internal (planned) dilution within the stope was included in the mineral resource estimates.
Mining recovery (mineability) and external dilution factors were applied. These factors were estimated based on historical data and experience with the various mining methods at each of the mines, and were applied to each stope on a stope-by-stope basis after consideration of both the mining method and any local considerations at each mine that could impact mining.
The resulting mineral reserves in each stope for each mine were scheduled in the mine operations LOM production plan. The LOM plan included capital, operating and corporate costs estimates, and was assessed for economic viability. All mineable units or stopes that were scheduled for mining were included in the mineral reserves, and were tested in the overall Ontario Operations production plan. Material that did not meet economic criteria following the financial analysis of the production plan were not converted to mineral reserves.
12.1.2 Open Pit
Mineral reserves were estimated using conventional open pit mining methods. Only measured and indicated mineral resources were converted to estimate proven and probable mineral reserves.
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For the Copper Cliff Pit the measured mineral resources were converted to probable mineral reserve based on uncertainties about the local historic underground workings and cave zones and the actual condition of the existing pit walls that are currently underwater.
Pit optimization software was used to generate nested pit shells for both pits. In the case of the Copper Cliff Pit, a detailed pit boundary study was carried out, and boundary limits were applied to the pit shells either singly, or in combination, corresponding to a Canadian Pacific rail line corridor, a property boundary with adjacent Glencore ground, a street line boundary with Municipal Road 35, and a 6 m setback from both the Vale property boundary and the Municipal Road 35 boundary, were evaluated. The final selected pit shell uses a 30 m Municipal Road 35 street line setback.
A pit-by-pit graph was used to select the ultimate pit shell for each deposit, as well as intermediate pit phases, which the final designed operating pit and schedule was based. Dilution was included in the optimization and the mining schedule.
12.2 | Development of Mining Case |
12.2.1 Underground
The Ontario Operations currently have a total of five major operating underground mines. With the exception of Totten, which has a nine-year mining history, the mines have been in operation for decades and, consequently, there is significant history and data available on the geological setting, mining methods, mining conditions, mining recoveries and dilution, production capacity and mining costs. These historical data are used extensively in the mineral reserve estimation process.
The mining methods used in the Ontario Operations are a combination of bulk stoping and cut-and-fill approaches (refer to discussion in Chapter 13.5).
The throughput rate for each mine is based on a detailed mining plan that includes consideration of current and planned mining methods, geotechnical constraints and risks, materials handling system, mining equipment fleet, labour resourcing, infrastructure such as power supply and reticulation, dewatering, backfilling, and ventilation. Life-of-mine plans, as well as more detailed five-year plans, are developed for each mine.
There are standard designs for stopes; however, there can be considerable variation in stope sizing from mine to mine and within each mine, depending on geology, geometry, logistical and geotechnical considerations, and historical data. Stopes can range from about 5,000 to >55,000 t.
Mine plans are adjusted by mine planners to minimize the risk of ground failures and seismicity through the establishment of an optimal mining block size and shape, and mine sequencing. All of the underground mines are relatively dry, with only small groundwater inflows.
12.2.2 Open Pit
Open pit mining for the proposed Copper Cliff Pit is planned at a rate of 7,500 t/d. There is a high waste stripping requirement because easily accessible (low strip ratio) ore was depleted near surface from mining in the historic Clarabelle No.2 Pit, and the deposit to be mined in the proposed pit is tabular and steeply dipping, so ore at depth has a substantial amount of overlying waste material.
The proposed pit requires the existing pit to be dewatered (currently in progress) and expanded. Considerations during pit designs included the fact that the pit is immediately adjacent to Municipal Road 35, a Canadian Pacific rail line corridor, a property corridor with Glencore, and an active industrial site that serves multiple third parties. There is also an emergency services centre in Azilda which supports the City of Greater Sudbury and requires emergency personnel to frequently travel along the stretch of Municipal Road 35 immediately adjacent to the proposed pit.
Inputs to the pit optimization runs are summarized in Table 12-1.
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Table 12-1: Pit Optimization Input Factors, Copper Cliff Pit
Item | Unit | Value |
Mining cost | $/t | 3 |
Mining cost increases $0.05 every 15 ft (4.6 m) in depth from surface to the bottom of the pit | ||
Processing cost | $/t | 10 |
Overall pit slope | º | 45 |
Dilution | % | 5 |
Mining recovery | % | 98 |
Discount factor | % | 4.5 |
Processing rate | Mt/a | 2.7 |
t/d | 7,500 for a 360 day year | |
Revenue factor | 1 |
Pit designs were maximized to mine as much ore as practicable from within the pit constraints. The overall final pit strip ratio is 8.9:1 (waste to ore). The majority of waste rock stripping will occur in Years 1–4 and the majority of ore will be mined in Years 5–8. The target ore production rate is projected to be reached in Year 4, and will be maintained up until the final year of production when the mineral reserves are depleted.
The ultimate pit for the Copper Cliff Pit is split into three operating phases that will be mined concurrently to provide greater scheduling and operational flexibility. A pit phase plan is included as Figure 12-1.
The phase 1 pit will be accessed via a highwall ramp cut into the south pit wall. This ramp is already constructed; however, the ramp will require widening. The present condition of the ramp is unknown as it is currently under water.
The phase 2 pit will push back the pit to the north, and will be accessed using an interim ramp that will cut across the west and north walls for access from surface to the 10,715 ft level. The south highwall ramp will be extended to allow access to the 10,460 ft level. The ultimate pit will push the north wall back farther to allow for the pit to be mined deeper.
The phase 2 interim ramp will be replaced by another highwall ramp cut into the north wall. This will facilitate access to the 10,775 ft level. Access below this bench will be made possible by extending the south wall ramp along the west and north walls to reach the final bench at the 10,265 ft level.
The final pit will be 735 ft (224 m) deep.
12.3 | Dilution and Mine Recovery |
12.3.1 Underground
Dilution and mining recovery for each stope are estimated after consideration of the planned mining method and stope design, and are applied as a modifying factor in the form of a percentage allowance of the in-situ estimated tonnage of the stope.
Estimates of external mining dilution are based on historical data and stoping experience at the mines, which is tracked through a reconciliation procedure of planned versus actual production for each stope mined. The allowance also includes provision for external dilution by backfill material from adjacent backfilled stopes that is broken during blasting or sloughs during production, and cannot be separated from ore during mucking. The estimate of external dilution can be reduced by a further allowance, again based on experience, for waste rock separated from the broken mineralized rock in the stope by mucking under geological control.
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Figure 12-1: Pit Phasing, Copper Cliffs Pit
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2022. EL = elevation; MR35 = Municipal Road 35.
Mining recovery factors include an allowance, based on local experience, for ore broken but not recovered during final mucking using remote-controlled load–haul–dump (LHD) vehicles. Oxidation of blasted ore frequently occurs where ore has been left in the stope for an extended period of time before removal. This leads to the ore consolidating as the sulphide content oxidizes, and makes it difficult to muck with LHDs, causing the loss of recovery. Mineral reserves within the design limits of the stope that are not recovered due to drilling and blasting limitations (e.g., stope shoulders) can also contribute to mining losses.
After mining is complete, the resulting dilution and mining recovery for each stope is assessed using excavation volumes from laser cavity monitor scans, and from detailed mineral grade distributions from blasthole conductivity probing when available. Mining recovery and dilution modifying factors are developed at each mine for each of the mining areas and mining methods through historical data based on the ongoing program of stope reconciliation. As new data are made available for stopes, these factors are regularly reviewed and updated for each mining method and mineral zone to reflect changing operating practices, and prevailing geological and geotechnical conditions.
12.3.2 Open Pit
A dilution rate of 5% was selected for the Copper Cliff Pit based on hanging wall and footwall contact with the orebody in the block model. Additional dilution for contacts between the underground workings and ore body was not added to avoid double counting because this dilution rate is already built into the block model. The assumed mining recovery for the Copper Cliff Pit was 98%.
12.4 | Cut-off Grades |
Vale uses a combination of contract pricing, knowledge of its key markets from a long production record, short term versus long term price forecasting, public documents and analyst forecasts when considering long term commodity price forecasts. The forecast prices vary locally by the individual mines and deposits to reflect the time at which the mine plans are updated, cashflows are conducted, and the local cut-off grade employed to suit each individual operation based on hoisting capacity, mining method, and geotechnical considerations. The estimated timeframe used for the price forecasts is the 22-year LOM that supports the mineral reserve estimates.
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12.4.1 Underground
The Ontario Operations have a cut-off grade policy and procedures for mine design, production scheduling and day-to-day ore/waste determination. The mineralized zones contain multiple recoverable metals, each with different metal prices and processing recoveries, resulting in a net processing return (NPR) formula being used to assign a dollar value grade descriptor to mineralization. The full mining operating cash cost per short ton is compared to the NPR value per short ton to determine if a given amount of material is ore or waste.
The NPR formula calculates the net in-situ value of the mineralized material before it is extracted, then the processing costs and certain direct corporate costs are subtracted from the anticipated revenue of the recoverable metal using the appropriate long-term sale price and exchange rate assumptions.
Input parameters to the NPR formula used in the LOM plans are provided in Table 12-2. These inputs were used for all cut-off applications, including day-to-day grade control, short-range planning, and longer-range mine design.
12.4.2 Open Pit
Actual block values for the Copper Cliff Pit were based on a net smelter return (NSR), derived from a combination of metal price assumptions (by element), mill recovery for each element, concentrator and smelter treatment and refining charges, payables for each metal, penalties, and transport costs. This NSR was used in pit optimization runs as the grade element.
12.5 | Ore/Waste Determinations |
12.5.1 Underground
Stope design boundaries are based on a combination of the mineral zone interpreted outline and the NPR value in the mineral resource block model. After deduction of the full mine operating cash cost from the NPR value in each block, an outline is created around all the mineral resource model blocks which have a positive value, and then this outline is used as the basis for the creation of a practical stope outline. Once the stope has been designed, modifying external dilution and mineability factors are applied to the interrogated tonnage and grade of the material in the stope.
A stope is considered for inclusion in the mine plan if its value is equal to or greater than the forecast mining cost. Uneconomic stopes are reviewed to determine if the value can be increased through improved design, but once confirmed as uneconomic, these stopes are removed from the mine plan. The cut-off value is a proxy for the cut-off grade.
12.5.2 Open Pit
A marginal cut-off grade of C$10.00/t was used as the discriminator between ore and waste at the pit rim in the Copper Cliff Pit design and schedules.
12.6 | Mineral Reserve Estimate |
Mineral reserves are reported using the mineral reserve definitions set out in SK1300. The reference point for the mineral reserve estimate is the point of delivery to the process plant. Mineral reserves that are reported in Table 12-3 are current as at 31 December, 2022.
The Qualified Person for the estimate is Tiffany Dube, P.Eng., a Vale employee.
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Table 12-2: LOM Plan NPR Formula Input Parameters
Notes:
1. The nickel sale price includes a premium of US$626/t to $800/t, based on quality of product and established sales contracts.
2. The overall process copper recovery is for copper that is processed through the Copper Cliff Smelter Complex.
3. The mine maintenance shutdown costs and the mine sustaining capital costs presented are the average of recent historic costs.
4. The overall process cost includes both operating cost and sustaining capital for all processing pants (mill / smelter / refineries) and varies based on the metal content of feed.
5. Mine designs for individual deposits were prepared using a cut off and the selected metal prices and foreign exchange rate above. Evaluation to demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve were made as of December 31, 2022, based on the assumptions described in Section 19.
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Table 12-3: Proven and Probable Mineral Reserve Statement
Notes to accompany mineral reserves table:
1. | Mineral reserves are reported using the mineral reserve definitions set out in Subpart 1300 of Regulation S-K. The reference point for the mineral reserve estimate is the point of delivery to the process plant. The estimate is current as at December 31, 2022. The Qualified Person for the estimate is Tiffany Dube, P.Eng., a Vale employee. |
2. | The estimates use the following key input parameters: bulk stoping or narrow vein cut-and-fill mining methods; copper sale price of US$6,100–7,500/t, nickel sale price of US$13,376–18,800/t, cobalt sale price of US$45,000–50,000/t, platinum sale price of US$1,200–1,225/oz, palladium sale price of US$925–1,400/oz, gold sale price of US$1,300–1,450/oz; variable copper recoveries ranging from 86–92%, variable nickel recoveries ranging from 75–88%; mine operating costs ranging from US$105–185/t mined; process costs ranging from US$80–195/t milled; mining recovery ranging from 83–87%, and unplanned dilution of 14–20%. Costs, metallurgical recovery, and pricing data are shown as ranges, due to the variability in specific deposit requirements and timing of the associated estimate. |
3. | Numbers have been rounded. |
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12.7 | Uncertainties That May Affect the Mineral Reserve Estimate |
Factors that may affect the mineral reserve estimates include:
· | Long-term commodity price assumptions; |
· | Long-term exchange rate assumptions; |
· | Long-term consumables price assumptions. |
Other factors that can affect the estimates include changes to:
· | Mineral resource input parameters for those mineral resources converted to mineral reserves; |
· | Constraining stope designs; |
· | Cut-off grade and NPR assumptions; |
· | Geotechnical (including seismicity) and hydrogeological factors; |
· | Supply of back fill material (e.g., rock tailings from concentrator); |
· | Metallurgical and mining recovery assumptions; |
· | Ability to control unplanned dilution; |
· | Ability to access the site, retain mineral, surface rights and water rights titles; |
· | Ability to maintain environmental and other regulatory permits, and maintain the social license to operate. |
Specific factors that may affect individual estimates include:
· | Coleman: increases in unplanned dilution as a result of overbreak of bulk stope shoulders; ability to manage any impact of historical onsite waste rock to surface and groundwater; impact of any potential mining-induced seismicity that would require discontinuing in-person entry mining methods. Vale is reliant on the infrastructure of the adjacent Fraser mine which is owned and operated by Glenore and, therefore, mining plans are at risk of being impacted by decisions made by Glencore; |
· | Copper Cliff: impact of any geotechnical issues such as rockbursts; ability to manage any impact of historical onsite waste rock to surface and groundwater; potential metals leaching/acid rock drainage issues arising from historical stockpile areas; |
· | Copper Cliff Pit: Uncertainties in the old workings and cave zones that may affect dewatering, mining, stripping ratio, and uncertainties in the actual condition of pit walls as the pit remains underwater (pumping in progress); |
· | Creighton: ability to manage any impact of onsite waste rock to surface and groundwater; potential metals leaching/acid rock drainage issues arising from historical stockpile areas; |
· | Garson: impact of seismicity on operations; addressing the forecast arsenic head grade in mill feed over the LOM plan to alleviate any negative impact on planned production; impact of future mine closure on groundwater; ability to manage any impact of historical onsite waste rock to surface and groundwater; potential metals leaching/acid rock drainage issues arising from historical stockpile areas; geological and grade interpretations, mine designs, and mine recovery assumptions due to the structurally complex mine setting; |
· | Totten: ability to manage any impact of historical onsite waste rock to surface and groundwater. |
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To the extent known to the QP, there are no other known environmental, permitting, legal, title related, taxation, socio-political or marketing issues that could materially affect the mineral reserve estimates that are not discussed in this Report.
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13 | MINING METHODS |
13.1 | Introduction |
The Ontario Operations use conventional bulk stoping or narrow vein cut-and-fill mining methods, depending on the mine and geological setting. Conventional open pit mining is planned for the Copper Cliff Pit.
Underground mines are Owner operated, and use conventional equipment. The planned open pit will also use conventional equipment and be either Owner operated or operated by a third-party contractor.
13.2 | Geotechnical Considerations |
13.2.1 Guidance Documents
13.2.1.1 | Underground |
Vale has technical guidelines and procedures in place to ensure that valid geotechnical data are collected and interpreted using appropriate methods, and that existing or planned risk mitigation measures which support mine designs are based on those data and interpretations. Documentation meets the requirements of Section 6 of the Regulation 854 for Mines and Mining Plants, under the Occupational Health and Safety Act of Ontario, R.R.O. 1990.
All underground mines must have an effective Ground Control Management Plan, also referred to as the “Mine Design Package”, which is a single coherent document that must be developed through application of sound geotechnical engineering practices, conform to local mining regulations, and be aligned with Vale’s safety standards. The document covers a wide range of technical topics, including geology; geotechnical information, mine arrangement, mining methods, ground control methods and support standards, ground control procedures, ground support quality control program, ground monitoring program, geomechanical evaluation, record keeping and communications, ground control training, mining-induced seismicity, geotechnical considerations in mine design and risk assessment and management. The Ground Control Management Plan is updated annually by a ground control engineer and annually reviewed and signed off on by the mine manager. This provides a robust basis for geotechnical evaluation, modelling, and mitigation measures.
The Ontario Operations maintain a Seismic Risk Management Plan, which is designed to identify, assess, and manage seismic hazards. All five operating mines, Coleman, Creighton, Copper Cliff, Garson, and Totten, are considered to be seismically active. A Seismicity Review Board was established in 2017 with a five-year mandate to assess these operating mines. The Seismicity Review Board assessed the effectiveness of controls in place at the mine to manage seismicity with external understanding of leading seismic management practices and procedures in the industry. Additional support could be provided when requested; for example, Vale could request the Seismicity Review Board to examine causes and propose mitigations from large, high-risk seismic events if they occurred.
In December 2021, an independent Geotechnical Review Board (formerly the Seismicity Review Board) was established to provide regular assessments and recommendations for managing geotechnical hazards at the underground operations and projects. The review board is the highest level of professional review to assist Vale in assessing and providing appropriate designs.
13.2.1.2 | Open Pit |
Vale has technical guidelines and procedures in place to ensure that valid geotechnical data are collected and interpreted using appropriate methods, and that existing or planned risk mitigation measures which support mine designs are based on those data and interpretations.
All open pit mines must have an effective Ground Control Management Plan, which is a single coherent document that must be developed through application of sound geotechnical engineering practices, conform to local mining regulations, and be aligned with Vale’s safety standards. The document covers a wide range of technical topics, similarly to the underground mines management plan.
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For the planned Copper Cliff Pit, a preliminary Ground Control Management Plan will be developed as part of the feasibility study.
13.2.2 Underground
13.2.2.1 | Geotechnical Designs and Support |
Geotechnical data collection and rock mass characterization are used to define domains. For each domain, a simplified set of ground support requirements is specified for each categorized ground condition through the iterative process of support element selection, consideration of support system coherence, application of different design methods and local regulations. These ground support requirements also take into consideration, excavation size and shape, required life of excavation, stress conditions, proximity to present and future openings, personnel exposure, and local historical experiences.
Geotechnical assessments are completed to:
· | Identify high stress zones; |
· | Evaluate the stability of major infrastructure; |
· | Assess the influence of major geological structures; |
· | Evaluate the stability of permanent pillars and other long-term excavations; |
· | Design optimal ground support systems to ensure the safety and stability of the excavations for the intended service life. |
The results of geotechnical assessments are recommendations for vertical development, lateral development, and mining stopes, as well as the mine plan, which may have specific sequences of stope extraction. Old workings or natural voids are also considered where present.
For each mine, the mine’s Ground Control Management Plan (see discussion in Chapter 13.2.1) sets out the considerations for the selection of ground support elements for various ground conditions including mine and service life, seismicity, corrosion potential and product characteristics. If shotcrete is applied at a mine, information on the types of material used (wet-mix, dry-mix, plain or reinforced) and the required thickness of application in different circumstances is incorporated into the document. The plan provides the justification process for the mine support standards and provides information on the selected pattern for each support category. It documents the scaling techniques used in each mine and related procedures. Standard development drilling and blasting patterns and their application with respect to various conditions and controlled perimeter blasting techniques are provided. The dewatering/depressurization requirements and methods are noted. Areas that routinely receive exceptionally high levels of ground support are recorded.
A complete ground support system for each mine consists of a series of activities and techniques such as scaling, local reinforcement (bolting), loose retention (meshing or strapping), shotcreting and cable-bolting. Primary support can include resin grouted rebar, friction and swellex bolts, and shotcrete. Secondary support is typically used for openings with a span of >7 m, and can consist of different elements such as cable bolts, Super-swellex bolts, strand-lok resin cables, and shotcrete arches and posts. Dynamic ground support systems (i.e., Par-1 dynamic bolts & #0 Gauge Mesh Straps) are installed in rockburst-prone and/or high seismic hazard areas.
13.2.2.2 | Backfill |
Either sand or mill rock tailings are used as a hydraulic backfill, with the type of fill materials dependent on the proximity of a mine to the Clarabelle Mill and the availability of proximal alluvial sand sources. The Copper Cliff and Creighton Mines use mill rock tailings, the Garson and Totten Mines use alluvial sands, and the Coleman mine uses a mix of mill rock tailings and alluvial sands.
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High-density (paste) backfill is only used at the Main area of the Garson mine. Alluvial sand and silt from the Garson sand pit used in paste production, and the binder is 90/10 (slag/Portland cement). The stope plugs and body are poured at 26:1 (sand to binder) ratio, achieving an unconfined compressive strength of approximately 130 psi in 28 days.
13.2.3 Open Pit
The open pit designs for Copper Cliff Pit are based on the results of geotechnical assessments and recommendations developed during the pre-feasibility study. The design criteria will be refined as part of the feasibility study. Distinct slope geometries have been developed for each pit sector, based on 60 ft (18 m) bench heights, and 27–41 ft (8–12.5 m) bench widths, recommended bench face angles that ranged from 37–70º, and inter-ramp slope angles that ranged from 26.4–50.9º.
13.3 | Hydrogeological Considerations |
13.3.1 Underground
Hydrological planning relies on historical norms and information. Most of the water that reports to the underground operations is from three sources: pumped in, surface runoff and ground water. A large percentage of a mine’s process water is pumped in (approximately 50–70%); about 30–50% is derived from surface depending on the season, and only minor amounts are contributed from ground water. The exception is at the Garson mine, where approximately 80% of pumped water is believed to be from groundwater ingress.
Water entering the mines from precipitation is minimal except for the Copper Cliff and Creighton Mines that have open pits/cave areas that are connected to the underlying working areas. Both mines have been in operation for many years, and have systems and procedures in place to handle these inflows.
Water management strategies for the underground mines are summarized in Table 13-1.
13.3.2 Open Pit
Since significant water inflows into the Copper Cliffs Pit are expected during mining, a robust pit dewatering system was incorporated into the mine design.
Water management will primarily rely on extracting water from the existing underground workings. A pumping system with associated hoisting and piping arrangements was designed to pump water from the nearby #2 Shaft at the formerly-operating Murray mine. The dewatering system will consist of two large multi-stage pumps, each connected to its own piping system. These pumps will be lowered down the shaft as the pit is mined down to maintain the water level below the pit bottom. All water that cannot be used by the open pit operations as process water will be delivered to the existing water collection and treatment system.
Dewatering will also take place from within the pit via boreholes from the pit bottom into underground workings. This will be achieved using a trailer-mounted diesel generator that will supply power to sump pump(s).
13.4 | Mine Accesses |
13.4.1 Coleman
The primary access to the Coleman mine is by the #1 Shaft and a series of internal ramps. In 1987, the #1 Shaft was deepened from the 2210 Level to the current shaft bottom at the 3450 Level. The Lower Coleman mine is situated approximately 914 m south of the Upper Coleman mine, at a depth of approximately 1 km. Ramp access is provided from 3370 Level to all active regions of the Coleman mine via a 5 km ramp system stretching west from the Coleman #1 Shaft at the 3370 Level.
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Table 13-1: Hydrological Considerations
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The main access drift and the conveyor drift are connected to the #1 Shaft at the 3370 Level and 3090 Level, respectively. The service ramp extends from 3370 Level to the 3575, 3770 and 3860 Levels. In parallel, the Kiruna haulage ramp extends from 3370 Level to the 3575 and 3770 Levels, and then splits into two branches below 3770 Level: the lower main haulage ramp which extends to the 4055 and 4215 Levels, and the 153 OB Kiruna haulage ramp.
There is also an emergency escape way from the 3575 Level via Glencore Canada’s Fraser mine 3600 Level track drift (the Fecunis escape way). This escape route was established in 2006, from the 3511 Level to Fraser mine 3600 Level. The Fraser mine is currently planned for closure in 2025. In July, 2022 Vale and Glencore signed an agreement called the Continued Use of Fraser mine Agreement, which established the framework for Coleman mine to continue to use the Fraser mine infrastructure following closure of the Fraser mine.
13.4.2 Copper Cliff
The main underground mine is accessed via the Copper Cliff North #1 Shaft on the north side of the mine, the Copper Cliff South #1 Shaft on the south side of the mine, and a surface portal ramp on south side. Both the North #1 and South #1 shafts have a level access approximately every 61 m (200 ft) at vertical intervals; however, only a few levels are connected to other parts of the mine via internal ramp systems. Vertical escapeways (ladder systems) are established and maintained where needed to serve as a means of secondary egress from the mine. The main ramp system on south side is currently connected to north side workings on the 2050, 2400/2490 and 3400 Levels. The 114 orebody is accessed via the 114 orebody portal and ramp system from surface, and is not connected to either of the #1 Shafts or the main ramp system and has its own separate secondary egress.
The Copper Cliff Pit will have two access ramps so that multiple pit phases can be mined independently.
13.4.3 Creighton
The main mine is accessed via the #9 Shaft with the shaft bottom being extended to about 37 m below the 7000 Level. There is a ramp system from surface to the 2600 Level at the #3 Shaft. A series of vertical escapeways and connections established between #9 Shaft and #3 Shaft ramp serve a means for secondary egress from the mine.
The #9 Shaft has level openings at approximately 61 m (200 ft) vertical intervals. Two internal ramp systems are available from the #9 Shaft. The upper ramp system is located between the 3310 and 5400 Levels, while the lower ramp system is located between the 6600 Level and extends beyond the 8400 Level. The bottom of the lower ramp system is currently at the 8460 Level. The Creighton Phase 5 study assumes that the ramp will be extended to the 9760 Level.
13.4.4 Garson
The Garson Main mine is accessed via the 1,293 m (4,240 ft) deep Garson #2 Shaft while the surface ramp area is accessed through a portal from surface, situated about 400 m west of the shaft collar. The main level accesses from #2 Shaft are 3800 and 4000. The secondary means of egress for the Main mine is through is a ladder system in the power raise from surface to 3400 Level. Primary and secondary egresses from the bottom of the Main mine on the 5200 Level to 3400 Level are a combination of haulage declines and relatively short ladderway systems.
The Garson Main mine and Garson surface ramp operations are physically connected on the 200, 400 and 600 Levels. The 200 Level has an escapeway to surface and serves as a secondary means of egress for the surface ramp operation. On the 400 Level of the surface ramp, access to the Main mine is via the 400 Level track drift. The 400 Level has an escapeway to the 200 Level. This level also serves as a secondary means of egress for the surface ramp. A third location as secondary means of egress between the surface ramp and the Main mine uses the 660 Level and 790 Level escapeway drift. The 790 Level escapeway drift is accessed from the 660 Level access drift on the surface ramp side and connects to the 600 Level main sill drift on the Main mine side.
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13.4.5 Totten
The 1,260 m (4,130 ft) deep #2 Shaft is the primary entry and exit point into the mine for personnel, materials, and ore/waste.
The secondary means of egress is a ladder system from surface down to the 4530 Level. A ramp has been connected to shaft access levels on the 3850 and 3150 Levels and it serves as second egress for the workings between the 3150 and 3800 Levels. Apart from the shaft, ramp access now exists from the 4650 to 2330 Levels. When ramp development is completed, the mine will have ramp access from the 1850 to 4630 Levels.
13.5 | Mining Methods |
A number of mining methods are used across the Ontario Operations (Table 13-2). The Ontario Operations mines each have a substantial history for which mining methods work best under various geological and geotechnical conditions. This experience combined with analysis was used to select the mining methods and stope sizes for the individual zones within each mine.
13.5.1 Open
This method is also referred to as blast-hole stoping, slot–slash stoping or sub-level open stoping. The stoping is done in a transverse or longitudinal orientation and is a bulk mining method.
The mining cycle begins with the development of a haulage drift parallel to the orebody strike or a sill drift through the ore. If required, crosscuts are then developed through the ore to the ore contact. Pillar widths are dependent on crosscut spacing and stope dimensions. Generally, stopes are divided in panels if the ore is >30 m thick, and are mined from hanging wall to footwall or vice-versa depending on the level configuration. Typically, bottom sill long wall slashes are required to create a void for blasting.
Slots are excavated in the form of drop raises. Production blast holes are drilled around the raise, and across the width of the entire panel in the slot drift. After the slot and production holes are drilled, they are blasted, usually in two to three blasts, to excavate the entire stope. Blasts are designed individually, based on the amount of void, and the location of the stope. Mucking is carried out with a LHD vehicle (typically 8 yd3) equipped with remote-control operating capabilities. Following mining, the stope void is measured with a cavity monitoring system laser-based surveying tool.
Following surveying, the stope void is filled with backfill, typically consisting of a 10:1 cemented hydraulic sand fill plug at the bottom of the stope, followed by a cemented hydraulic sand fill body. Unconsolidated waste rock can be added to the body of the stope if permitted.
13.5.2 Longitudinal
Longitudinal stoping is used in narrow portions of orebodies and in stopes adjacent to trap dykes. At the Totten mine to avoid cross cuts through trap dykes, a footwall drift is developed through the trap dyke without any transverse cross cuts. The longitudinal sill is developed from the first cross cut after crossing the trap dyke within ore. In some cases, where the mineralization is very wide, two parallel sills can be developed to extract the entire width of the orebody. Stopes are very narrow, so that longwall slashes may or may not be needed in the bottom sill. Typically, stoping starts in the orebody extremity and retreats towards the main access.
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Table 13-2: Mining Methods by Mine
13.5.3 Transverse
Most of the main ore body at the Totten mine is mined using transverse primary–secondary stoping. Transverse stoping is also common at the Coleman, Creighton and Copper Cliff Mines using a primary–primary sequence. A footwall drift is initially developed parallel to the strike of the ore body. Cross cuts or ore sills at 12–15 m intervals are developed normal to the footwall drift and cross cuts extend up to the hanging wall contact of the orebody. Bottom sill longwall slashes are required to completely recover the ore in the bottom sills. All of the production drilling is done from the top sills. Generally, where the orebody width is >30 m, the panel is divided into two or more stopes, from the hanging wall side to the footwall side.
13.5.4 Slot–Slash
Slot–slash mining is a bulk mining method that entails blasting vertical slices of ore to a free face, which initially will be a blasted inverse raise, or a bored raise. The amount of ore that can be blasted at any given time is limited to the existing void space and the available free face. Blastholes are loaded with staggered decks to break anywhere from 6 m to the entire length of the hole. The blocks are slashed out to the stope boundaries and up to a crown. The final crown is taken in one blast.
This method concentrates loading and blasting operations, and, once a slot has been established, stopes of 25,000–40,000 t of ore can be completely broken in 3–5 separate blasts, while smaller stopes can be blasted in one blast.
Blastholes are drilled using in-the-hole (ITH) drills. Prior to blasting, long blastholes are surveyed in order to determine their location and all holes are probed with a conductivity probe to confirm ore limits. If required, new holes are drilled to reduce burdens created by drilling inaccuracy and to blast additional ore found during the conductivity tests.
Slot–slash mining maximizes the availability of broken ore and increases the efficiency of stope service operations without compromising muck (waste) fragmentation. The walls of the stope are also supported for a greater period of time through the blasting and mucking cycle, improving stope stability and minimizing issues related to ground control.
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The method is used in both transverse and longitudinal orientations. Following the removal of blasted ore by remote-controlled LHDs, the stope is filled with consolidated backfill.
13.5.5 Vertical Retreat
With vertical retreat mining, a bulk mining method, stopes approximately 15.2 x 15.2 m in plan by 36.6 x 61 m in vertical extent are blasted in 3 m horizontal slices up to a crown. The final, typically 9 m, crown is taken in one blast.
Holes are drilled using ITH drills. Prior to blasting, long blastholes are surveyed in order to determine their location and all holes are probed with a conductivity probe to confirm ore limits. If required, new holes are drilled to reduce burdens created by drilling inaccuracy and to blast additional ore found during the conductivity tests.
Inverse-crater blasting is employed. Detonation of up to 25–30 similarly-loaded blastholes in a timed sequence generates approximately 1,500 t of broken ore per blast.
Holes are typically initiated using non-electric (NONEL-type) detonators; however, electronic detonators are also used to minimize blast vibrations in areas that are close to surface and/or in large crown pillar blasts.
The method is used in both transverse and longitudinal orientations. Following the removal of blasted ore by remote-controlled LHDs, the stope is filled with consolidated backfill.
13.5.6 Uppers Retreat
With the uppers retreat mining method, a bulk mining method, uppers blastholes (blastholes drilled upwards at typically between 60–90º) are drilled to recover ore where top-sill access is not available, or where the height of ore is insufficient to warrant ITH drilling for slot–slash or vertical retreat mining. This method is also useful for removing ‘ore-skins’ (thin layers of ore left remaining below previously-mined stopes).
Drill rings are established by fanning up-holes from the sill back, dipping towards the slot void, which is typically established by standard raising or raise boring or in the absence of a raise the rings are “wagon wheeled” such that they progressively steepened to create the initial down break or void.
Following the removal of blasted ore by remote-controlled LHDs, the stope is filled with consolidated backfill.
13.5.7 Mechanized Cut-and-Fill
Mechanized cut-and-fill is used for flat-lying and narrow-vein deposits that are not suitable for bulk blasthole mining. Two distinctive types of mechanized cut-and-fill mining methods are used. The first is a narrow-vein approach whereby a set of sequential cuts 2.7–3.7 m high are mined with small equipment (i.e., one-boom drill jumbos, 3 yd3 LHDs and rock bolting using hand-held drills such as jacklegs and stopers). Depending on the width of the vein, it is mined in one pass (narrow vein) or with multiple passes (drift-and-fill). With these methods, over-hand mining is the most common approach, but under-hand mining is also used. For larger flat-lying zones post-pillar cut-and-fill is used, with the cuts at approximately 6 m high and varying from 6–9.8 m in width. Regularly sized and spaced pillars are left to support the openings. The pillars are either post- or rib-type and generally are not recoverable. Both approaches extract the ore in horizontal slices over the entire deposit strike length then are backfilled before the next slice is mined. Production drilling is done with Jumbo drills.
Backfill is a combination of unconsolidated rock fill placed by the LHD into the empty cut as tight to the back as possible, and/or sand fill.
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13.5.8 Post Pillar Cut-and-Fill
A post pillar cut-and-fill method is used for wide ore zones, with great vertical extent. Access ramps are driven from the main ramps and footwall drifts to the ore zones, initially at a negative grade and the ore is mined upwards on successive cuts. There can be as many as five cuts from the same access. For each successive mining cut within the ore, the back of the access ramp is slashed to grade. The ore is extracted by advancing development rounds, to mine a series of horizontal slices or cuts of ore, using the down-breasting technique. Some ore is left behind to form ribs and/or post pillars to control back stability. Each heading is mined in a drill–blast–muck-support mining cycle. Rock fill from waste development and sand fill from surface are used for backfilling; cemented sand fill is placed as required to form the floor for the next cut. The headings are developed using two-boom electric hydraulic jumbo drills, and rock bolters are employed for the ground support cycle.
13.5.9 Narrow Vein Cut-and-Fill
A narrow vein cut-and-fill method is used in zones that host complex ore veins and stringers, with irregular widths and dips. Ore is extracted by mining a series of horizontal slices or cuts, and each heading is mined in a drill-blast-muck-support mining cycle. Rock fill from waste development and cemented sand fill from surface are used for backfill. Mining blocks are divided into 33 m vertical intervals and connected by ramps and raises. Levels are divided into mining blocks for mining flexibility. Accesses are driven from the main ramps and footwall drifts to the ore zones and the ore is mined upwards in successive cuts. The access ramps and other development headings are driven using two-boom jumbos and Maclean bolters. In the narrow ore vein headings, single-boom jumbos are used for development in the ore, while stopers and jacklegs are used to install ground support. Smaller Fletcher bolters are used to bolt narrow vein headings. Some narrow veins are being mined with fully mechanized equipment due to the high stress conditions in the sill pillars and to help with mining flexibility.
Mining follows the narrow veins up dip from each access drift. The narrow vein cut-and-fill production headings are normally mined to the width of the ore vein. Where veins are >8 m wide, they are mined using multiple passes, using a drift-and-fill sequence, or are extracted using shotcrete posts.
13.5.10 Drift-and-Fill
A variation of both post pillar and narrow vein methods, where the pillars are mined using jumbo drills and bolters. The drift-and-fill method entails advancing simultaneously in a direction parallel to the strike of the orebody, consisting of several (i.e., typically three) parallel primary headings that are separated by rib pillars. Once the primary headings are mined and backfilled, the rib pillars separating the headings are mined as secondary headings.
13.5.11 Open Pit
Open pit mining is used to extract near-surface ores resulting in a typically oval-shaped excavation profile that is wider at the top than at the pit bottom, with staggered levels (benches) that also typically decrease in width as the pit becomes deeper. Ramps are used to provide access into the open pit.
The open-pit mining cycle includes drilling and blasting of ore and waste, ore loading and hauling to the process plant for processing or to stockpiles for process plant feed later in the mine life, and waste rock loading and hauling to a designated waste rock storage facility.
13.6 | Mine Plans |
Figures showing the final mine layouts are provided in Figure 13-1 to Figure 13-9.
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Figure 13-1: Coleman Mine Cross-Section
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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Figure 13-2: Copper Cliff Mine Cross-Section
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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Figure 13-3: Copper Cliff Pit Plan View
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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Figure 13-4: Copper Cliff Pit Cross-Section
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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Figure 13-5: Creighton Mine Cross-Section
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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Figure 13-6: Garson Main Mine Cross-Section
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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Figure 13-7: Garson Mine–McConnell Cross-Section
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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Figure 13-8: Garson Mine–Garson Ramp Cross-Section
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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Figure 13-9: Totten Cross-Section
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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13.7 | Blasting and Explosives |
13.7.1 Underground
The types of explosives used, and blasting procedures vary depending on the mine, and the mining method.
For blast-hole stoping, 7.6–15 cm diameter blastholes are charged with a combination of ANFO/gel products and/or emulsion while NONEL-type detonators with boosters are used to initiate the blasts. The use of digital electronic initiation systems (Orica–IKON) is also increasingly used to reduce vibration, and thus minimize wall damage that can cause dilution.
For mechanized cut-and-fill mining, blastholes typically 4.3 cm diameter by 3.7 m long are pneumatically loaded with ANFO, primed with NONEL-type detonators, hooked up with blasting cord, and initiated with electric caps.
13.7.2 Open Pit
The planned Copper Cliff Pit will require special considerations for the drill-and-blast plan, because the proposed pit is in proximity to other infrastructure, including the public Municipal Road 35, the Canadian Pacific rail corridor, several industrial sites, and historical underground mining operations. The designed pit also mines through a significant amount of inactive underground workings. The main concern with mining through underground workings is that there is a risk of sinkholes developing in the pit and that the presence of voids could lead to over blasting.
Standard patterns will be drilled with 6” (152 mm diameter) drill bits. Matted patterns (i.e., patterns that will use blast mats) will be drilled with 4” (102 mm) drill bits because this is the maximum size that can be used with blast mats.
Explosive product and accessories (boosters, caps, det cord) will be supplied by an explosives manufacturer. Bulk emulsion product will be loaded into blast holes using a mobile manufacturing unit, and no explosive storage or manufacturing on site is envisioned. There is adequate local supply and several explosives suppliers to choose from in the Sudbury area.
Due to the presence of a high-water table and water entering the pit during operations, a bulk emulsion type explosive is planned to be used. Electronic detonators are proposed for all blasts.
13.8 | Ore Control |
Ore control procedures for underground operations include geological mapping, production blasthole conductivity probing, stope grade calculations or post-probe block modelling and stope grade calculations, and stope block laser scan (cavity monitor surveys) reconciliations. Vale has established standard operating procedures for grade control that are used at all of the underground mines.
Ore control for the Copper Cliff Pit will include geological mapping, assessment of production blasthole drill hole cuttings, production blasthole conductivity probing, block modelling of probe results for metal grade estimates and blast control, geologist visual ore/waste sorting of broken material where possible, and bench survey reconciliations. Detailed operating procedures for ore control will be created prior to mining commencing.
13.9 | Ore and Waste Handling |
13.9.1 Underground
Ore and waste handling varies by underground operation.
13.9.1.1 | Coleman |
Ore is transported by LHD equipment and diesel haulage trucks from the primary locations or storages to internal ore passes. From these ore passes, ore is hauled to the muck circuit by 45 t (50 ton) capacity Kiruna electric trolley haulage trucks.
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Crushed ore is conveyed from the underground crusher to the Coleman #1 Shaft, where it is hoisted to surface by two 17.2 t (19 ton) skips operating in balance. The shaft has a rated hoisting capacity of 502 tons/hr.
On surface, ore is transported by 36 t (40 ton) highway trucks to a load-out at the rail head, for stockpile and rail transportation to the Clarabelle Mill.
Waste rock is used as rock fill in mined-out areas. Rock is therefore re-handled underground and not hoisted to surface, although waste rock hoisting will likely be required in the future due to increased waste development activity and fewer cut and fill areas available for disposal of waste fill.
13.9.1.2 | Copper Cliff |
Ore and waste rock are mucked using LHDs and handled at the North Shaft as follows:
· | Muck is initially dumped in central loading areas, where it is subsequently loaded into 27 t trucks; |
· | Ore is trammed to the 2639 ore pass (on the 2,600 and 3,400 Levels) or dumped directly into the crusher (on the 3,935 Level); |
· | Crushed ore is hoisted to surface through #1 Shaft in 13.6 t skips that have a capacity of 270 t/hr; |
· | Ore is then trucked to surface stockpiles for blending with other ore sources to meet milling requirements. |
The majority of waste rock is used underground as fill. Some waste rock is hoisted to surface and permanently placed in a formerly producing open pit mine on the property. Currently the two main production constraints are trucking capacity and ventilation requirements.
The following system was commissioned in 2022 for the South #1 Shaft:
· | Muck is loaded by LHD into 27 t and 36 t trucks and hauled to the 3,930 Level; |
· | On the 3,930 Level there is a truck dump with rock breaker and grizzly that feeds a 180 t coarse ore bin, and two storages with 907 t capacity each. A LHD feeds the truck dump between truck loads and operate between shifts (automated from surface) to maintain inventory in the bin. The coarse ore bin feeds a crusher on the 4,000 Level; |
· | Crushed ore is hoisted to surface through the South #1 Shaft in 16.3 t skips that are rated for 390 t/hr; |
· | On surface there is a 1,362 t load out bin and 317 t rock bin. |
13.9.1.3 | Creighton |
Production ore is mucked by LHD to internal ore bins or re-muck storage on each of the main production levels. The ore is then chuted loaded, or side loaded in trucks and hauled up a ramp from the ore bins or storage areas, using a mixed fleet of electric trolley and diesel-powered trucks, to the truck dump at the 6,970 Level. Material is fed through the 7,000 Level crusher, and to the 6,680 Level loading pocket, via a conveyor.
The Phase 5 mining operation will extend this system to the 9,760 Level. Each production level will have LHDs move ore and waste to internal ore bins and re-muck storages, and trucks will haul material up a ramp system. The current methodology of dumping, crushing and skip loading on 6,970, 7,000 and 6,680 Levels will continue as is.
All ore is, and will be, hoisted up #9 Shaft, using a 7,000 HP double drum hoist and two 14.5 t (16 ton) aluminum skips. The skipping rate from the 5,280 Level loading pocket is about 336 t/hr (370 tons/hr), while the deeper 6,680 Level loading pocket can be skipped at 279 t/hr (308 tons/hr). All personnel and materials access the mine via the #9 Shaft cage.
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Waste rock brought to surface via the hoist is, and will be, handled through the ore system (i.e., crusher, bins, belts etc.). However, on surface, it is, and will be, directed into a different chute than the ore.
13.9.1.4 | Garson |
Ore and waste rock is mucked using LHDs to re-muck storages on each level and side loaded into 45 t (50 ton; common) or 27 t (30 ton; less common) diesel trucks. Ore is hauled up the ramp and dumped into a storage bin from where it is loaded through a chute into rail cars. The ore is then trammed by rail along the 4,000 Level and into another chute feeding a crusher. Crushed ore is hoisted to surface via # 2 Shaft in 10 t (11 ton) skips that have a capacity of 231 t/hr (255 tons/hr).
The majority of waste rock is used underground as fill, though some hoisting of rock does take place. Waste rock is loaded into 45 t (50 ton) diesel trucks by LHDs and hauled up the ramp and handled through a rock system that is independent of the ore system but uses the same loading pockets and skips as the ore system.
The Garson ramp mining zone hauls ore and waste from underground in 36 t (40 ton) trucks via a ramp to surface for ore crushing and shipment to the mill or disposal. Production ore capacity is approximately 450 t/day (500 tons/day).
13.9.1.5 | Totten |
The main haulage level is the 3,800 Level. An ore pass links the 1,850 Level down to the 3,800 Level. The ore circuit also involves the trucking of material from below the 3,950 Level for dumping into an ore pass on the 3,800 Level. The crusher is located below the 3,850 Level and is ramp accessible. The rock breaker is equipped for remote control operation, and the crusher is automated. Crushed ore is hoisted to surface via 16.3 t (18 ton) skips (over cage arrangement) with a capacity of 272 t/hr (300 tons/hr).
The waste rock circuit is equipped with truck-loading chutes to transport the waste rock. The waste pass extends from the 3,150 Level down to the 3,800 Level. Waste rock is also hoisted via the skip through a rock handling system that is separate from the ore handling system.
13.9.2 Open Pit
The proposed waste rock storage facilities that will support the Copper Cliff Pit is discussed in Chapter 15.3.2.
13.10 | Underground Infrastructure Facilities |
13.10.1 Mine Mobile Equipment Maintenance
The underground mines use a combination of underground maintenance facilities of varying sizes and capacities. These shop areas are equipped with the necessary tools and equipment to service large industrial rock moving and drilling equipment. Most of the mobile equipment repairs are completed at these permanent facilities while smaller repairs can be done in the field by trained mechanics.
13.10.2 Communications
The underground mines are equipped with leaky feeder communication in most underground work areas, with all employees being equipped with two-way radios. The surface buildings and underground refuge stations have wired telephones. Underground communications are linked to surface through fibre optic broadband systems. Totten mine is equipped with Wi-Fi in most underground workings.
13.10.3 Logistics and Supplies Handling
Mine supplies and personnel (e.g., employees, ground support products, fuel, safety supplies and explosives) are transported underground via the mine hoisting shafts (with the exception of the Garson ramp and Copper Cliff mine portals). To place the materials in the shaft conveyance they can either be loaded on a timber rail car or be handled with a mobile forklift. Once the material has arrived at the underground destination level it is unloaded from the cage, and eventually brought to underground supplies storage locations with a boom truck or forklift.
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13.10.4 Ventilation
The mine ventilation systems are summarized in Table 13-3.
13.10.5 Compressed Air and Process Water
Each of the mines uses compressed air and process water for numerous mining related activities such as drilling, dust suppression, and fire sprinklers and to operate some equipment such as pumps, ore-pass gates, and mining equipment. Each plant is structured in a similar fashion to provide compressed air and water services to the mining areas.
Large compressors situated on surface create the necessary air volumes at required working pressures (~80–120 psi). Varying diameter pipes are hooked up to the compressors and are directed underground. A series of pipes then direct the compressed air to all active working areas. In areas where the permanent feed is insufficient or cannot be accessed, free-air compressors are used.
Process water is sourced from a suitable surface supply as well as from recycled process water from the underground workings. Similar to compressed air, the process water supply originates from a location on surface and is delivered underground through a network of pipes that are directed throughout the underground work areas.
13.11 | Production Schedules |
Each underground mine developed a production schedule that contained production and cost information for every producing area within the mine, based on mineral reserve estimates. Production schedules were limited for the underground mines by process and infrastructure constraints such as ventilation, drift development, blasthole drilling, LHD/haulage, backfilling, and muck circuit/storage. The assemblage of mining process activities is used to derive costs based on historical and budgeted rates.
Production scheduling for the Copper Cliff Pit was determined by a pre-feasibility (FEL2) mining study. The schedule was limited by the Clarabelle Mill feed capacity, logistical process interactions and standard mechanized equipment productivities. The schedule was optimized to find the balance between the quantity of ore, metal grade of the ore, and minimizing waste stripping costs. The study assessed mining rates from 4,500–9,000 tons/day. Ultimately an ore mining rate of 6,800 yd/d was selected.
These plans were collated into an overall production schedule for the Ontario Operations. Based on this schedule, the forecast mine life for the mineral reserves is 22 years (2023–2044).
13.12 | Equipment |
13.12.1 Underground
Vale has a large fleet of mobile equipment consisting of approximately 650 units distributed between the operating mines depending on each mine’s operational requirements. The number of units for each mine changes over the LOM as development and production rates and haulage distances vary on an ongoing basis.
The total production and development fleet consists of over 200 units, consisting of production drill jumbos, development jumbos, LHDs, haulage trucks, and specialty vehicles to load explosives.
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Table 13-3: Ventilation Systems
Mine | Ventilation Capacity (kcfm) |
Ventilation System | Comment |
Coleman | 1,600 | Two fresh air and two return air systems | As part of the continued use of Fraser mine agreement with Glencore, an additional 400 kcfm of fresh air is supplied to Coleman from the Fraser mine infrastructure. In return, the Ontario Operations accommodates 200 kcfm of the exhaust air from the Fraser mine. |
Copper Cliff | 3,200 | North-side and south-side ventilation supply each consisting of three separate fresh air and return sub-systems | |
Creighton | 1,700 | Three parallel fresh air systems; one return air system | Phase 5 (below 8590 ft Level) will have two return air systems (east and west) with one central fresh air system. A cooling plant will be constructed on 8400 ft Level to cool air on 8720 ft Level and below. |
Garson | 1,050 | One major fresh air system; four return air systems | The Garson ramp circulates 300 kcfm. |
Totten | 685 | One major fresh air system; one main return air system |
Drilling equipment is selected to suit the mining methods with bulk mining; down-hole drill units being the most predominant blasthole drilling equipment. The ITH drills use booster compressors to provide high pressure compressed air for higher penetration speeds and typically drill production blastholes of either 11.4 cm or 15 cm diameter. For up-hole blastholes, electric hydraulic top-hammer drill rigs are used typically drilling 8.9 cm (3.5 inch) diameter blastholes. For mechanized post-pillar cut-and-fill mining, two-boom electric hydraulic drill jumbos are used, and for narrow-vein cut-and-fill, one-boom jumbos are used. Specialized vehicles are used to load either ANFO or emulsion-type explosives.
Loading equipment includes both 7.2 t and 9 t (eight ton and 10 ton) capacity LHDs, although Totten has some 5.4 t (six ton) units. Smaller 2.3–3.2 t (2.5–3.5 ton) LHDs are used as utility vehicles in all the mines.
Haulage equipment includes 27 t, 36 t, and 45 t (30, 40 and 50 ton) capacity haulage trucks. Coleman mine has six 45 t (50 ton) capacity electric trolley trucks working on a truck-priority haulage ramp.
The support equipment fleet consists of over 430 units including rockbolters, scissor lifts, shotcrete sprayers, shotcrete and cement transporters, mobile rock breakers, utility trucks with hydraulic lifting booms, graders, rail locomotives and rail ore cars, backhoes, personnel vehicles including small tractors, jeeps and personnel carriers, and other trucks used for transporting materials such as fuel trucks.
13.12.2 Open Pit
Mining equipment for the Copper Cliff Pit was selected based on production requirements set out in the mine schedule. This involved equipment matching procedures and calculation of productivities for loading and hauling equipment.
The mine plan incorporates a mixed ore and waste rock haulage fleet. The waste haulage fleet will consist of a maximum of 22 x 150 t rigid-frame haul trucks, and the ore fleet will consist of a maximum of three 61 t rigid frame trucks.
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A mixed digging fleet of two face shovels, a front-end-loader, and an excavator, with buckets ranging from 7.5–22 yd3 (5.7–16.8 m3) is envisaged. The drill and blast plan requires a mixed fleet of drill rigs. A maximum of five blast hole drills with 6-inch (15 cm) drill bits and four smaller drill rigs with 4-inch (10 cm) drill bits will be required.
Support equipment will include five track-type dozers, two rubber-tire dozers, three graders, and two water trucks. Auxiliary equipment is expected to include a front-end loader, a 3 yd3 excavator, two fuel lube trucks, a water truck, a cable reeler, a tire manipulator, a tractor-trailer lowbed, a crew cab pickup, a mechanic truck, a maintenance truck, a welder truck, a mine rescue truck, an ambulance, a 4 yd3 utility backhoe, a powerline boom truck, a small forklift, a medium forklift, two 30-person crew buses, a 15-person in-pit crew bus, eight pit dewatering pumps, eight lighting plants, four generators, and a flat deck with crane.
13.13 | Personnel |
A total of 2,202 personnel support the mining operations.
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14 | PROCESSING AND RECOVERY METHODS |
14.1 | Process Method Selection |
The process plant design was based on a combination of metallurgical testwork and familiarity gained during historical processing. The Clarabelle Mill was originally built in 1971 and subsequently underwent a number of major modifications. The hourly design throughput of the plant was based on a yearly throughput of approximately 8 M tons. The utilization calculation was based on an assumption that the plant would operate 350 days per year, with an availability of 92%, for a net utilization of 88.2%. In 2017, the crushing plant and rod mill circuit was put on care and maintenance and the Clarabelle Mill became a SAG-only operating plant. The yearly throughput based on SAG-only operation is approximately 6.0 Mt.
At the concentrator, the ore is crushed and ground and fed to the froth-flotation cells. The multi-staged froth flotation separates the sulphide minerals into a nickel concentrate and a copper concentrate. The tailings are disposed of in tailings ponds. The nickel concentrate typically averages 11% Ni and 4% Cu. The copper concentrate typically averages 31.5% Cu and 0.4% Ni. The Clarabelle Mill is operated in such a way to place as much copper into the saleable copper concentrate as possible, then recover remaining copper and maximum possible nickel into a high-grade nickel–copper bulk concentrate to maximize the product NSR values.
The copper concentrate is dewatered by two pressure filters and shipped to market buyers. The nickel–copper bulk concentrate is dewatered at the smelter, and upgraded to Bessemer matte by processing through fluid-bed dryers, flash furnace, and Pierce–Smith converters. The magnetic metallics (containing nickel, copper, and precious metals) are sent to the Copper Cliff Refinery. The nickel sulphides are roasted in a fluid-bed roaster to produce nickel oxides which are then sent to the Copper Cliff Refinery in Ontario, or the Clydach Refinery in Wales.
The Copper Cliff Refinery complex includes three areas: nickel refinery converter (NRC), Inco pressure carbonyl (IPC) and electrowinning (EW). Nickel sulphides and oxides from the smelter complex and other feeds are blended and fed to top blown rotary converters, which produce a high-grade nickel matte. This matte is granulated, dried, and fed into one of three carbonylation reactors in the IPC, where nickel and trace iron are extracted by reaction with carbon monoxide. The mixture is separated into a pure nickel carbonyl stream and an iron/nickel carbonyl stream. Material from both streams is decomposed at high temperature to produce pure nickel pellets, pure nickel powders and ferro-nickel pellets, which are sold directly to market. The residue left in the reactor, high in copper, cobalt and precious metals, is ground and pumped to the EW plant as a slurry.
In the EW process, copper is removed from IPC residue. Copper cathodes are plated from solution and sold to market. Three other products are made at EW: a nickel–cobalt carbonate slurry, a slurry-rich in precious metals containing platinum-group metals, silver and gold and a slurry enriched in platinum-group metals and selenium–tellurium. These are sent to the Port Colborne Refinery for further processing.
An overview of the process flowsheet from the mill to smelter and refinery is provided in Figure 14-1.
14.2 | Process Plant |
14.2.1 Flowsheet
A simplified process flowsheet is included as Figure 14-2 and Figure 14-3.
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Figure 14-1: Process Overview Flowsheet
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020.
Figure 14-2: Simplified Comminution Flowsheet
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2015.
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Figure 14-3: Simplified Flotation Flowsheet
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2015.
14.2.2 Plant Design
Ore is transported from the Ontario Operations mines and third-party feed suppliers by rail and/or truck to the Clarabelle Mill where the material is blended. From the tipple building, feeders send the material along one of two comminution paths:
· | Circuit 1: Ore feeds the semi-autogenous grind (SAG) mill where ore is ground with added water. Discharge passes through a trommel; coarse trommel oversize material is transferred back to the tipple building by conveyor, while the trommel undersize is pumped to vibrating screens located near the feed of the SAG mill. Screen oversize is fed back into the SAG mill while the screen undersize is pumped to the ball mill feed distribution pumping system; |
· | Circuit 2: Material from the tipple building is fed into a fine crushing circuit. This circuit consists of primary screening, four secondary (in closed circuit with screens) and four tertiary crushers. Product from this circuit feeds two rod mills. This circuit is currently in care and maintenance. |
Product from both primary grinding circuits (SAG and rod mills) feeds the ball mill feed distribution system, which can send slurry to the cyclone feed pumpboxes of six ball mills. Each ball mill in combination with its own cyclone system grinds the material to a target of 80% passing 150 µm (106 µm for sulphides). Once the material is ground to the correct size, the slurry is sent to flotation.
Material entering flotation passes through the rougher circuit which recovers most of the copper and a high proportion of the nickel to a mixed bulk concentrate. This concentrate is sent to the rougher cleaners. Rougher–cleaner tails material is sent to the pyrrhotite separation circuit via the pyrrhotite regrind circuit. Rougher–cleaner concentrate is sent to the copper roughers which in turn provide a concentrate to the copper cleaners. The copper cleaners produce a saleable copper concentrate while the tails from the copper cleaners return to the copper roughers. The copper rougher tails are a mixed high-grade nickel–copper concentrate which is sent to the Sudbury smelter complex for further processing.
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The rougher tails are processed in the scavengers. These produce a scavenger concentrate and a final rock tailings that can either be sent to a mine backfill plant or to the TSF. The scavenger concentrate is sent to cyclones which separate out a coarse fraction and a fine fraction.
The fine fraction is thickened and then flotation is performed to create a fines concentrate. This fines concentrate is combined with the rougher–cleaner tails and combined with the coarse fraction and sent through a regrind circuit. The product of the regrind is sent to the pyrrhotite roughers and scavengers. The pyrrhotite rougher concentrate is cleaned through cleaning columns and joins the high-grade nickel–copper concentrate being sent for processing in the smelter complex. The pyrrhotite scavenger concentrate is recirculated to the head of the pyrrhotite feed. The pyrrhotite tails are sent to the TSF for disposal.
In total, two concentrate products and two tailings streams are produced. The two different concentrates reporting for sale or to the smelter are:
· | A high-grade copper concentrate grading approximately 31.5% Cu and 0.4% Ni; |
· | A nickel–copper concentrate grading approximately 4.0% Cu and 11% Ni. |
The tailings (rock and pyrrhotite) contain most of the gangue minerals, and report to either a mine backfill plant or the TSF.
The copper concentrate is sold to market while the nickel–copper concentrate is dewatered, mixed with custom concentrate feed and high-grade silica flux, and conveyed to the smelter.
14.2.3 Equipment Sizing
The key equipment in the Clarabelle Mill is summarized in Table 14-1.
14.2.4 Power and Consumables
The power consumption for the Ontario Operations is described in Chapter 15.9.
14.2.5 Personnel
A total of 120 persons are employed at the Clarabelle Mill.
14.3 | Refinery/Smelter |
14.3.1 Flowsheet
A simplified process flowsheet for the Ontario Operations was included as Figure 14-1. An illustrated schematic of the flowsheet for the Copper Cliff Refinery is included as Figure 14-4. Figure 14-5 is a simplified flowsheet for the Clydach Refinery.
14.3.2 Design
14.3.2.1 | Copper Cliff Smelter |
Bulk concentrate is sent from the Clarabelle Mill to the Copper Cliff Smelter. The concentrate is dewatered in a filter plant. The 20 wt% Cu–Ni–Co concentrate is fed to an INCO flash furnace, and is blown with oxygen burners located on opposite end walls of the vessel. Silica is added as a flux to ensure immiscibility of nickel sulphide-rich matte and iron oxide-based slag. Once the target matte level is reached the matte is tapped and sent to converters. The furnace slag is removed, and sent to a slag storage facility. Sulphur dioxide from the flash furnaces, converters, and fluid bed roasters is fixed and sold as sulphuric acid.
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Table 14-1: Key Equipment, Clarabelle Mill
Area | Equipment | Number | Note | Comment |
Ore discharge | Holding bin | 1 | 25,000 tons (22,700 t) |
Ore is received at -6 inch (-152 mm) |
Conveyor belts | 2 | 48 in. x 1,900 ft (1.22 x by 579 m) |
||
Coarse ore bin | 1 | 2,500 tons (2,270 t) | ||
SAG circuit | SAG feed bin | 1 | 8,800 tons (8,000 t) | |
SAG mill | 1 | 32 ft dia. by 13.5 ft long (9.75 m by 4.11 m) |
The SAG mill processes 785 st/hr (700 t/hr) ore on average, net of pebble production. Control of the SAG mill is through a Foxboro DCS. The mill employs a SAG Expert system for process control. | |
Ball size | 5 in (127 mm) | |||
Mill speed | 8.2–10.8 rpm | |||
Critical speed | 79% max | |||
AC drive motor | 2 | 5,500 hp (4,100 kW) variable speed | ||
Shell liners | 3 x 13 inch (76 mm by 330 mm) with integrated lifters. | |||
Discharge grates | 2 inch (51 mm) slots with an open area of 256 sq. inch (0.16 m2) | |||
Rubber panels | 0.75 in. wide by 2 in. (16 mm by 51 mm) slots. | |||
Pebble bin | 400 tons (363 t) | Approximately 12% of the SAG mill feed is removed as pebbles. | ||
Tramp metal magnetic separator | 2 | |||
Double-deck, vibrating screens | 2 | 8 ft by 24 ft (2.43 m by 7.31 m) |
The upper polyurethane deck has 0.25 inch (6 mm) wide slots while the lower deck has 0.125 inch (3 mm) wide slots. | |
Ball mill grinding circuit | Ball mill | 5 | 13 ft 6 inch dia. by 18 ft (4.11 m by 5.49 m) |
SAG feed is distributed to any one of five ball mills via a six-way pressurized distributor. Targets P80 of 150 µm. Particle size is analyzed by an on-stream, particle size monitor |
Ball size | 2.5 in (63 mm) | |||
Mill speed | 17.3 rpm | |||
Critical speed | 83% | |||
Motor | 2,000 hp (1,492 kW) |
|||
Cyclones | 5 | 20 in. (0.0.51 m) | Operated in closed circuit. |
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Area | Equipment | Number | Note | Comment |
Primary flotation circuit | Rougher flotation cells | 2 parallel banks of 5 | 100 m3 tank cell volume | Total 1,000 m3 |
Scavenger flotation cells | 6 parallel banks of 8 | 1,350 cu. ft. (38 m3) |
Total 228 m3 | |
Rougher cleaner | 2 banks of 7 cells | 20 m3 tank cell volume | Total 280 m3 | |
Copper circuit | Conditioning tanks | |||
Copper rougher | Nine 20 m3 flotation cells | |||
Copper cleaner | Four columns | The number of columns in operation at any given time is driven by the amount of copper concentrate recovery required to obtain the desired Cu:Ni ratio in final nickel concentrate based on the smelter needs. | ||
Copper concentrate dewatering and storage | Thickener | 94 ft. dia. (28.2 m) | ||
Filter presses | Two | Larox vertical filter presses | ||
Pyrrhotite regrind circuit | Regrind mills | Two | Two 13 ft 6 in. dia. by 18 ft. long (4.11 m x 5.49 m) ball mills. 2,000 hp (1,492 kW) motor. Operate at 83% of critical speed. | Closed circuit. Product grind target of P80 of 60 µm |
Cyclones | One ball mill has a nest of seven 5-inch (0.13 m) cyclones and the other has 16 10-inch (0.25 m) cyclones | |||
One | Isamill | Open circuit | ||
Cyclones | Nest of six 15 inch (0.38 m) cyclones | |||
Pyrrhotite rejection circuit | Rougher flotation tank cells | 2 rows | Each with three 100 m3 cells | |
Scavenger flotation tank cells | 2 rows | Each with two 100 m3 cells | ||
Cleaner columns | 3 | 4.5 m diameter | ||
Concentrate dewatering & storage | Thickeners | 4 | 110 ft dia. (33.5 m) |
|
Concentrate storage tanks | 4 | Provide concentrate surge capacity between the mill and the smelter when there is an imbalance between what the mill produces and what the smelter can take in as feed | ||
Water treatment plant | Clariflocculators | 2 | 135 ft dia. (41.1 m) |
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Figure 14-4: Schematic Flowsheet, Copper Cliff Refinery
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2020.
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Figure 14-5: Simplified Flowsheet, Clydach Refinery
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2021
Removal of the remaining iron in the matte is accomplished by the use of Peirce-Smith converters. Charging of the converter occurs when matte is poured into the vessel through an opening in the top. The molten matte is blown with oxygen-enriched air to remove the remaining iron and silica flux is added to produce a slag. Sulphur dioxide is generated during the process. The converter slag is skimmed and returned to the flash furnace to recover oxidized cobalt and nickel prior to disposal. The Bessemer matte produced in the converter is subsequently cast into moulds and slow-cooled to produce a coarse crystal structure. The Bessemer matte is crushed, ground, and separated into metallic, nickel sulphide and copper sulphide materials by magnetic separation and flotation in a matte separation plant.
Consumables in the process plant include grinding media, frother, sodium cyanide, flocculant, lime, xanthate, electrical materials, lubricants, and maintenance supplies.
Water for process and potable needs is sourced from the Vermilion River, or is recycled from the plant. Average water consumption is approximately 327,000 m3. This level of water consumption is projected to remain approximately the same for the duration of the LOM.
All of the precious metal-bearing metallic material is sent to the Copper Cliff Refinery. The nickel sulphide is roasted in fluid bed roasters. The resulting nickel oxide is processed in the Copper Cliff Refinery and the Clydach Refinery. Sulphur dioxide from the roasters is fixed as sulphuric acid.
Copper sulphide from matte separation is filtered and sold to market.
14.3.2.2 | Copper Cliff Refinery |
There are three main facilities at the Copper Cliff Refinery: the nickel refinery converter plant, the Inco pressure carbonyl plant, and an electrowinning building.
At the nickel refinery converter plant, feed input (nickel sulphide crudes, nickel–copper metallics, nickel oxides, precious metal-bearing intermediates and refinery intermediates, and fluxing agents) are charged into two top blown rotary converters, and melted using natural gas-oxygen lance burners. Once the temperature of the bath has reached approximately 1,600ºC, petroleum coke is added to reduce the oxygen content. High-pressure oxygen is occasionally blown into the bath to desulphurize it if the sulphur content is too high. The melted product is transferred to a teeming ladle and poured through high velocity water jets to granulate the product. The resultant granules are dewatered, dried in a gas-fired kiln, and conveyed to the Inco pressure carbonyl plant.
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At the Inco pressure carbonyl plant, the granules are batch-reacted with carbon monoxide in three 150-t rotating reactors. Nickel and iron are extracted as carbonyl vapours, while copper, cobalt, precious metals and other impurities are retained in the residue. This residue is milled and pumped to the electrowinning plant. The nickel and iron carbonyl vapor is distilled in two parallel vertical distillation columns; nickel carbonyl separate and rises to the top of each column while iron carbonyl settles at the bottom of each column.
At the electrowinning building, the Inco pressure carbonyl residue is treated in a first stage metathetic acid leach circuit to remove nickel, cobalt, iron, arsenic, and other minor element contaminants. A second stage oxidative leaching circuit is used to dissolve copper, selenium, and tellurium from the first leach solid residue. The second stage slurry is filtered and the residue is sent to the Port Colborne Refinery to extract the precious metals. The filtrate is pumped into tanks and an electrical current is applied through titanium cathodes and lead anodes. The copper plates onto the cathode over a two-week period. The copper sheets are removed from the cathodes and sent to market. The first stage leach solution is fed to the iron/arsenic removal circuit and then through a copper clean-up circuit. The nickel and cobalt are precipitated from the solution with soda ash. The resultant carbonate stream is thickened and sent to Port Colborne.
14.3.2.3 | Clydach Refinery |
Nickel oxide feedstock is continuously fed into a reduction kiln where it is tumbled in a stream of hydrogen, the reduced feed is then fed to the activation kiln. The activated nickel matte is sent to a volatilisation kiln, where the nickel reacts with carbon monoxide to form nickel carbonyl gas. The nickel carbonyl gas is piped to an adjacent plant for thermal decomposition into pure nickel pellet or powder.
To produce powder, the nickel carbonyl gas is injected at a metered rate into the top of eight decomposer towers, each 10 m high and 2 m in diameter. The walls of the towers are heated. The gas decomposes instantly to form nickel powder which settles at the bottom of the unit. The nickel powder is collected, blended for uniformity, screened, and packaged for sale.
When nickel carbonyl gas is heated in a pellet unit, it decomposes to form nickel metal and CO gas; this occurs when the gas comes into contact with hot nickel pellets. Nickel pellets grow in size each time they pass through a reactor (approx. once every 30 minutes). Once they reach saleable size, they are collected via a make screen. The nickel pellet is collected, sieved, and packaged for sale.
14.3.2.4 | Port Colborne Refinery |
The Port Colborne Refinery is an electro-cobalt refinery and precious metals upgrading facility.
In the precious metals upgrading facility, slurry feed shipments of residues or process intermediates are received from the Sudbury Operations. The facility also processes toll materials from third-parties. The refinery is a hydrometallurgical process that uses several oxidative and reductive reaction steps along with acidic and basic leach steps to selectively remove impurities and purify targeted metals in each step. Base metals are precipitated and recycled back to Sudbury. Fiberglass and stainless-steel tanks are typically used as reaction vessels along with settlers and filters for liquid solids separation. The process produces gold, silver, and platinum group metal concentrate products for external customers. In addition, tellurium dioxide, selenium, bismuth, and lead carbonate are produced as by-products that are sold to market.
In the electro-cobalt refinery, slurry feed is received from the Copper Cliff Refinery that contains nickel, cobalt carbonates, and other impurities. This slurry is dissolved with sulphuric acid and then pH adjusted with soda ash. The mixture is filtered to remove calcium and iron along with other metals. The solid phase is rejected and liquid phase is sent through several other purification steps including copper ion exchange, and zinc ion exchange. The remaining liquid containing purified cobalt and nickel is treated with sodium hypochlorite to separate the cobalt from the nickel. The remaining nickel solution is treated with soda ash producing a nickel carbonate precipitate which is sent in slurry form to the fluid bed roasters at the Copper Cliff Smelter. Cobalt hydrate is precipitated, filtered, and sent to the electro-cobalt refinery building.
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In the electro-cobalt refinery, the cobalt hydrate feed is subjected to additional purification through ion exchange, settling and filtering. Soluble cobalt contained in acidic liquor is pumped into plating cells containing cathodes and a sacrificial lead anode. Metallic cobalt is electrolytically deposited onto mandrels. Several hundred cobalt disks form on each mandrel to a size of about three centimetres in diameter. Once removed from the mandrel, the rounds are polished, degassed in an electrically heated kiln and packaged for market in 250 kg drums.
Nickel products are received from Vale operations, including the Ontario Operations. Nickel rounds go through a sulphuric acid dip for cleaning followed by screening, a water rinse and polishing. Nickel pellets, disc, and rounds are also received in bulk containers for repackaging. The products are packaged into 10 kg bags, 250 kg drums or tonne bulk bags for shipment to market.
14.3.3 Equipment Sizing
Key equipment sizes for the Copper Cliff Smelter are provided in Table 14-2, for the Copper Cliff Refinery in Table 14-3, for the Port Colborne Refinery in Table 14-4, and for the Clydach Refinery in Table 14-5.
14.3.4 Power and Consumables
The power consumption for the Ontario Operations is described in Chapter 15.9.
Consumables include:
· | Copper Cliff Smelter: spare parts, electrical materials, maintenance supplies, refractories, quartz, sand, lime, coke, natural gas; |
· | Copper Cliff Refinery: refractories, lime, coke, MgO, dolime, sulphuric acid, soda ash, maintenance supplies; |
· | Port Colborne Refinery: soda ash, sodium hydroxide, sodium hypochlorite, sulfur dioxide, acid, chlorine, lime, maintenance supplies; |
· | Clydach Refinery: refractories, nickel sulphate, liquid ammonia, diethanolamine (DEA), potassium hydroxide (Benfield solution), sulphur dioxide, sodium hydroxide, sulphuric acid, maintenance supplies. |
Water requirements and water sources vary by smelter/refinery location.
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Table 14-2: Equipment List, Copper Cliff Smelter
Item | Number | Size/Model | Manufacturer/Make |
Pressure filters | 4 | FL Smidth | |
Flash furnace | 1 | Hatch Eng. - Inco type | |
Pierce–Smith converters | 2 | 13' x 45’ | Anmar – Peirce–Smith converter |
Slag cleaner | 1 |
Howden Parsons (Howden Buffalo). Currently not in use | |
Main aisle overhead cranes | 3 | Two x 65/20 ton; one by 65/15 ton | Virginia Crane 65/20 ton; Dominion Engineering |
Casting building overhead crane | 2 | 65/15 ton | Dominion Bridge |
Casting building crushers | 3 | Traylor crusher, 48" x 66" jaw; GG crusher, 48” x 15” jaw; Symons crusher | Gatex Fuller; B & D Manufacturing; Nordberg (Metso Minerals) |
Rod mill | 2 | Metso Minerals | |
Ball mill | 5 | Metso Minerals | |
Recleaner column | 2 | Eriez | |
Flotation cell | 16 cells in 4 banks | Denver | |
Fluid bed roaster | 2 | ||
Acid plant blowers | 2 | AC compressor | |
Plant compressor | 19 | air, oxygen, nitrogen | Ingersoll Rand; York; Delaval; Joy Electrical Company; Sulzer Ltd. |
Plant separator | 1 | Oxygen | Peerless Pump Company |
Plant regenerator | 1 | Nitrogen |
Table 14-3: Equipment List, Copper Cliff Refinery
Area | Item | Number | Size/Model | Manufacturer/Make |
Converter | 2 | 50 Ton Kaldo | Davy Ashmores | |
Granulation | Dewatering bin | 2 | 15'-6" I.D. Cone x 15'-3" High | ASH Fluid Transport |
Granulation rotary dryer | 1 | Model: 502-32 / Size: 5'-1 1/4" I.D. x 31'-1 1/2" LG | FMC Technologies | |
Granulation sluice | 3 | 22'-7 1/8" LG x 3'-0" Wide | Div Shops | |
Thickener | 1 | Model: 3900 | Parson Corporation | |
Granulation cooling tower | 1 | Series 15 #457-202 | Marley Canadian Limited | |
Nickel refinery converter | Top blown rotary converter baghouse | 2 | ||
Stack | 1 | |||
Inco pressure carbonyl | Inco pressure carbonyl reactors | 3 | ||
Distillation column | 1 |
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Area | Item | Number | Size/Model | Manufacturer/Make |
Overhead cranes | 75 ton main aisle crane | 1 | 6754/ 75T main hoist /15T aux hoist, 4 girder hot metal crane, 55ft span ; Rerated to 75T from 65T in 1974 | Alliance Machine Company |
EW 8T Crane | 1 | 8T Crane, Class D Rerated to 8T from 6T in 2009 | Provincial Crane Division | |
IPC 20T Pellet Crane | 1 | DL-DMR-3, 55ft span, 65ft lift | Shawbox | |
MGC 10T Crane | 1 | DL-DMR-2, 52'-6" span, 35ft lift | Shawbox | |
Main gas compressors | CO reciprocating Compressors | 3 | 5HHE 5MGC, 5083 | Ingersoll Rand |
Pellet and powder decomposer | Pellet Decomposer units | 18 | 43500,Rex ChainBelt Shop Code: 682 | Rex Chainbelt Canada Limited |
Powder decomposer | 10 | 28'-0" ft long x 6'-6" I.D. | Shell unknown, heating: EW Playford Company Limited | |
Electrowin cells, rectifiers | Concrete T and L sections | 48T, 2L | Precast 'T' and 'L' concrete panels | Fisher Wavy Inc. |
Composite liners | 49 | FRP Cell Liners | Chemposite INC | |
Tankhouse rectifier | 1 | 45KA 150VDC | ABB |
Table 14-4: Equipment List, Port Colborne Refinery
Area | Item | Number | Size/Model | Manufacturer/Make |
Cobalt hydrate | North feed receiving tank | 1 | H: 30', dia: 13'6''; capacity 121,576 L | Troy |
South feed receiving tank | 1 | H: 30', dia: 13'6''; capacity 121,576 L | Troy | |
Slurry leach tank | 3 | H: 10, dia: 8'; capacity 12,800 L | Mak Enterprises | |
Leach–polish feed tank | H: 28', dia:12'; capacity 72,000 L | Ceilcote Canada Ltd | ||
Nickel solution tank 1 | 1 | H: 30', dia: 12'; capacity 72,000 L | Precisioneering Ltd | |
Nickel solution tank 2 | 1 | H: 28', dia: 12'; capacity 60,000 L | Precisioneering Ltd | |
Cobalt precipitation tank | 2 | |||
Cobalt hydrate settling tank | 3 | approx. 30' x12' | Precisioneering Ltd | |
Nickel sol surge tank | 2 | H: 30'; dia: 8', | Precisioneering Ltd | |
Cobalt ECR | Cob hydrate surge tank | 3 | H: 20', dia: 16'; capacity 98,410 L | Protective plastics ltd |
Leach Tank A | 1 | H: 15', dia: 13'; capacity 52,333 L | Scepter Manufacturing | |
Leach tank B | 1 | H: 15', dia: 13'; capacity 52,333 L | Scepter Manufacturing | |
Leach tank C | 1 | H: 15', dia: 13'; capacity 52,333 L | Scepter Manufacturing | |
Precious metals recovery | Screw conveyor | 1 | AGCL/SiO2 Fltr Dchrg, 40-9 | Perrin |
1 | SIO2 FltrDchrg, 70-20, 2Fl, | |||
Scrubber | 1 | Process vacuum circuit, 90-1-CT | ||
Scrubber | 1 | Process SO2 ventilation circuit, 90-2-CT | ||
Tank | 1 | OPM Tank, 20-9.1-TK, 2Fl | ||
1 | Copper surge, 20-20-TK | |||
1 | Cu/Ni precipitation, 20-12.2-TK |
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Area | Item | Number | Size/Model | Manufacturer/Make |
Nickel processing | Conveyor | 1 | East speed belt,10 KBP | |
10KPB line conveyor | 1 | Palletizer infeed, 10 KBP | ||
10KPB line conveyor | 1 | Palletizer eject, 10 KBP | ||
10KPB line conveyor | 1 | East incline, 10 KBP | ||
10KPB line conveyor | 1 | Magnetic,10 KBP | ||
10KPB line compressor | 1 | Air, 10 KBP, Gardner Denver, | ||
250KPB line conveyor | 1 | Escalator, #2, 250 KP | ||
250KPB line conveyor | 1 | Reject &test weigh, 250 KP | ||
250KPB line conveyor | 1 | Reversing, 250 KP | ||
250KPB line conveyor | 1 | South squares, 250 KP | ||
Tank | 1 | Acid dip tank, Ni processing |
Table 14-5: Equipment List, Clydach Refinery
Area | Item | Number | Size/Model | Manufacturer/Make |
Process gas plant | Recycle hydrogen compressor | 3 | Capacity 45 m3/hr: motor 4 kW | The Bryan Donkin Company Ltd. |
Start-up circulating compressor | 1 | Capacity 120 m3/hr: Power 37.1 HP | Reavell & Co. Ltd. | |
Vaporiser | 2 | External dimensions 2.4 x 2.4 m mounted on 2.5 m legs. Topped with a 3.8 m cone tapering to a 25 m long 70 mm flue. | Unknown | |
Desulphuriser | 2 | 14 m high x 1.5 m diameter. Stainless steel clad. | Old Park Engineering Ltd. | |
Reforming furnace | 2 | 4 x 4 x 10m. 10 reforming tubes | Power-Gas Corporation Ltd. | |
Benfield solution absorber | 1 | 33 m high x 660 mm ID | Danks Of Netherton Ltd. | |
Benfield regenerator | 1 | 36 m high x 1.4 m ID | Wefco (Gainsborough) Ltd. | |
DEA Absorber | 1 | 16.3 m high x 1 m ID | Wefco (Gainsborough) Ltd. | |
DEA Regenerator | 1 | 11.3 m high x 1.2 m ID | Wefco (Gainsborough) Ltd. | |
Copper liquor absorber | 1 | 32 m high x 1.1 m | Wefco (Gainsborough) Ltd. | |
Copper liquor absorber wash tower | 1 | 50 m x 400 mm | Power-Gas Corporation Ltd. | |
Copper liquor regenerator | 1 | 18.5 x 1.4 m | Wefco (Gainsborough) Ltd. | |
Hydrogen gas holders | 2 | 19 m high x 15.5 m | ||
CO2 holder | 1 | 10 m high x 10.5 m | GW Walker | |
CO holder | 1 | 10 m high x 10.5 m | GW Walker |
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Area | Item | Number | Size/Model | Manufacturer/Make |
Kiln plant | Reduction kiln | 2 | 38 m long x 3.9 m | F.L. Smidth-Fuller Ltd. |
Hydrogen blower | 2 | Capacity 6000 m3/hr with outlet pressure of 3 psi: power 165 HP | George Waller & Son Ltd. | |
Primary scrubber | 2 | 5.3 m high x 1 m | Projex Solutions Ltd | |
Activation kiln | 2 | 20 m long x 2 m | F.L. Smidth-Fuller Ltd. | |
Volatilisation kiln | 2 | 55 m long x 4.6 m | F.L. Smidth-Fuller Ltd. | |
Stabilisation kiln | 2 | 16 m long x 1.5 m | Unknown | |
Pellet plant | Carbonyl blower | 6 | 355 mm x 890 mm, Mark 2 Roots type, | Waller |
Pellet units (standard) | 17 | Contains 30 t Ni | International Nickel (MOND) Ltd. | |
Pellet units (double capacity) | 2 | Contains 45/60 t Ni | International Nickel (MOND) Ltd. | |
Powder plant | Powder decomposers | 6 | 10 m long x 2 m | Caper Neil/Mortec |
Powder Blower | 2 | 355 mm x 890 mm, Mark 2 Roots type, | Waller |
The Copper Cliff Smelter and Copper Cliff Refinery source freshwater from the Vermilion River, and recycle process water from the plant operations. In the period 2017–2021, freshwater requirements ranged from 1,267,000–3,358,000 m3, and process (recycle) requirements ranged from 44,973,541–118,831574 m3.
The Port Colborne Refinery sources its freshwater and process water needs from the Welland Canal. Annual water usage for the period 2017–2021 ranged from 3,006,000–3,769,000 m3.
As discussed in Section 3.7, a complex recycled, closed-loop, cooling water circuit was installed and phased into operation for the Clydach Refinery in during 2021–2022. Process water was abstracted from the Swansea Canal at a rate of 54,552 m3 for 2022 and there was no water abstraction from the Tawe River in 2022. Process water was supplied via the closed loop circuit at a recycled water rate of 1,664,400 m3 for 2022. Following installation of the closed loop circuit no water is planned to be sourced from either the river or the canal in 2023. However, the previously-granted water licenses have been retained for emergency back-up purposes while the new system is fully integrated into the operation.
Fresh water is sourced from the municipal water supply system for the Clydach Refinery at a total rate of 109,480 m3 for 2022. This water is primarily for domestic usage, but a portion is also used for topping up the closed loop process water circuits.
The LOM plan assumes similar water usage patterns.
14.3.5 Personnel
The personnel counts for the refining and smelting operations in 2021 included:
· | Copper Cliff Smelter: 400 persons; |
· | Copper Cliff Refinery: 270 persons; |
· | Port Colborne Refinery: 150 persons; |
· | Clydach Refinery: 196 persons. |
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15 | INFRASTRUCTURE |
15.1 | Introduction |
Major infrastructure currently in place for the underground mine sites is summarized in Table 15-1.
The processing facilities in Sudbury include a concentrator, a combined nickel and copper smelter, matte processing facilities, a carbonyl nickel refinery, a copper anode casting plant, a sulphuric acid plant and a sulphur dioxide liquefaction plant. The copper refinery was closed in 2006.
Ontario Operations infrastructure also includes a tailings impoundment area, a slag disposal area, and an oxygen plant.
All underground mines use a combination of several underground maintenance facilities of varying sizes and capacities. These shop areas are equipped with the necessary tools and equipment to service large industrial rock moving and drilling equipment. Most of the mobile equipment repairs are completed at these permanent facilities while smaller repairs can be done in the field by trained mechanics.
Additional facilities will be required to support the Copper Cliff Pit (Figure 15-1):
· | Ore handling and fine ore storage infrastructure: surface crushing facility; covered storage dome between crusher and rail load-out; rail spur connection to existing rail line (within 2 km of Clarabelle Mill); and waste storage area; |
· | Maintenance facilities: surface maintenance facility including tire change building, wash bay, and warehouse; |
· | Services and other support infrastructure: power supply and facilities; mine dewatering; office and dry facilities; automation and communication. |
15.2 | Roads and Logistics |
Road access is described in Chapter 4.2.
15.3 | Waste Rock Storage Facilities |
15.3.1 Underground
Waste rock from underground operations is primarily stored underground. One active permanent waste rock disposal location used by the Garson and Copper Cliff Mines is a non-producing open pit on the north side of the Copper Cliff mine property.
15.3.2 Open Pit
An area previously disturbed by mining activities that falls within the existing water management system and that is located northwest of the Copper Cliff Pit was selected for the waste rock storage facility location for the planned Copper Cliff Pit. The waste rock storage facility is planned to hold 136.9 Mt of waste.
The facility will be constructed with 30 ft (9 m) high lifts with 42.5 ft (13 m) wide catch benches. The face slope will be constructed at 37º with an overall slope of 2.7H:1V. The design assumes a 25% swell factor, and a ramp grade average of 8%.
Infrastructure that may be affected by the proposed facility location, such as existing powerlines and roads, will be moved, or replaced. The design includes consideration of key infrastructure that cannot be replaced, such as fresh air raises and the smelter material handling facility.
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Table 15-1: Current Mine Site Infrastructure
Mine | Key Surface Infrastructure | Comment |
Coleman | Headframe, warehouses, mechanical and electrical shops, hoist room buildings, a sand plant, fan houses, a first aid/security station, training rooms, offices, and change/shower facilities. | The Levack water system, owned by Coleman mine, provides industrial water. |
Copper Cliff | Two headframes, open, cold, and heated warehouses, mechanical and electrical shops, hoist room buildings, fan houses, sand plant, a first aid/security station, training rooms, offices, and change/shower facilities. | Water is sourced from the Vermillion water treatment plant located at the Creighton mine. |
Creighton | Headframe, Warehouses, mechanical and electrical shops, hoist room buildings, a sand plant, fan houses, a first aid/security station, training rooms, offices, and change/shower facilities. | Creighton mine owns the Vermillion Water Treatment Plant that provides industrial water. Creighton mine is also home to a government operated research facility, the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory. |
Garson | Headframe, warehouses, mechanical and electrical shops, hoist room buildings, a first aid/security station, training rooms, management, and technical services offices, paste fill plant, Aran sand plant, fan houses and a change house. | Water sourced from No 2. Well. |
Stobie | Main office and change/shower facilities, warehousing, surface lay down, a maintenance shop and a diamond drillhole core logging and sampling facility. | Former producing underground mine that was shut down in 2017. Buildings and warehouse are used by central mine service departments. |
Totten | Headframe, collar house, hoist house and compressor room, dry/office building, sewage treatment plant, process water storage tank and pump house, fuel storage facility, mine water treatment system, surface repair facilities, slick line system, dewatering pipeline, backfill plant, fan houses. |
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Figure 15-1: Proposed Infrastructure, Copper Cliff Pit
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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The selected area has historical open pits that will be filled by the waste rock. Silt traps, using crushed rocks and a fabric filter liner will be used to line the base of the historical pits to mitigate any silt that could flow from the waste rock into the underground workings.
The facility will affect an existing water management tunnel between Lady Macdonald Lake and Clarabelle Lake. It is planned to extend the tunnel to the north using a series of culverts.
15.4 | Tailings Storage Facilities |
The Copper Cliff tailings impoundment or Central Tailings Area became operational in 1936 and has become the primary management site for tailings generated from the Ontario Operations. The facility encompasses some 2,430 ha, and divided into several areas according to eras of tailings disposal: A-Area, M-Area, CD-Area, P-Area, Q-Area, R-Area, and the Upper Pond Area (UPA). A historical location plan is provided in Figure 15-2, with a current general location plan is provided in Figure 15-3 and a more detailed inset plan in Figure 15-4.
The UPA is the oldest area, dates to the 1930s, and is inactive in tailings disposal terms but is used as a process water supply for Clarabelle Mill. The A-Area followed in the late 1930’s and covers about 421 ha. The A-Area Dam lies in the southeast corner. The A-Area collects seepage from other parts of the Central Tailings Area as well as runoff from a large watershed. Hill Station sump overflows also report to A-Area. When sump overflows exceed the flow capacity to A-Pond, excess flow reports to the Hill Station Emergency Overflow pond.
The M-Area usage start date is uncertain, but may have been the 1950s. It is currently inactive in tailings disposal terms, covers about 121 ha, and includes a storage pond. The M-Area is bounded to the southeast and northeast by the M-Area South and M-Area North Dams. The remaining portions of the M-Area are connected to other tailings areas. The dams are currently being buttressed to allow future deposition of dredged tailings in the M-Area.
The P-Area began being used in the 1960s and is currently inactive in tailings disposal terms; however, it remains an important attenuating element for water management. A total of six perimeter dams make up the impoundment: Whissel Dam, Rock Dam, Mikkola Dam, Pistol Dam, Kallio Dam, and Cecchetto Dam. The P-Area Pond is the final storage pond for process water prior to discharge from the Central Tailings Area, receiving water from the combined flow from the R-Areas pond, CD-Area, Q-Area, and M-Area.
The Q-Area and CD-Area are both inactive in terms of tailings storage and are bounded on all sides by other tailings storage areas.
The R-Area was originally split into four separate areas (R1, R2, R3 and R4), and are currently combined into one, referred to as the R Pond, as the elevation of the R4 pond has risen to form a common pond with the R1, R2, and R3 Areas.
The original R1-Area was approximately 162 ha in size and bounded to the southwest by an internal dam, Dam C, and to the northeast by the Pyrrhotite Dam that separates the R1 Area from A-Area. The R2 Area lies to the northwest and is separated by a series of internal dykes known as Dams K, L, M, and N. The R1 Area is separated from CD-Area and Q-Area by the R1-CD and Guindon North Dams. Seepage from the Pyrrhotite Dam flows into A-Area. The R1 Area also receives seepage from the R2-Area flowing through the internal dykes.
The former R2-Area encompasses some 263 ha and makes up the northern region of the Central Tailings Area. It is bounded by 12 perimeter dams along the western and northern ends and the R1-Area on the southern end. A series of four separator dykes separate the R1- and R2-Areas. Seepage from Dams R-1 through R-9 flows to the A-Area drainage system. Seepage from Dams R-10, R-11, and R-12 is collected in a downstream seepage pond and pumped back to the R2 Area via the #1 Seepage Pumping Station. Two seepage containment dams downstream are used to minimise seepage escaping to the local environment.
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Figure 15-2: Historical Plan for Central Tailings Area
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
Figure 15-3: Central Tailings Impoundment
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2022. WWTP = waste water treatment plant.
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Figure 15-4: Tailings Impoundment Detail Plan
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2021.
The former R3-Area is approximately 202 ha in size and lies in the northwest region of the Central Tailings Area. It is bounded by five perimeter dams (Dams R-13 to R-17) on the western side. Seepage from the perimeter dams is captured by a series of ponds and channels, conveyed to a collection pond, and pumped back to the R3 Area via the #2 Seepage Pumping Station. Downstream seepage containment dams minimise seepage from escaping to the downstream environment.
The former R4-Area covers about 344 ha, and forms the southwestern portion of the Central Tailings Area. There are 10 perimeter dams (Dams R-18 through R-27) and one internal dam (Guindon Dam). Seepage from the majority of the perimeter dams is contained within a large collection pond and pumped back to the R4 Area via the #3 Seepage Pump Station. A series of seepage recovery dams was built in the late 1980s to divert water back to the seepage pump back stations at the downstream side of R3 between Dams R-10 and R-16.
In addition to tailings deposition, the Central Tailings Area receives an assorted stream of wastes including non-hazardous solid waste, water and process treatment plant sludges, and asbestos.
A site-wide seismic hazard assessment for the tailings areas was completed in 2022. Vale is incorporating the findings based on the assigned risk rating into future designs.
Vale meets the requirements of the Ontario Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry, Lakes, and Rivers Improvement Act, uses safety guidance provided by the Canadian Dam Association, and internal risk management frameworks to ensure dam safety. Vale has undertaken numerous studies on the Central Tailings Area to update various aspects of the facility to meet current dam engineering practices.
A detailed Operations Manual was developed that includes water management procedures, tailings delivery procedures, dam construction and safety procedures, instrumentation and monitoring procedures, environmental control procedures, management and control procedures, and the emergency preparedness and response plan. This manual is regularly updated.
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As part of Vale’s commitment to risk management for the Central Tailings Area and the UPA, Vale established a Technical Review Board in the 1990s. Board members are specialists in tailings and water management and dam safety with several years of experience. The Technical Review Board meetings typically involve presentations from Vale and their engineering consultants and discussion on the key issues related to the Central Tailings Area. The Technical Review Board work with Vale to address these issues and bring them to the attention of senior management. Vale has a recommendations-tracking database to monitor the recommendations from the Technical Review Board and their status.
15.5 | Slag Disposal Facility |
The smelter operation generates approximately 0.5 Mt of slag annually.
Furnace slag is tapped and poured into a series of slag pot rail cars. The slag pots are taken to one of three locations on the Copper Cliff Smelter Complex property, emptied, and the slag is allowed to cool. The main slag facilities are continuously managed to provide storage of additional molten slag by active cleaning with bulldozers, excavators, and other mobile equipment.
There are two main storage areas in the central and northeastern areas of the smelter that are designated for storage of cooled slag. Haulage trucks transport the slag from the main facilities to these storage areas.
15.6 | Water Management |
15.6.1 Water Management Strategy
The general water management strategy for several facilities peripheral to the Central Tailings Area involves collecting and treating impacted runoff. The strategy is common to the Copper Cliff (underground and planned open pit) and Creighton mines, the Stobie property, Clarabelle Mill, the Central Tailings Area, UPA, Copper Cliff Smelter complex, Copper Cliff Refinery, and the Copper Cliff and Nolin Creek waste water treatment plants.
The Ontario Operations monitor levels, flows and water balances on a weekly basis. Raw field data (flow, pond level, snow pack and precipitation) are incorporated into water balance and storage calculations. These data are reviewed by Vale’s internal Water Management Committee, which includes representatives from the process plant, water treatment plants and environmental department. Once a review is complete, the Water Management Committee issues minutes to the individual operations and internal stakeholders. The individual operations are responsible for implementing recommendations.
15.6.2 Water Treatment
15.6.2.1 | Copper Cliff Mine, Creighton Mine, Clarabelle Mill, Copper Cliff Smelter Complex and Copper Cliff Refinery |
Surface water over areas potentially affected by acid rock drainage is managed using two systems; the Copper Cliff and Nolin Creek water management systems. The Copper Cliff water management system consists of seven sub-watersheds covering approximately 5,300 ha and has 22 reservoirs. Flows are either treated at the Copper Cliff waste water treatment plant or recycled for mill process water. There are a number of creeks within the Town of Copper Cliff that also convey water to the Copper Cliff waste water treatment plant. The Nolin Creek water management system consists of a separate watershed, comprising a single, three-reservoir catchment covering approximately 890 ha. Associated flows are treated at the Nolin Creek waste water treatment plant. There are two large storage reservoirs in front of the Nolin Creek waste water treatment plant to help provide attenuated water during peak flow events.
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15.6.2.2 | Totten Mine |
All mine water and surface contact waters are directed to the west surge pond, including mine dewatering, surface run-off and water pumped from the Worthington cave zone and through the dewatering wells installed around the return and fresh air raises. Water is pumped from the west surge pond to a high-density sludge treatment plant, where metals and solids are removed through hydroxide precipitation, settling and filtration. The treated water is released to the polishing pond. Water from the polishing pond is primarily used as process water at the mine, with discharge to the environment required only when inputs exceed mine demand (typically seasonally). Domestic sewage is treated at the onsite sewage treatment plant with effluent discharged to the west surge pond within the larger Totten mine waste water treatment system.
15.6.2.3 | Garson Mine |
Waste water at the Garson mine is managed through a waste water treatment plant that is supported by a series of upstream reservoirs and downstream settling ponds. Mine dewatering is pumped directly to a surge pond at the intake of the waste water treatment plant, though can also be directed to the R2 reservoir if needed. Surface contact waters are collected in the north pond, and the R1 and R2 reservoirs and are pumped to a surge tank for treatment. The waste water treatment plant uses a metal hydroxide precipitation process. Water discharged from the waste water treatment plant reports to the settling pond, flowing then to the polishing Pond and is pH adjusted using CO2 prior to discharge to the environment.
15.6.2.4 | Coleman |
The Coleman mine operates within an integrated waste water management system, tying in inputs from Vale’s operations as well as those from KGHM International Ltd’s and Glencore’s operations in the area. Mine dewatering from the Coleman and Levack mines, as well as domestic sewage treated in a small sewage treatment plant, report to the process water sump in the sewage treatment plant, which equalizes with Strathcona Lake. Strathcona Lake also receives inputs from the gravel pit pond, which receives runoff from the former tailings area, inputs from the Grassy Creek and Pike Lake interceptor wells, and water collected in the Levack runoff containment area. The Stratchcona pumphouse then moves the water from the lake for subsequent treatment within Glencore’s Moose water treatment system.
15.6.3 Water Sources
Process water for the Clarabelle Mill is sourced from the UPA. The Upper Pond consists of a water reservoir, two pumphouses that pump process water to Clarabelle Mill, and a gravity overflow structure that provides process water to the filter plant. Ancillary infrastructure that supports the Upper Pond includes the process water supply pipeline, two containment dams (north and south), roads, and power systems. Secondary uses for the Upper Pond include providing process water for the concentrate storage domes, dust suppression in the active slag facility, and providing gland water to the booster station. The Upper Pond also serves as a settling pond to settle out precipitated solids from the lime treated process water.
Fresh and drinking water is sourced primarily from the Vermilion River catchment. The Vermilion River water intake is owned and operated by Vale. The intake pumps raw water from the river to Creighton to be treated at the Vermilion water treatment plant. After treatment, water is supplied to the mines in the Sudbury area, the Clarabelle Mill, Copper Cliff Smelter, and the Copper Cliff Refinery The treatment plant also provides water to the City of Sudbury.
The primary water source for the Port Colborne Refinery is the Welland Canal.
As discussed in Chapter 3.7, a complex recycled, closed-loop, cooling water circuit was installed and phased into operation for the Clydach Refinery in mid-2022. Previously-granted water licenses have been retained for emergency back-up purposes while the new system is fully integrated into the operation.
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15.7 | Built Infrastructure |
All major infrastructure to support the Ontario Operations underground mining activities envisaged in the LOM is in place.
Additional facilities will be required to support the Copper Cliff Pit, key amongst which are a rail yard and connection to the Creighton railway line, ore sizing, dewatering, and process water infrastructure, a fuelling station, traffic control centre, and power and communications.
15.8 | Camps and Accommodation |
No accommodations camps are operated. Personnel live either in Sudbury or in surrounding settlements.
15.9 | Power and Electrical |
Electrical power for the Ontario Operations is primarily sourced from the Ontario provincial supply (approximately 80%). Power is transmitted on the Hydro One transmission system and is connected to two locations in Sudbury and one in Port Colborne. In Sudbury, all incoming grid-connected power and hydroelectric generation is distributed to mines and processing plants through Vale’s electrical distribution network, consisting of 69 kV distribution power lines, substations, transformers, breakers, disconnects and other electrical equipment. This distribution system is owned, operated, and maintained by Vale.
A portion of the demand (about 20%) is met by Vale’s hydroelectric power facilities. Vale consumes 100% of its self-produced hydro generation behind-the-meter, i.e., Vale does not inject power onto the Ontario grid. The hydroelectric facilities have a nameplate capacity of 55 MW.
The Clydach Refinery obtains all of its power from a local utility.
The average annual usage by major area, based on actual 2022 data is summarized in Table 15-2. These usage levels are forecast to remain approximately the same for the LOM.
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Table 15-2: Annual Power Usage
Facility | Power (MWh) |
Mining operations | 571,000 |
Clarabelle Mill | 223,000 |
Copper Cliff Smelter | 307,000 |
Copper Cliff Refinery | 176,000 |
Port Colborne Refinery | 23,000 |
Clydach | 37,000 |
Total power usage | 1,338,000 |
Note: Numbers have been rounded.
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16 | MARKET STUDIES |
16.1 | Products |
The Clarabelle Mill produces copper concentrate. The Copper Cliff Refinery produces high-purity carbonyl nickel chips, pellets, and nickel powders from a high-grade nickel–copper bulk concentrate from the Clarabelle Mill. The Port Colborne Refinery produces electro-cobalt, processes precious metals, and makes and distributes finished nickel. The Clydach Refinery produces nickel powder and pellets.
A portion of the gold production from the Ontario Operations is sold under a multi-year streaming agreement with Wheaton Precious Metals (refer to Chapter 3.8).
16.2 | Markets |
16.2.1 Nickel
16.2.1.1 | Demand |
As a first use, nickel is consumed in plating, alloy steel, non-ferrous alloys, foundry, batteries, and stainless steel. These are then used in several applications in varying industries including aerospace, automotive (including electric vehicles), appliances, electronics and energy production and consumption.
The largest demand segment is stainless steel accounting for 68% of total primary nickel demand in 2021 (Wood Mackenzie, 2022a). Uses in alloy steel, non-ferrous alloys, plating, and foundry applications make up 11% with the battery market filling the remaining demand. This dynamic is expected to change as demand for batteries in electric vehicles grows with the expectation that the battery market will increase its share of total demand to 27% in 2030.
Primary nickel demand is expected to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 6% from 2021 to 2030 led by growth in the battery market. Total consumption, net of stainless steel scrap, is expected to grow from 2.8 Mt in 2021 to 4.5 Mt in 2030.
16.2.1.2 | Supply |
Nickel production is broken out into two distinct streams:
· | Class 1: high purity nickel products such as briquettes and cathodes; |
· | Class 2: lower purity nickel such as nickel pig iron (NPI) and ferronickel (FeNi). |
Class 2 nickel is the primary feedstock for the stainless-steel industry while the remaining end uses prefer class 1.
Primary nickel supply is expected to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 5% from 2021 to 2030 led by growth in Indonesia NPI production (Wood Mackenzie, 2022a). Primary nickel supply, including supply from recycled batteries, is expected to grow from 2.7 Mt in 2021 to 4.4 Mt in 2030. As growth is led by the Class 2 nickel stream, conversion to a suitable battery-grade Class 1 material is essential to meet growing demand in the electric vehicle market. Figure 16-1 is a graph showing the nickel market forecast for the period 2021–2030.
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Figure 16-1: Nickel Market Supply and Demand, 2021–2030
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, based on information sourced from Vale and third-party commodity research firms. Data shown for 2021 are actual data; 2022 is a mix of actual and forecast data.
16.2.2 Copper
16.2.2.1 | Demand |
Copper consumption can be divided into first use product groups, such as copper wire rod, copper billet and copper cake or slab (Wood Mackenzie, 2022b). In general, these products are consumed in broad sectors of the global economy, such as: construction, industrial machinery, transportation, consumer and general products and electrical networks. Additionally, these copper products are vital to the rapidly growing green economy, such as renewable energy generation and storage.
Construction is the largest copper-consuming sector, accounting for 28% of total copper consumption in 2021. The sectors of “Electrical Network” and “Consumer and General” rank second and third, with both sectors accounting for 49% of copper demand.
The near to medium-term demand outlook is aligned with the trajectory of the global economy. Longer-term, copper will maintain its key role within the energy transition. The rapid uptake of copper-intensive clean technologies will underpin future copper demand as the world looks to a greener and more sustainable future.
Refined copper demand is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 2% between 2021 and 2030. Copper demand, net of scrap, is predicted to grow from 24.8 Mt in 2021 to 30.3 Mt by 2030.
16.2.2.2 | supply |
Refined copper supply is expected to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 2% between 2021 and 2030. Total refined supply is expected to reach 30.3 Mt by 2030, from 24.8 Mt in 2021. Figure 16-2 is a graph showing the copper market forecast for the period 2021–2030.
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Figure 16-2: Copper Market Supply and Demand, 2021–2030
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, based on information sourced from Vale and third-party commodity research firms. Data shown for 2021 are actual data; 2022 is a mix of actual and forecast data.
16.2.3 Cobalt
16.2.3.1 | Demand |
Cobalt is used in a wide variety of applications. Cobalt can be magnetized and is used to make magnets, including particularly powerful magnets when alloyed with aluminum and nickel. Other alloys of cobalt are used in jet turbines and gas turbine generators, where high-temperature strength is important. Cobalt salts have been used for centuries to produce blue colors in paint, porcelain, glass, pottery, and enamels. The main end use markets include batteries for electric vehicles, tablet and smartphones, superalloys for use in aerospace, land-based turbines and medical prosthetics, and tool materials for use in mining and drilling.
The largest demand segment is battery chemicals, accounting for 66% of total cobalt demand in 2021 (Darton Commodities, 2022) . Uses in superalloys and tooling materials make up roughly 14% with the other markets such as catalysts, pigments and magnets filling the remaining demand. The market share of battery chemicals is expected to change as demand for batteries in electric vehicles grows with the expectation that this market will increase its share of total demand to 82% in 2030.
Refined cobalt feedstock demand is expected to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 9% from 2021 to 2030 led by growth in the battery market. Total consumption is expected to grow from 175 kt in 2021 to 393 kt in 2030.
16.2.3.2 | Supply |
Cobalt is mined across the world and the vast majority is produced as a by-product from large scale copper and nickel mines. Over 70% of the global cobalt mined production in 2021 was in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Refined cobalt production is concentrated in China, accounting for 75% of global refined output in 2021.
Total cobalt feedstock supply, including secondary supply, is expected to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 8% from 2021 to 2030. Total supply, including secondary supply, is expected to grow from 169 kt in 2020 to 347 kt in 2030. Figure 16-3 is a graph showing the cobalt market forecast for the period 2021–2030.
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Figure 16-3: Cobalt Market Supply and Demand, 2022–2030
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, based on information sourced from Vale and third-party commodity research firms. Data shown for 2021 are actual data; 2022 is a mix of actual and forecast data.
16.2.4 Platinum
16.2.4.1 | Demand |
The PGMs are a group of metals comprising platinum, palladium, rhodium, iridium, ruthenium, and osmium. These metals have similar physical and chemical properties and tend to occur together in the same mineral deposit. The usefulness of PGMs is determined by their particular chemical and physical properties.
Certain of these properties are shared by other materials, but it is the unique combination of properties that makes the PGMs so valuable in their end-markets. The PGMs have high and specific catalytic activity, high thermal resistance, are chemically inert, biocompatible and are hard but malleable for forming into shapes.
Platinum, palladium and rhodium are used in higher-volume industrial applications, while iridium and ruthenium have niche high-technology applications. Alongside their established applications, PGMs’ attractive properties make them all the subject of intensive research and development into novel end-uses.
The main uses of platinum are as a catalyst for automotive emissions control, in a wide range of jewellery pieces and in industrial catalytic and fabrication applications. The hydrogen economy is currently a small portion of total platinum demand, in 2021 represented 1% of total demand, but is an emerging end-use in electrolysers and fuel cells (SFA Oxford, 2022). Platinum use in the hydrogen economy is expected to reach 13% of total net demand by 2030. Industrial applications made up 44% of net palladium demand in 2021 while jewellery made up 29% with the remaining consumed in the autocatalyst and hydrogen markets.
Overall platinum demand, net of recycling, is forecast to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 2%. Platinum demand, net of recycling, is predicted to grow from 4.8 Moz in 2021 to 5.6 Moz by 2030. The growth in the hydrogen sector is expected to help offset shrinking autocatalyst and jewellery sector demand.
16.2.4.2 | Supply |
The majority of PGM mineral resources are located in South Africa. Zimbabwe and North America are also import primary sources of PGMs. PGMs are also found in high concentrations in Russia and Canada as a by-product of nickel mining. In 2021, South Africa accounted for 69% of total refined platinum production.
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Refined platinum supply is expected to decrease at a compound annual growth rate of 2% between 2021 and 2030. Total refined supply is expected to reach 5.4 Moz by 2030, from 6.3 Moz in 2021.
is a graph showing the platinum market forecast for the period 2021–2030.
Figure 16-4: Platinum Market Forecast, 2022–2030
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, based on information sourced from Vale and third-party commodity research firms. Data shown for 2021 are actual data; 2022 is a mix of actual and forecast data.
16.2.5 Palladium
16.2.5.1 | Demand |
Palladium is primarily used as a catalyst in the automotive sector, mainly in gasoline-powered on-road vehicles, and has displaced platinum in some parts of on-road diesel engine autocatalysts. The second main use of palladium is in electrical components, specifically in multi-layer ceramic capacitors, as conductive pastes and in electrical plating.
Autocatalyst applications made up 79% of net palladium demand in 2021 while industrial made up 18% with the remaining consumed in the jewellery markets (SFA Oxford, 2022).
Overall palladium demand, net of recycling, is forecast to decrease at a compound annual growth rate of 4%. Platinum demand, net of recycling, is predicted to decrease from 6.6 Moz in 2021 to 4.6 Moz by 2030. The decline is driven by the decreased use in autocatalysts as internal combustion engine vehicle production declines as electric vehicle production grows.
16.2.5.2 | Supply |
The supply sources listed for platinum in Chapter 16.2.4.2 are also the sources of palladium. In 2021, South Africa accounted for 36% of total refined palladium production with Russia contributing the majority share at 37%.
Refined palladium supply is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 0.4% between 2021 and 2030. Total refined supply is expected to reach 7.2 Moz by 2030, from 6.9 Moz in 2021. Figure 16-5 is a graph showing the palladium market forecast for the period 2021–2030.
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Figure 16-5: Palladium Market Forecast, 2022–2030
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, based on information sourced from Vale and third-party commodity research firms. Data shown for 2021 are actual data; 2022 is a mix of actual and forecast data.
16.2.6 Gold
16.2.6.1 | Demand |
Gold is used in jewellery, as an investment instrument, in technology, and to manage central banks’ reserves.
Gold jewelry is the largest demand sector, accounting for over 50% of total demand. Central bank demand has shifted since the financial crisis of 2008 with emerging markets increasing purchases and European banks halting sales of the metal, now accounting for roughly 6% of total market demand. Volatile markets sustain demand for gold in investment portfolios to protect purchasing power and minimize losses during market shocks, with this sector accounting for approximately 30% of total market demand. The unique properties of gold are driving technological uses in medicine, engineering, and environmental management, with a total market share of approximately 10%.
The demand for gold has moved in the past decade to the emerging economies of China and India. India is one of the largest consumers of gold and that metal plays a central role in the country’s culture as a status symbol.
16.2.6.2 | Supply |
The geographical diversity of mined gold, mined on every continent except Antarctica, allows for stability in the market. Mine production of gold accounts for roughly 70% of total market supply annually with recycled material making up the balance.
16.2.7 Comments on Market Studies
There are no agency relationships relevant to the marketing strategies used by Vale Operations.
Product valuation is included in the economic analysis in Chapter 19 and is based on a combination of the metallurgical recovery, commodity pricing, consideration of processing charges, and allocations, where applicable for premiums paid on the products from the operations.
Since gold is a by-product of the Vale operations, there is no technical specification for end-users to be saleable.
Based on the supply and demand forecast figures, there is a reasonable expectation that there will be a demand for all of the commodities discussed in Chapter 16. The figures support that there is a large and expanding market for nickel, copper, and cobalt, which are the main value drivers in the economic analysis in Chapter 19.
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16.3 | Price Outlook |
The intent is to demonstrate that the mineral reserves are economically viable, and the sensitivity analysis shows the potential upside or risks of the economics to factors such as price.
16.3.1 Nickel
The LOM pricing forecast of US$17,725 uses a consensus approach based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. The forecast uses annual predictions for the period 2023–2027, reverting to a long-term fixed forecast from 2028 for the remaining mine life (
Figure 16-6).
Figure 16-6: LOM Nickel Price Forecast
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, using bank reports published from December, 2022.
16.3.2 Copper
The LOM pricing forecast of US$7,950 uses a consensus approach based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. The forecast uses annual predictions for the period 2021–2027, reverting to a long-term fixed forecast from 2028 for the remaining mine life (Figure 16-7).
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Figure 16-7: LOM Copper Price Forecast
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, using bank reports published from December, 2022.
16.3.3 Cobalt
The LOM pricing forecast of US$56,250 uses a consensus approach based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. The forecast uses annual predictions for the period 2023–2027, reverting to a long-term fixed forecast from 2028 for the remaining mine life (Figure 16-8)
Figure 16-8: LOM Cobalt Price Forecast
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, using bank reports published from December, 2022.
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16.3.4 Platinum
The LOM pricing forecast of US$1,175 uses a consensus approach based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. The forecast uses annual predictions for the period 2023–2027, reverting to a long-term fixed forecast from 2028 for the remaining mine life (Figure 16-9).
Figure 16-9: LOM Platinum Price Forecast
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, using bank reports published from December, 2022.
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16.3.5 Palladium
The LOM pricing forecast of US$1,175 uses a consensus approach based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. The forecast uses annual predictions for the period 2023–2027, reverting to a long-term fixed forecast from 2028 for the remaining mine life (Figure 16-10).
Figure 16-10: LOM Palladium Price Forecast
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, using bank reports published from December, 2022.
16.3.6 Gold
The LOM pricing forecast of US$1,525 uses a consensus approach based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. The forecast uses annual predictions for the period 2023–2027, reverting to a long-term fixed forecast from 2028 for the remaining mine life (Figure 16-11).
Figure 16-11: LOM Gold Price Forecast
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023, using bank reports published from December, 2022.
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16.3.7 Exchange Rate
The LOM exchange rate forecast of 1.25 (C$:US$) uses a consensus approach based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. The forecast uses annual predictions for the period 2023–2027, reverting to a long-term fixed forecast from 2028 for the remaining mine life.
16.4 | Contracts |
16.4.1 Nickel
The terms contained within the refined nickel sales contracts are typical and consistent with standard industry practice and are similar to contracts for the supply of nickel throughout the world. Depending on the specific contract, the terms for the refined nickel sales are predominantly negotiated annually, or in the case of spot agreements, based on market terms negotiated at the time of sale. There are some instances where a longer contract duration may be negotiated, but this is typically the exception. The differences between the individual contracts are generally in relative quantity of refined nickel that is covered under the sale.
16.4.2 Copper
Vale has agreements at typical copper concentrate industry benchmark terms for metal payables, treatment charges and refining charges for concentrates produced. Treatment costs and refining costs vary depending on the concentrate type and the destination smelter. The terms contained within the copper concentrate sales contracts are typical and consistent with standard industry practice and are similar to contracts for the supply of copper concentrate throughout the world.
Depending on the specific contract, the terms for the copper concentrate sale are either annually negotiated, benchmark-based treatment and refining charges, or in the case of spot agreements are based on fixed treatment and refining charges based on market terms negotiated at the time of sale. The differences between the individual contracts are generally in relative quantity of concentrates that are covered under annually negotiated treatment and refining charges.
16.4.3 Cobalt
The majority of the cobalt production is sold under annual or multi-year contracts. These contracts are based on market pricing using a negotiated formula based on the Fastmarkets cobalt price plus a premium or discount. The remaining production is sold on a spot basis. These sales are based on the current market pricing at the time of sale, using similar pricing methodology as described previous, or at a spot or fixed current market price.
Any finished cobalt sales to affiliated parties are sold at market pricing similar to external parties.
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16.4.4 PGM and Gold
PGM concentrate and gold sands are typically sold using spot pricing terms with end-users based on prevailing market conditions. As metals contained in copper products, the terms for gold and PGMs are determined through a payable mechanism on metal content based on typical market terms. As is typical for concentrates, the product is generally contracted under a medium-term contract.
A portion of Sudbury gold production is sold under a multi-year streaming agreement.
16.4.5 Vale Affiliates
Intercompany agreements between Vale affiliates are negotiated at arm’s length based on market terms and rates that would be achieved had the contract been negotiated with an unaffiliated third party.
16.4.6 Goods and Services
Contracts may be entered into with third-parties for goods and services required to operate underground mining operations. On occasions, mining contractors may be employed for specific mine development projects. The largest in-place contracts include transportation, purchase of fuel, reagents and other process consumables, ground support and mining equipment leases. The terms contained within the contracts are typical of, and consistent with, standard industry practices.
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17 | ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES, PERMITTING, AND PLANS, NEGOTIATIONS, OR AGREEMENTS WITH LOCAL INDIVIDUALS OR GROUPS |
17.1 Baseline and Supporting Studies
17.1.1 History
Vale’s Ontario Operations are one of the largest integrated mining complexes in the world, including both mines and processing operations, some dating back to the early and mid-1900s. Environmental regulations and awareness has progressed significantly from the beginning of the Ontario Operations, and Vale has engaged in baseline studies, various improvement and legacy reclamation initiatives and other activities to ensure compliance as the regulatory regime changes.
All pertinent baseline information as per standard of the day is available in the Closure Plans for the mine sites and surface plants, including: land use, topography, regional geology, local geology and mineralogy, soil, climate and hydrology, hydrogeology, terrestrial plant and animal life and aquatic plant and animal life, with relevant updates provided in the subsequent Closure Plan amendments.
As the mines and plant sites have continued to expand, supporting environmental studies have been completed to assess site environmental conditions, and to support permit applications and decision-making processes.
17.1.2 Current Activities
At all mines, baseline and supporting environmental studies are completed to assess both pre-existing and ongoing site environmental conditions, as well as to support decision-making processes, and if applicable, permit applications for new projects as these are brought on stream. Characterization studies were completed for all environmental media including soil, water, waste, air, noise and closure.
Plans were developed and implemented for all Ontario Operation mine sites to address waste management, spill prevention and contingency planning, water management and fugitive dust management. Noise levels generally meet the required guidelines.
17.2 | Environmental Considerations/Monitoring Programs |
17.2.1 Waste Rock
In general, the presence of comparatively large quantities of waste rock onsite presents a significant environmental liability. Waste rock is present throughout the Ontario Operations areas, and is both confined to specific piles or storage areas and distributed throughout the sites. Surface and groundwater monitoring has shown water quality to generally be acidic with elevated concentrations of metals. Specific areas requiring remedial work were identified and prioritized using the Water Quality Management Plan (see Chapter 17.2.3).
17.2.2 Tailings
The Copper Cliff tailings impoundment became operational in 1936 and was the primary management site for tailings generated from the Sudbury milling operations. The tailings area footprint is approximately 3,000 ha and currently contains approximately 534 Mt of tailings within seven internal cells. The perimeter was developed using upstream construction. In 1985, deposition commenced in the last cell, called the “R” area, and deposition will continue in this area over the next 25 years and reach an elevation of 335 m. Since tailings deposition could resume over “A” Area and given tailings will continue to be used for backfill underground, it is expected that there will be sufficient tailings storage until approximately 2050.
Historically, Frood mine tailings were piped to the Vale’s Central Tailing Area; however, tailings were occasionally discharged within the closure area within the Frood Emergency Tailings Area when they could not be accepted offsite. Runoff that is captured in the Frood Emergency Tailings Area is pumped back to Frood Pond.
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Tailings were historically impounded onsite in the Levack Tailings Area. During operation most of the tailings produced by the Levack Mill were stored onsite for permanent disposal. The tailings are no longer actively deposited into the Levack Tailings Area and are currently dry. Tailings impacted surface and groundwater seepage is collected by a series of interception wells. The overall environmental impact of the tailings is reduced due to minimal water infiltration and the interception well system. A receiving water study showed that the perimeter seepage management systems are effective in preventing contaminant migration to surrounding natural water bodies.
In 2021, Vale concluded a tailings closure study for the closed facilities at the Frood Emergency Tailings Area, Levack Tailings Area, and the Shebandowan Tailings area. The objectives of the study were to provide additional details regarding tailings characterization, as well as considering alternative closure strategies for these facilities. These FEL1 studies are now complete and have progressed to the FEL2 stage. These studies will remain ongoing throughout 2023. As at 31 December, 2022, no final conclusions have been made regarding alternative closure strategies associated with inactive tailings facilities.
17.2.3 Water Quality
Treated mine effluent and receiving water quality monitoring is ongoing as per permit and regulatory requirements. Acid mine drainage is the main water quality issue at all the sites. Routine sampling, in accordance with the stated requirements, is conducted on an ongoing basis at Totten mine, Garson mine, Crean Hill (Ellen Pit), and the Whistle mine, as well as at the Copper Cliff Complex. The Copper Cliff Complex, serviced by the Copper Cliff and Nolin Creek waste water treatment plants, encompasses effluent and surface drainage from the Creighton and Gertrude Mines, Copper Cliff mine, Stobie mine and surface milling/smelting and refining facilities.
A summary of the major water treatment facilities is provided in Table 17-1.
In 2009, Vale initiated a comprehensive Water Quality Management Plan, involving the consolidation of all surface and groundwater monitoring data for all sites, dating back to approximately 2001 (and earlier for some stations/data), into one web-based database (see also discussion on water sampling in Chapter 7.3). The Water Quality Management Plan is designed to be a proactive plan, involving hazard screening and a risk evaluation process, to guide Vale with the identification, prioritization and execution of remedial activities to address potential water impacts from seepages and discharges connected to historical operations.
The management of water quality impacts, and the associated regulatory implications, resulting from past practices when environmental protection programs and regulations were less robust remains a significant risk.
Regulatory limits associated with treated effluent water quality are consistently met, with the exception of an exceedance of ammonia limit in the Garson mine effluent in 2022. Work is ongoing to assess and continually improve effluent treatment processes and spill prevention.
17.2.4 Air Quality and Sulphur Dioxide Emissions
Ontario Regulation 419/05 requires all Ontario Operations mines and metallurgical plants to meet ambient air quality standards by both measurement and air dispersion modeling. Dispersion modeling is the tool used to predict offsite concentrations based on a reasonable worst-case production scenario and local meteorological data.
All Ontario Operations currently meet Ontario Regulation 419/05 standards, except the Copper Cliff Smelter which operates under a site-specific standard for annual nickel impact. A new site-specific standard was approved in December 2021, following submission in September 2020, and replaced the former site-specific standard that expired on December 31, 2021. The site-specific standard recognizes that, while nickel impact from the site has decreased over time, the site still does not comply with the Ontario Regulation 419/05 standard.
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Table 17-1: Key Water Treatment Infrastructure
Plant | Comments |
Copper Cliff waste water treatment plant | Manages water from the Central Tailings Area and other site sources of contact water, including from the Clarabelle Mill, smelter complex and refinery sites and the Creighton, Copper Cliff and Stobie mine sites. The Copper Cliff waste water treatment plant also treats municipal runoff. Capacity of up to 227,000 m3/day |
Nolin Creek wastewater treatment plant | Treats contact waters from the smelter complex, CCM Pit, slag pile areas, the Clarabelle Mill property, as well as excess Clarabelle Mill reclaim thickener water. Capacity of up to 26,450 m3/day |
Garson mine waste water treatment system | Treats effluent and site surface runoff |
Totten mine waste water treatment system | Treats effluent and site surface runoff |
Whistle mine wastewater treatment system | Treats effluent and site surface runoff |
Crean Hill (Ellen Pit) wastewater treatment system | Treats effluent and site surface runoff |
Coleman mine | Mine water and surface drainage are collected and transferred to the Glencore operations for treatment in their wastewater facilities |
The new site-specific standard will require the implementation of an Action Plan and will be effective until December 2031. Fifteen months prior to that date, a new application will need to be submitted if the site still does not show compliance with the nickel standard.
Effective July 1, 2023, the Ontario Regulation 419/05 1-hr ambient air standard for SO2 changes from 690 µg/m3 to 100 µg/m3. The Copper Cliff Smelter and Copper Cliff Refinery currently do not meet the upcoming 1 hr SO2 standard. On October 2, 2021, the Ministry promulgated Ontario Regulation 652/21 specifically for the Copper Cliff Smelter, Copper Cliff Refinery and Glencore’s Sudbury Smelter. The regulation replaces the requirement to comply with the new SO2 standard. In the regulation, there are specific requirements listed and obligations for implementation of equipment for SO2 control at the Nickel Refinery by 2026. Regulation 652/21 does not have an expiry date.
The Port Colborne Refinery has implemented a process change to enable compliance to the new SO2 standard.
17.3 | Closure and Reclamation Considerations |
17.3.1 Closure Planning
Vale has 16 closure plans for aspects of the Ontario Operations, covering the Central Tailings Area, Clarabelle Mill, the Copper Cliff Refinery, Crean Hill mine, Creighton mine, Frood–Stobie mine, Garson mine, Levack–Onaping–Coleman mine, Copper Cliff North mine, Port Colborne Refinery, Shebandowan mine and mill, Copper Cliff Smelter complex, Copper Cliff South mine, Whistle mine and Totten mine.
Closure plans for all operating sites were submitted to the relevant regulatory authorities in 2001, and there are plans in place for three closed sites (Whistle mine, Shebandowan mine and mill site, and Crean Hill mine) in accordance with Part VII of the Ontario Mining Act. As required by regulation and internal guidelines, these documents are updated in five-yearly intervals to ensure they accurately depict onsite liabilities. Vale updated all 16 Closure Plans in 2018 and formally submitted to regulators in 2019. At the request of the regulator, the closure plans were submitted on a staggered basis to allow the Ministry of MINES to better manage their internal review and approval process. Vale has received comments on these documents, and is working with the regulator to incorporate feedback. In 2022, Vale has continued to make final closure plan submissions to the Ministry of Mines. As of December 2022, three updated closure plans have been “Deemed Filed” by the Province (Copper Cliff North mine, Port Colborne Refinery, and the Levack/Onaping Closure Plan).
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While Ontario Operations uses "self-assurance" as its form of financial assurance for some surface facilities, a performance bond of C$297 million, in the form of letters of credit, was provided for 12 properties. Such bonding is a requirement in Ontario when the half-life of a mine is exceeded or where a facility has formally ceased operations. Vale is now approaching the half-life of all facilities in Ontario and, by the end of 2023, will no longer qualify for the “self-assurance” method of providing Financial Assurance.
17.3.2 Closure Costs
Vale developed closure cost estimates associated with the chosen rehabilitation strategy for each property. The estimate also includes an expected schedule for closure-related expenditures.
Closure costs are included in the mine site financial models as cash costs, on an annual basis for all sites. The largest closure costs are associated with the process plant and mining infrastructure.
The escalated closure cost estimate for the Ontario Operations, as at year-end 2022, is US$2,633 million.
17.4 | Permitting |
All known and anticipated permits and approvals are in place to support underground operations. These include permits for air quality, noise emissions, taking and discharging water, and tailings, waste rock and waste disposal.
Where permits have specific terms, renewal applications are made of the relevant regulatory authority as required, prior to the end of the permit term.
For new mining projects that may be incorporated into future mine plans, assuming mineral resources can be converted to mineral reserves with the appropriate supporting studies, the expectation is that environmental/impact assessments (if required) will be near completion, and the permits required for mine development will be understood and advancing, where possible, with baseline and supporting studies completed to facilitate application submissions and detailed design. The environmental permitting plan for the Copper Cliffs Pit has been developed and studies and permitting tasks are underway or in progress.
17.5 | Social Considerations, Plans, Negotiations and Agreements |
Indigenous Peoples may have Aboriginal and Treaty Rights and traditional territory where Vale operates as well as within lands in which Vale has mineral rights. In Canada, the Crown has an obligation to consult with Indigenous communities to address possible infringement of their rights. This obligation may need to be satisfied by the Crown in connection with development on Vale's lands, which may affect those rights. The Crown also frequently delegates the procedural aspects of this duty to consult to proponents such as Vale. Increasingly, Vale is being requested to consult with Indigenous communities on some provincial and federal environmental permit applications.
In accordance with revisions made to O. Reg. 240/00 (under the Ontario Mining Act), Vale is also required to consult with Indigenous communities, as directed by the Director of Mine Rehabilitation, before filing a certified Closure Plan or a certified amendment to a Closure Plan.
Vale routinely engages with five Indigenous communities in the Sudbury Basin including Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation, Wahnapitae First Nation, Sagamok Anishnawbek First Nation, Whitefish River First Nation and the Métis Nation of Ontario – Region 5. Vale has signed agreements with Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation, Wahnapitae First Nation, Sagamok Anishnawbek First Nation and the Métis Nation of Ontario – Region 5. There are currently no known consultation obligations which would materially impact the mineral reserve estimates. However, consultation obligations may need to be satisfied before new areas that currently only have mineral resource estimates can be developed. In 2023, Vale intends to negotiate new agreements with Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation and Wahnapitae First Nation.
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Vale does not currently have agreements or established relationships with Indigenous communities near the Port Colborne Refinery. This is largely due to the fact that the Crown has not identified any impact from the Port Colborne Refinery to Indigenous traditional territories in the region. However, Vale is proactively seeking to establish relationships and engagement routines with Indigenous communities in the region.
Due to the proximity of Vale’s Ontario Operations to local communities, the company continues to engage the local communities of interest that may be impacted by future development. There are a variety of communication channels for community engagement including Annual Reports to the Community, annual Open Houses, a Community Liaison Committee, a company website, local media relations and advertising. Vale has also established a grievance mechanism known as the Community Concerns Line to receive community concerns, complaints, and other matters; there are also a number of email communication channels to register grievances. These grievances are recorded in a grievance database and tracked for mitigation and conclusion.
17.6 | Qualified Person’s Opinion on Adequacy of Current Plans to Address Issues |
Regulatory limits associated with treated effluent water quality are consistently met and managing collected runoff and seepage quantities are key to achieving improved environmental compliance
Remediation of potential water impacts from historical operations, which has often involved capturing additional site surface runoff and seepages, will need to be balanced with clean water diversion and/or appropriate management to ensure that the waste water treatment plant capacities are not exceeded.
It is possible that future changes in water quality discharge limits could result in the need for additional or more efficient water treatment facilities. All collected site waters are treated in existing treatment plants. Based on the current knowledge of potential changes to future discharge limits, it is reasonable to assume that future treatment requirements could be accommodated within the existing facilities, but with some upgrades/modifications to the treatment plants potentially required.
In 2009, Vale initiated a comprehensive Water Quality Management Plan, involving the consolidation of all surface and groundwater monitoring data for all sites, dating back to approximately 2001 (and earlier for some stations/data), into one web-based database (see also discussion on water sampling in Chapter 7.3). The Water Quality Management Plan is designed to be a proactive plan and risk evaluation process to guide Vale with the identification, prioritization and execution of remedial activities to address potential water impacts from historical operations. The management of water quality impacts resulting from past practices when environmental protection programs and regulations were less robust remains a significant risk.
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18 | CAPITAL AND OPERATING COSTS |
18.1 | Introduction |
All capital and operating cost estimates are at a minimum at a pre-feasibility level of confidence, having an accuracy level of ±25% and a contingency range not exceeding 15%.
The numbers presented in this Chapter are to demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve. Information in this Chapter may differ from other information Vale publishes on an annual detailed basis.
18.2 | Capital Cost Estimates |
18.2.1 Basis of Estimate
Capital costs are based on recent prices or operating data. Unit costs for in-house mine development are based on historical actual costs. Mobile equipment that is leased is included in operating costs. Lease periods typically range from two to five years. Lease costs are charged to capital while the equipment is doing capital work. Purchased equipment is allocated for in the capital plan. Mobile equipment and fixed asset costs are based on supplier quotations and/or current examples. Sustaining capital cost forecasts are based on forecast mine development and construction needs, mobile equipment re-build/replacement schedules and fixed asset replacement and refurbishment schedules.
18.2.2 Capital Cost Forecasts
Across the Ontario Operations, sustaining capital cost forecasts are prepared considering three main categories:
· | Annual capital development: sustaining capital investments required to open up new mine production areas. This category includes underground tunneling and new infrastructure construction that will be in use for more than two years (e.g., ramps, ventilation raises, ore passes, switch rooms, backfill stations); |
· | Stoping and development: mobile equipment acquisitions, replacements, and rebuilds; |
· | Asset integrity: capital investments required to maintain existing main infrastructure, and rebuild and replace fixed assets (e.g., shafts, main fresh air fans, material handling systems, mill equipment, smelting equipment). |
In addition, where the scope of a sustaining investment exceeds US$30 M estimated capital cost, the project is developed following a front-end loading (FEL) methodology and subject to an internal process of technical review and stage gate approval.
Current sustaining capital projects include Copper Cliff mine Phase 3 and Phase 4, Copper Cliff Open Pit, and Creighton mine Phase 5. The Copper Cliff Phase 3 Project consists of mining studies on the 178 and 191 zones, the Copper Cliff Phase 4 Project consists of mining studies on the 712 zone, and the Creighton Phase 5 Project consists of mining studies on mineralization below the 8590 Level. Pre-feasibility studies support the future development of these mineral reserves with dedicated project capital and all projects with the exception of Copper Cliff mine Phase 4 have actively progressing feasibility studies. The Copper Cliff and Creighton mine projects will sustain production at these sites. The Copper Cliff Open Pit will fill the Clarabelle Mill capacity and increase production.
18.2.3 Capital Cost Estimate Summary
The overall capital cost estimate for the LOM is US$7,245 M as shown in Table 18-1.
The capital cost estimates presented in this Report demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve. This information may differ from other capital cost estimates Vale publishes on an annual detailed basis.
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Table 18-1: LOM Capital Cost Estimate
Area | Capital Cost Type | Unit | Value |
Mining | Annual capital development | US$ M | 1,221 |
Stoping and development | US$ M | 629 | |
Asset integrity | US$ M | 582 | |
Copper Cliff mine Phase 3 Project | Project | US$ M | 540 |
Copper Cliff mine Phase 4 Project | Project | US$ M | 831 |
Copper Cliff Open Pit Project | Project | US$ M | 316 |
Creighton Phase 5 Project | Project | US$ M | 1,001 |
Milling | Sustaining | US$ M | 761 |
Smelting and refining | Sustaining | US$ M | 719 |
Other | Sustaining | US$ M | 643 |
Total | US$ M | 7,245 |
Note: All numbers have been rounded. “Other” costs include provision for elements such as the power department (electrical power generation and distribution), the divisional shops (custom parts repair and manufacturing), the transportation department, the environment department, and the central engineering department. Copper Cliff Phase 3 Project consists of mining studies on the 178 and 191 zones; Copper Cliff Phase 4 Project consists of mining studies on the 712 zone; Creighton Phase 5 Project consists of mining studies on mineralization below the 8590 Level.
18.3 | Operating Cost Estimates |
18.3.1 Basis of Estimate
Operating costs are based on actual costs from operations, and are projected through the LOM plan.
Historical costs are used as the basis for operating cost forecasts for supplies and services unless there are current contract terms for these items.
Labour and energy costs are based on budgeted rates applied to headcounts and energy consumption estimates.
The long-term mine operating cost model accounts for the impact of varying production rates on the direct and indirect variable cost items as per Vale’s finance department definitions. As a mine approaches the end of mine life, some fixed (e.g., labour) and distributed costs are reduced in line with the projected lower production rates. The processing operating cost estimates are the budget year cash costs applied to the mineral reserves mined throughout the LOM plan. These processing costs include both variable and fixed plant components. The mineral reserves throughput for the processing plant decreases relative to the strategic plan that includes externally purchased feeds and transfers of feed form other Vale operations over the LOM plan. As a result, the fixed cash cost component of the processing plant is stepped down in a logical progression as the feed decreases.
18.3.2 Operating Cost Estimate Summary
Operating costs total US$18,395 M over the LOM (Table 18-2).
The operating cost estimates presented in this Report demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve. This information may differ from other operating cost estimates Vale publishes on an annual detailed basis.
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Table 18-2: LOM Operating Cost Estimate
Area | Unit | Value |
Mining | US$ M | 8,532 |
Milling | US$ M | 917 |
Smelting and refining | US$ M | 3,723 |
General and administrative/corporate overhead | US$ M | 4,200 |
Site services and other | US$ M | 733 |
Research and development | US$ M | 0 |
Logistics and distribution costs | US$ M | 290 |
Total | US$ M | 18,395 |
Note: All numbers have been rounded.
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19 | ECONOMIC ANALYSIS |
19.1 | Introduction |
The aim of the economic evaluation presented in this Report Chapter is to demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve. The production rates, operating efficiencies, costs and expenditures, taxes and other information presented can differ from other information Vale publishes. The planned production extraction may vary due to continuous mineral exploration and technical studies to add new mineral reserves.
19.2 | Methodology |
The financial model that supports the mineral reserve declaration is a standalone model that calculates annual cash flows based on scheduled ore production, processing recoveries, metal sale prices, a C$/US$ exchange rate, projected operating and capital costs and estimated taxes.
The financial analysis is based on an after-tax discount rate of 7.5% following a mid-year convention and a long term C$/US$ exchange rate of 1.25. All costs and prices are in unescalated “real” dollars. The currency used to document the cash flow is US$.
Operating cost estimates are based on fixed and variable expense definitions that are driven by planned activities and volumes. Capital cost estimates are derived from the budget rates and project studies and applied to planned development, construction, asset purchase and refurbishment requirements.
Revenue is calculated from the recoverable metal and the long-term forecast of metal prices and exchange rates. Revenue from the sale of a copper concentrate is included, based on the contained metal, accountability factors and the long-term forecast for metals prices and exchange rates.
All inputs to the economic analysis are derived at a minimum of a pre-feasibility level of confidence.
19.3 | Input Parameters |
The mineral reserves estimate was summarized in Chapter 12.6. The projected mine life was provided in Chapter 13.11.
The metallurgical recovery forecast was provided in Chapter 10.4.
Commodity prices were discussed in Chapter 16.3.
Capital costs were summarized in Chapter 18.2. Operating costs were summarized in Chapter 18.3.
Royalties were summarized in Chapter 3.8.
Closure and reclamation costs were discussed in Chapter 17.3.
The economic analysis is based on 100% equity financing and is reported on a 100% project ownership basis.
19.4 | Taxation Considerations |
Vale Canada Limited is subject to income and mining taxes, which are both profit-based taxes.
The financial estimates are based on a combined federal and provincial income statutory tax rate of 25% and a provincial mining tax rate of 10%, before processing allowance.
Depreciation rates for corporate income tax purposes have been applied, on a declining balance basis, at the base rates of 25% for depreciable tangible capital property and 30% for mine development. For mining tax purposes, depreciation has been approximated on a declining balance basis for mining (30%) and processing property (15%).
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Provincial mining processing allowance is further deducted as applicable. The mining tax paid is deductible for corporate income tax purposes.
19.5 | Results of Economic Analysis |
Absent from the reserve-only cashflow are Ontario resources, external feeds acquired by Vale from other mining companies and Manitoba concentrate treated by the Sudbury processing assets. The contractual gold price conditions stated in the Wheaton Precious Metals streaming agreement are not reflected in the cashflow evaluation. Information on the terms of the Wheaton Precious Metals agreement is discussed in Chapter 3.8.
The post-tax NPV 7.5% is US$995 million. A cashflow summary on an average basis is provided in Table 19-1. The annual cashflow is presented with the inputs as averages grouped for the first two years, followed by three years, and subsequently five-year groups. The end of the production period is presented as a two-year average. The average closure costs are summarized as a long-term group (2045–2148) and indicated in the cashflow footnote (3) of Table 19-1.
Figure 19-1 is an annualized cashflow from 2023–2024.
As the cashflows are based on existing operations where all costs are considered sunk to 1 January 2023, considerations of payback and internal rate of return are not relevant.
19.6 | Sensitivity Analysis |
A sensitivity analysis was performed on metal prices, metal recovered, capital costs and operating costs. Ontario Operations are most sensitive to the following, arranged in order from most to least sensitive:
· | Nickel price; |
· | Nickel grade; |
· | Operating cost; |
· | Capital costs; |
· | Copper price; |
· | Copper grade. |
These sensitivities are presented in Figure 19-2 at a ±25% range to illustrate the impact of the changes on the parameters shown to the economic analysis presented in this Report.
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Table 19-1: Ontario Average Cashflows 2023–2148
Cash Flow | Unit | 2023–2024 | 2025–2027 | 2028–2032 | 2033–2037 | 2038–2042 | 2043–2044 | 2045–2148 |
Ore processed | Mt | 3 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 0 | |
Nickel recovered | kt | 37 | 42 | 53 | 44 | 27 | 3 | |
Copper recovered | kt | 59 | 59 | 60 | 46 | 26 | 4 | |
Cobalt recovered | kt | 0.4 | 0.5 | 0.7 | 0.5 | 0.3 | 0.0 | |
Platinum recovered | k oz | 122 | 96 | 79 | 78 | 54 | 6 | |
Palladium recovered | k oz | 125 | 98 | 105 | 118 | 77 | 8 | |
Gold recovered | k oz | 48 | 35 | 23 | 25 | 17 | 2 | |
Total revenue | US$ million | 1,704 | 1,595 | 1,692 | 1,429 | 891 | 174 | |
Operating costs, expenses, royalties, and closure costs | US$ million | (978) | (1,076) | (1,051) | (858) | (674) | (300) | (18) |
Tax and working capital change | US$ million | (6) | (7) | 0 | (40) | (0) | 27 | 0 |
Total capital cost estimate | US$ million | (599) | (646) | (494) | (201) | (107) | (48) |
Notes: (1) Metal sale prices can be found in Section 16.3. (2) Figures shown do not deduct the stream amounts. For a description of the streaming arrangement with Wheaton Precious Metals, see Chapter 3.8. (3) The closure costs from 2045–2148 totals US$1.9 billion. US$18 million represents the annual average cost of closure in the period. (4) The sole purpose of the presented numbers is to demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve; therefore, these numbers can differ from other information Vale publishes and should not be considered as a guidance.
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Figure 19-1: Annual Cashflow
Notes: (1) Metal sale prices can be found in Section 16.3. (2) Figures shown do not deduct the stream amounts. For a description of the streaming arrangement with Wheaton Precious Metals, see Chapter 3.8. (3) The closure costs from 2045–2148 totals US$1.9 billion. US$18 million represents the annual average cost of closure in the period. (4) The sole purpose of the presented numbers is to demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve; therefore, these numbers can differ from other information Vale publishes and should not be considered as a guidance.
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Figure 19-2: Sensitivity Analysis
Note: Figure prepared by Vale, 2023.
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20 | ADJACENT PROPERTIES |
This Chapter is not relevant to this Report.
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21 | OTHER RELEVANT DATA AND INFORMATION |
This Chapter is not relevant to this Report.
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22 | INTERPRETATION AND CONCLUSIONS |
22.1 | Introduction |
The QPs note the following interpretations and conclusions in their respective areas of expertise, based on the review of data available for this Report.
22.2 | Property Setting |
The Ontario Operations are located in an area that has more than a hundred years of mining activity. As a result, local and regional infrastructure and the supply of goods available to support mining operations is well-established. Personnel with experience in mining-related activities are available in the Sudbury district. There are excellent transportation routes that access the Sudbury area.
There are no significant topographic or physiographic issues that would affect the Sudbury Operations. The dominant vegetation type is temperate boreal forest.
Mining operations are conducted year-round.
22.3 | Ownership |
The Ontario Operations are wholly-owned by Vale Canada Limited, a Vale subsidiary.
22.4 | Mineral Tenure, Surface Rights, Water Rights, Royalties and Agreements |
Information obtained from Vale experts supports that the mineral tenure held is valid and is sufficient to support a declaration of mineral resources and mineral reserves.
In each township, Vale is the registered owner of mining rights and surface rights or a combination of both shown as fee simple lands, mining leased lands, mining license of occupation lands and unpatented mining claims. Vale holds applicable water take permits to support operations.
There are no royalties or other similar payments made on the Ontario Operations mine properties within the Sudbury Basin other than that payable to Wheaton Precious Metals. Wheaton Precious Metals has the right to an amount of gold equal to 70% of the gold production from certain of Vale’s Sudbury mines, including the Coleman, Copper Cliff, Garson, Stobie, Creighton, and Totten mines and the Victor project for a period of 20 years. Wheaton Precious Metals will make ongoing payments of the lesser of US$400/oz Au or the prevailing market price per ounce of gold delivered. There are no known encumbrances.
Vale has agreements in place, including: multiple road and property easements with various mining companies; various corridor agreements with Glencore permitting development of underground corridors; an exploration joint venture agreement with Glencore; ventilation agreements with Glencore, and OIC that allow Vale to export nickel, copper and precious metals products outside of Canada for further refinement.
22.5 | Geology and Mineralization |
Deposits within the SIC are type examples of nickel–copper mineralization arising from a meteorite impact.
The geological understanding of the settings, lithologies, and structural and alteration controls on mineralization in the different zones is sufficient to support estimation of mineral resources and mineral reserves. The geological knowledge of the area is also considered sufficiently acceptable to reliably inform mine planning.
The mineralization style and setting are well understood and can support declaration of mineral resources and mineral reserves.
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The Ontario Operations continue to actively explore within the current mining operations area, and the majority of deposits remain open at depth. Exploration is conducted underground from existing infrastructure and services with the aim of discovering and delineating additional mineralization that is within reach of the active mine infrastructure.
Brownfield exploration is focused on areas in the Sudbury basin within a reasonable radius of existing infrastructure. Greenfields exploration is conducted throughout the Ontario Operations area to identify new stand-alone nickel and copper deposits.
22.6 | History |
The Ontario Operations have over 100 years of active mining history, and exploration activities date back to 1856 when nickel was first discovered.
22.7 | Exploration, Drilling, and Sampling |
The exploration programs completed to date are appropriate for the style of the deposits within the Sudbury basin and Ontario Operations area.
Most drill holes are oriented to intersect mineralized zones at an angle, and the drill hole intercept widths reported for those drill holes are typically greater than the true widths of the mineralization at the drill intercept point.
Sampling methods, sample preparation, analysis and security conducted prior to Vale’s interest in the operations were in accordance with exploration practices and industry standards at the time the information was collected. Current Vale sampling methods are acceptable for mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation. Sample preparation, analysis and security for the Vale programs are currently performed in accordance with exploration best practices and industry standards.
The quantity and quality of the lithological, geotechnical, collar and down-hole survey data collected during the exploration and delineation drilling programs are sufficient to support mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation. The collected sample data adequately reflect deposit dimensions, true widths of mineralization, and the style of the deposits. Sampling is representative of the nickel, copper, and PGM grades in the deposits, reflecting areas of higher and lower grades.
Density is estimated using a formula, based on a multivariate regression of nickel, copper, and sulphur data. This formula has been in use since the late 1990s and is considered to provide acceptable density values for use in mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation.
The sample preparation, analysis, quality control, and security procedures used by the Ontario Operations have changed over time to meet evolving industry practices. Practices at the time the information was collected were industry-standard, and frequently were industry-leading practices. Vale currently uses a system of “layered responsibility” to ensure that only appropriately verified data are used for estimation purposes. The sample preparation, analysis, quality control, and security procedures are sufficient to provide reliable data to support estimation of mineral resources and mineral reserves.
The QA/QC programs adequately address issues of precision, accuracy, and contamination. Modern drilling programs typically included blanks, duplicates, and standard samples. QA/QC submission rates meet industry-accepted standards.
22.8 | Data Verification |
Vale had data collection procedures in place that included several verification steps designed to ensure database integrity. Vale staff also conducted regular logging, sampling, laboratory, and database reviews. In addition to these internal checks Vale contracted independent consultants to perform laboratory, database, and mine study reviews. The process of active database quality control and internal and external audits generally resulted in high-quality data.
The data verification programs concluded that the data collected from the Ontario Operations area adequately support the geological interpretations and constitute a database of sufficient quality to support the use of the data in mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation.
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Data that have been verified on upload to the database, and checked using the layered responsibility protocols, are acceptable for use in mineral resource and mineral reserve estimation.
22.9 | Metallurgical Testwork |
Industry-standard studies were performed as part of process development and initial mill design. Subsequent production experience and focused investigations guided mill alterations and process changes. Testwork programs, both internal and external, continue to be performed to support current operations and potential improvements. From time to time, this may lead to requirements to adjust cut-off grades, modify the process flowsheet, or change reagent additions and plant parameters to meet concentrate quality, production, and economic targets.
Samples selected for testing were representative of the various types and styles of mineralization. Samples were selected from a range of depths within the deposits. Sufficient samples were taken so that tests were performed on sufficient sample mass.
Recovery factors estimated are based on appropriate metallurgical testwork, and are appropriate to the mineralization types and the selected process routes. The milling recovery for nickel is estimated based on the nickel head grade and the calculated amount of pyrrhotite. The milling recovery for cobalt is estimated as 1% less than the nickel recovery. The copper recovery is estimated based on the copper head grade. The plant will produce variations in recovery due to the day-to-day changes in ore type or combinations of ore type being processed. These variations are expected to trend to the forecast recovery value for monthly or longer reporting periods.
The deleterious elements for smelting are arsenic, lead, zinc, and chromium. With these typical deleterious element concentrations, the mill concentrate feed (nickel concentrate currently) for the smelter routinely meets smelter specifications. The element of the greatest concern is arsenic and the overall blended feed into the plant is kept below 0.008% As.
In the period from 2025–2026, Garson ores are forecast to be higher in arsenic (0.075–0.080%), and may pose challenges in controlling the arsenic to the correct levels so as to not impact smelter efficiency and operating cost. As an integrated operation, the Ontario Operations have some flexibility in the control of their feed through stockpiling and blending strategies. The mine is addressing the forecast arsenic head grade in mill feed over the LOM plan to alleviate any negative impact on planned production.
22.10 | Mineral Resource Estimates |
Mineral resources are reported for the Blezard, Coleman, Copper Cliff, Copper Cliff Pit, Creighton, Garson, Stobie, Totten and Victor deposits.
Resource estimation follows a similar procedure for the Ontario Operations. Vale has a set of protocols, internal controls, and guidelines in place to support the estimation process, which the estimators must follow.
Estimation was performed as a team effort involving several technical disciplines. All mineralogical information, exploration boreholes and background information were provided to the estimators by the geological staff at the mines or by exploration staff. Commercially-available Datamine software was used for estimation.
Mineral resources are reported using the mineral resource definitions set out in SK1300, and are reported exclusive of those mineral resources converted to mineral reserves. The reference point for the estimate is insitu.
Areas of uncertainty that may materially impact all of the mineral resource estimates include: changes to long-term metal price and exchange rate assumptions; changes in local interpretations of mineralization geometry such as pinch and swell morphology, extent of brecciation, presence of unrecognized mineralization off-shoots; faults, dykes and other structures; and continuity of mineralized zones; changes to geological and grade shape, and geological and grade continuity assumptions; changes to unfolding, variographical interpretations and search ellipse ranges that were interpreted based on limited drill data, when closer-spaced drilling becomes available; changes to metallurgical recovery assumptions; changes to the input assumptions used to derive the potentially-mineable shapes applicable to the assumed underground and open pit mining methods used to constrain the estimates; changes to the forecast dilution and mining recovery assumptions; changes to the cut-off values applied to the estimates; variations in geotechnical (including seismicity), hydrogeological and mining method assumptions; and changes to environmental, permitting and social license assumptions.
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22.11 | Mineral Reserve Estimates |
Mineral reserves are reported for the Coleman, Copper Cliff, Creighton, Garson, and Totten deposits.
Mineral reserves were converted from measured and indicated mineral resources.
All current mineral reserves will be exploited using underground mining methods. Economic cut-off grades were estimated for each mine and mining area and used to optimize the design of each stope. Mining recovery (mineability) and external dilution factors were applied.
The Ontario Operations have a cut-off grade policy for mine design, production scheduling and day-to-day ore/waste determination. A stope is considered for inclusion in the mine plan if its value is equal to or greater than the forecast mining cost. Uneconomic stopes are reviewed to determine if the value can be increased through improved design, but once confirmed as uneconomic, these stopes are removed from the mine plan and are not included in the mineral reserve estimates. The cut-off value is a proxy for the cut-off grade.
Mineral reserves are reported using the mineral reserve definitions set out in SK1300. The reference point for the mineral reserve estimate is the point of delivery to the process plant.
Areas of uncertainty that may materially impact all of the mineral reserve estimates include: long-term commodity price assumptions; long-term exchange rate assumptions; long-term consumables price assumptions; changes to mineral resources input parameters for those mineral resources converted to mineral reserves; changes to constraining stope designs; changes to cut-off grade and NPR assumptions; changes to geotechnical (including seismicity) and hydrogeological factors; changes to metallurgical and mining recovery assumptions; the ability to control unplanned dilution; and assumptions as to the continued ability to access the site, retain mineral and surface rights titles, maintain environment and other regulatory permits, and maintain the social license to operate.
22.12 | Mining Methods |
The Ontario Operations use conventional bulk stoping or narrow vein cut-and-fill mining methods, depending on the mine and geological setting. Conventional open pit mining is planned for the Copper Cliff Pit.
Underground mines are Owner operated, and use conventional equipment. The planned open pit will also use conventional equipment and be either Owner operated or operated by a third-party contractor.
All underground mines have an effective Ground Control Management Plan that is updated annually. This provides a robust basis for geotechnical evaluation, modelling, and mitigation measures.
The Ontario Operations maintain a Seismic Risk Management Plan, which is based on a seismicity management policy, and is designed to identify, assess and manage seismic hazards. Five mines were considered to be seismically active at the Report date, consisting of Coleman, Creighton, Copper Cliff, Garson and Totten.
For the planned Copper Cliff Pit, a preliminary Ground Control Management Plan will be developed as part of the feasibility study.
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Either sand or mill tailings are used as a hydraulic backfill, with the type of fill materials dependent on the proximity of a mine to the Clarabelle Mill and the availability of proximal alluvial sand sources. High-density (paste) backfill is only used at the Main area of the Garson mine.
Hydrological planning relies on historical norms and information. Most of the water that reports to the underground operations is from three sources: pumped in, surface runoff, or ground water. Water entering the mines from precipitation is minimal, except for the Copper Cliff and Creighton Mines that have open pits or cave areas connected to the underlying working areas. Both these mines have been in operation for many years, and have systems and procedures in place to handle these inflows.
Since significant water inflows into the Copper Cliff Pit are expected during mining, a robust pit dewatering system was incorporated into the mine design.
The Ontario Operations mines each have a substantial history for which mining methods work best under various geological and geotechnical conditions. This experience combined with analysis was used to select the mining methods and stope sizes for the individual zones within each mine.
Each mine developed a production schedule that contained production and cost information for every producing area within the mine, based on mineral reserve estimates. Production schedules were limited by process and infrastructure constraints such as ventilation, drift development, LHD/haulage, backfilling, and muck circuit/storage. The assemblage process activities are used to derive costs based on historical and budgeted rates. These plans were collated into an overall production schedule for the Ontario Operations. Based on this schedule, the forecast mine life is 22 years (2023–2044).
22.13 | Recovery Methods |
The Clarabelle Mill design was based on a combination of metallurgical testwork and familiarity gained during historical processing. The process methods and equipment used at the Clarabelle Mill are conventional to the industry. The process facilities in use are appropriate to the mineralization styles. The plant will produce variations in recovery due to the day-to-day changes in ore type or combinations of ore type being processed. These variations are expected to trend to the forecast recovery value for monthly or longer reporting periods.
The Copper Cliff Smelter uses methods conventional to the industry. The process facilities in use are conventional, and are appropriate to product produced. All of the precious metal-bearing metallic material and some of the nickel sulphide material is sent to the Copper Cliff Refinery. The remaining nickel sulphide is roasted in fluid bed roasters. The resulting nickel oxide is processed in the Copper Cliff Refinery, the Clydach Refinery, or is marketed as-is. Sulphur dioxide from the roasters is fixed and sold as sulphuric acid .
The Copper Cliff Refinery uses process methods and equipment that are conventional to the industry, with the exception of the pressure carbonyl plant. The carbonyl process has a long history, being first used at the Clydach Refinery in 1902. The carbonyl process is well understood, and the equipment requirements for the process are conventional for pressure carbonyl processing. The refinery produces pure nickel pellets, pure nickel powders and ferro-nickel pellets, which are sold directly to market. It also produces copper cathodes that are plated from solution and sold to market. Three slurries, a nickel–cobalt carbonate slurry, a slurry-rich in precious metals containing platinum-group metals, silver and gold and a slurry enriched in platinum-group metals and selenium–tellurium, are sent to the Port Colborne Refinery.
The Clydach Refinery is a carbonyl process plant that produces a nickel powder for sale. The carbonyl process is well understood, and the equipment requirements for the process are conventional for pressure carbonyl processing.
The Port Colborne Refinery is an electro-cobalt refinery and precious metals upgrading facility. The refinery uses process methods and equipment that are conventional to the industry.
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22.14 | Infrastructure |
All key infrastructure supporting mining and processing operations is built and operational, and is suitable for LOM purposes. No accommodations camps are operated. Personnel live either in Sudbury or in surrounding settlements.
Waste rock is currently primarily stored underground.
The Central Tailings Area became operational in 1936 and is become the primary management site for tailings and waste generated from the Ontario Operations. The facility has sufficient storage for LOM needs. Vale meets the requirements of the Ontario Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry Lakes and Rivers Improvement Act, uses safety guidance provided by the Canadian Dam Association, and internal risk management frameworks to ensure dam safety. Vale has undertaken numerous studies on the Central Tailings Area to update various aspects of the facility to meet current dam engineering practices. A detailed Operations Manual is in place and is regularly updated.
There are two main storage areas in the central and northeastern areas of the smelter that were designated for storage of cooled slag. Haulage trucks transport the slag from the main facilities to these storage areas. There is sufficient slag storage capacity to support the LOM plan.
The general water management strategy for several facilities peripheral to the Central Tailings Area involves collecting and treating impacted runoff. The strategy is common to the Copper Cliff, Creighton and Stobie mines, Clarabelle Mill, the Central Tailings Area, UPA, smelter complex, Nickel Refinery, and the Copper Cliff and Nolin Creek waste water treatment plants. The Ontario Operations monitor levels, flows and water balances on a regular basis.
Process water for the Clarabelle Mill is sourced from the UPA. Fresh and drinking water for the Sudbury area infrastructure is sourced primarily from the Vermilion River catchment. The primary water source for the Port Colborne Refinery is the Welland Canal. Currently, water for the Clydach Refinery is partly sourced from the Swansea Canal. The Clydach Refinery undertook in 2017 to install a complex recycled, closed-loop, cooling water circuit. Once completed in 2022, water will no longer be sourced from either the river or the canal. There is sufficient process and fresh water availability to support the LOM plan.
Electrical power for the Ontario Operations is primarily sourced from grid supply (approximately 80%). A portion of the demand (about 20%) is met by Vale’s hydroelectric power facilities. The Clydach Refinery obtains all of its power from a local utility. There is sufficient power availability to support the LOM plan.
22.15 | Market Studies |
Vale has an internal marketing department that is tasked with monitoring global commodities markets for the products from the Ontario Operations.
None of the products from the Ontario Operations are subject to product specification requirements from end users to be saleable.
The LOM pricing forecasts using a consensus approach based on long-term analyst and bank forecasts, supplemented with research by Vale’s internal specialists. The forecast uses annual predictions for the period 2023–2027, reverting to a long-term fixed forecast from 2028 for the remaining mine life.
The terms contained within the concentrate sales contracts are typical and consistent with standard industry practice, and are similar to contracts for the supply of nickel and copper concentrate throughout the world. Depending on the specific contract, the terms for the nickel and copper concentrate sale are either annually negotiated, benchmark-based treatment and refining charges, or in the case of spot agreements are based on fixed treatment and refining charges based on market terms negotiated at the time of sale.
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Contracts may be entered into for goods and services required to operate underground mining operations. On occasions, mining contractors may be employed for specific mine development projects. The largest in-place contracts include transportation, purchase of fuel, reagents and other process consumables, ground support and mining equipment leases. The terms contained within the contracts are typical of, and consistent with, standard industry practices.
22.16 | Environmental, Permitting and Social Considerations |
Vale’s Ontario Operations are one of the largest integrated mining complexes in the world, including both mines and processing operations, some dating back to the early- and mid-1900s. Environmental regulations and awareness has progressed significantly from the beginning of the Ontario Operations, and Vale has engaged in baseline studies, various improvement and legacy reclamation initiatives and other activities to ensure compliance as the regulatory regime changes.
All pertinent baseline information as per standard of the day is available in the closure plans for the mine sites and surface plants, including land use, topography, regional geology, local geology and mineralogy, soil, climate and hydrology, hydrogeology, terrestrial plant and animal life and aquatic plant and animal life, with relevant updates provided in the subsequent closure plan amendments.
As the mines and plant sites have continued to expand, supporting environmental studies have been completed to assess site environmental conditions, and to support permit applications and decision-making processes.
At all mines, baseline and supporting environmental studies are completed to assess both pre-existing and ongoing site environmental conditions, as well as to support decision-making processes, and if applicable, permit applications for new projects as these are brought on stream. Characterization studies were completed for all environmental media including soil, water, waste, air, noise, and closure.
Plans were developed and implemented for all Ontario Operation mine sites to address waste management, spill prevention and contingency planning, water management and fugitive dust management.
Vale has 16 closure plans for aspects of the Ontario Operations, covering the Central Tailings Area, Clarabelle Mill, the Copper Refinery, Crean Hill mine, Creighton mine, Frood–Stobie mine, Garson mine, Levack–Onaping–Coleman mines, Copper Cliff North mine, Port Colborne Refinery, Shebandowan mine and mill, Copper Cliff Smelter complex, Copper Cliff South mine, Whistle mine and Totten mine. Closure plans for all operating sites were submitted to the relevant regulatory authorities, and there are plans in place for three closed sites (Whistle mine, Shebandowan mine and mill site, and Crean Hill mine) in accordance with Part VII of the Ontario Mining Act. In 2022, Vale has continued to make final closure plan submissions to the Ministry of Mines. As of December 2022, three updated closure plans have been “Deemed Filed” by the Province (Copper Cliff North mine, Port Colborne Refinery, and the Levack/Onaping Closure Plan).
While the Ontario Operations uses "self-assurance" as its form of financial assurance for some surface facilities, a performance bond of C$297 million, in the form of letters of credit, was provided for 12 properties. Such bonding is a requirement in Ontario when the half-life of a mine is exceeded or where a facility has formally ceased operations. Vale is now approaching the half-life of all facilities in Ontario and, by the end of 2023, will no longer qualify for the “self-assurance” method of providing financial assurance.
Vale developed closure cost estimates associated with the chosen rehabilitation strategy for each property. The estimate also includes an expected schedule for closure-related expenditures. Closure costs are included in the mine site financial models as cash costs, on an annual basis for all sites. The largest closure costs are associated with the process plant and mining infrastructure. The escalated closure cost estimate for the Ontario Operations, as at year-end 2022, is US$2,633 million.
All known and anticipated permits and approvals are in place to support operations. These include permits for air quality, noise emissions, taking and discharging water, and tailings, waste rock and waste disposal. Where permits have specific terms, renewal applications are made of the relevant regulatory authority as required, prior to the end of the permit term.
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Vale routinely engages with five Indigenous communities in the Sudbury Basin including Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation, Wahnapitae First Nation, Sagamok Anishnawbek First Nation, Whitefish River First Nation, and the Métis Nation of Ontario – Region 5. Vale has signed agreements with Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation, Wahnapitae First Nation, Sagamok Anishnawbek First Nation and the Métis Nation of Ontario – Region 5. There are currently no known consultation obligations which would materially impact the mineral reserve estimates. However, consultation obligations may need to be satisfied before new areas that currently only have mineral resource estimates can be developed. In 2023, Vale intends to negotiate new agreements with Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation and Wahnapitae First Nation.
Vale does not currently have agreements or established relationships with Indigenous communities near the Port Colborne Refinery. This is largely due to the fact that the Crown has not identified any impact from the Port Colborne Refinery to Indigenous traditional territories in the region. However, Vale is proactively seeking to establish relationships and engagement routines with Indigenous communities in the region.
Due to the proximity of Vale’s Ontario Operations to local communities, the company continues to engage the local communities of interest that may be impacted by future development. There are a variety of communication channels for community engagement including Annual Reports to the Community, annual Open Houses, a Community Liaison Committee, a company website, local media relations and advertising. Vale has also established a grievance mechanism known as the Community Concerns Line to receive community concerns, complaints, and other matters; there are also a number of email communication channels to register grievances. These grievances are recorded in a grievance database and tracked for mitigation and conclusion.
22.17 | Capital Cost Estimates |
Capital costs are based on recent prices or operating data. Unit costs for in-house mine development are based on historical actual costs. Mobile equipment that is leased is included in operating costs. Lease periods typically range from two to five years. Lease costs are charged to capital while the equipment is doing capital work. Purchased equipment is allocated for in the capital plan. Mobile equipment and fixed asset costs are based on supplier quotations and/or current examples. Sustaining capital cost forecasts are based on forecast mine development and construction needs, mobile equipment re-build/replacement schedules and fixed asset replacement and refurbishment schedules.
The overall capital cost estimate for the LOM is US$7,245 million.
The capital cost estimates presented in this Report demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve. This information may differ from other capital cost estimates Vale publishes on an annual detailed basis.
22.18 | Operating Cost Estimates |
Operating costs are based on actual costs from operations, and are projected through the LOM plan. Historical costs are used as the basis for operating cost forecasts for supplies and services unless there are current contract terms for these items. Labour and energy costs are based on budgeted rates applied to headcounts and energy consumption estimates.
The long-term mine operating cost model accounts for the impact of varying production rates on the direct variable costs. As a mine approaches the end of mine life, the indirect and distributed costs are reduced in line with the projected lower production rates. The processing operating cost estimates are the budget year cash costs applied to the mineral reserves mined throughout the LOM plan. These processing costs include both variable and fixed plant components. Since the throughput for the processing plants decreases over the LOM plan, the fixed cash cost component of these processing plants is stepped down in a logical progression as the feed decreases.
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Operating costs total US$18,395 million over the LOM.
The operating cost estimates presented in this Report demonstrate the economic viability of the mineral reserve. This information may differ from other operating cost estimates Vale publishes on an annual detailed basis.
22.19 | Economic Analysis |
The financial model that supports the mineral reserve declaration is a standalone model that calculates annual cash flows based on scheduled ore production, processing recoveries, metal sale prices and C$/US$ exchange rate, projected operating and capital costs and estimated taxes.
The financial analysis is based on an after-tax discount rate of 7.5% following a mid-year convention and a long-term C$/US$ exchange rate of 1.25. All costs and prices are in unescalated “real” dollars. The currency used to document the cash flow is US$.
All costs are derived from the 2023 approved budget. Operating cost estimates post-2023 are based on fixed and variable expense definitions that are driven by planned activities and volumes. Capital cost estimates post-2023 are derived from the 2023 budget rates and estimates applied to planned development, construction, asset purchase and refurbishment schedules and Project study estimates. Revenue is calculated from the recoverable metal and the long-term forecast of metal prices and exchange rate.
The financial estimates are based on a combined federal and provincial income statutory tax rate of 25% and a provincial mining tax rate of 10%, before processing allowance. Depreciation rates for corporate income tax purposes have been applied, on a declining balance basis, at the base rates of 25% for depreciable tangible capital property and 30% for mine development. For mining tax purposes, depreciation has been approximated on a declining balance basis for mining (30%) and processing property (15%). Provincial mining processing allowance is further deducted as applicable. The mining tax paid is deductible for corporate income tax purposes.
The post-tax NPV at a discount rate of 7.5% is US$995 million. As the cashflows are based on existing operations where all costs are considered sunk to 1 January 2022, considerations of payback and internal rate of return are not relevant.
A sensitivity analysis was performed on metal prices, metal recovered, capital costs and operating costs. Ontario Operations are most sensitive to the following, arranged in order from most to least sensitive, nickel price, nickel grade, operating costs, capital costs, copper price, and copper grade.
22.20 | Risks and Opportunities |
22.20.1 Risks
Factors that may affect the mineral resource and mineral reserve estimates were identified in Chapter 11.14 and Chapter 12.7 respectively.
Risks to the Ontario Operations as a whole include:
· | Changes to the regulatory, permitting and monitoring regimes set out in Chapter 17.1, Chapter 17.2, and Chapter 17.4, and the taxation assumptions in Chapter 19.4 could affect mine planning, infrastructure operation, closure planning, capital cost assumptions, overall operating cost assumptions, the duration of the LOM plan, and the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
· | Changes to the social licence assumptions, changes to relationships with First Nations groups, and changes to relationships with stakeholders in the Sudbury area could affect the social licence to operate, and the duration of the LOM plan; |
· | Non-renewal of the OIC permits, such that Vale cannot export nickel, copper and precious metals products outside of Canada for further refinement. This could affect operation of the Clydach Refinery. Changes could also affect marketing assumptions, operating assumptions, the duration of the LOM plan, and the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
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· | Five of the mining operations are classified as seismically active. While those operations have a Seismic Management Plan in place, designed to identify, assess and manage seismic hazards, there remains potential for unexpected seismic disturbance. Seismic events have the potential to change geotechnical and hydrological assumptions, sterilize portions of the mine plan, result in an increase in capital costs to repair damaged equipment and infrastructure, increase operating costs due to mitigation measures, and impact the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
· | Geotechnical and hydrological assumptions used in mine planning consider historical performance, and to date historical performance has been a reasonable predictor of current conditions. Any changes to the geotechnical and hydrological assumptions could affect mine planning, affect capital cost estimates if any major rehabilitation is required due to a geotechnical or hydrological event, affect operating costs due to mitigation measures that may need to be imposed, and impact the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
· | Mining methods are based on a combination of historical performance of selected mining methods in the various Sudbury mines, orebody orientations, and consideration of factors such as geological, geotechnical, and hydrological settings. The selected mining method as envisaged in the LOM plan may vary due to operational reasons. Changes could occur in that instance to the actual mine plan in terms of redesigns and resequencing, in supporting requirements such as ventilation, haulage, equipment, and production rate, in estimations of sustaining capital and operating costs, production schedules, and could impact the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
· | Recovery methods assume the Clarabelle Mill, Copper Cliff Smelter and Refinery, Clydach Refinery and Port Colborne Refinery will be operational for the LOM. The LOM plan incorporates costs and recoveries for these facilities based on historical performance, and to date historical performance has been a reasonable predictor of current conditions. However, if costs and recoveries vary, either positively or negatively in future performance, there is a risk that the assumed process (mill, smelter, refinery) recoveries, capital or operating costs will differ from those envisaged in this Report, and that there could be an impact on the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
· | The Central Tailings Area is the central repository for tailings and certain types of waste for the Ontario Operations. It is also a major process water source. While Vale has undertaken numerous studies on the Central Tailings Area to update various aspects of the facility to meet current dam engineering practices, there may be areas that require additional updates or upgrades. Where these have not been contemplated in the LOM plan, such updates could affect capital and operating cost estimates, and there could be an impact the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
· | Closure costs for the entire Ontario Operations are estimated at US$2,060 million, and closure costs are estimated out to 2148. This forecast may change if additional mineral reserves can be identified that would prolong the mine life, or if mining activities cease prior to the projected 2044 date; |
· | Assumptions that the long-term reclamation and mitigation of the Ontario Operations can be appropriately managed within the estimated closure timeframes and closure cost estimates; |
· | The management of water quality impacts, and the associated regulatory implications, resulting from past practices when environmental protection programs and regulations were less robust remains a significant risk; |
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· | Market studies, commodity prices, and exchange rates are based on the most current information available to Vale. While mineral resource, mineral reserve and economic analysis for the LOM use this information, there is a risk of recession or upturn in commodity markets that could have an impact, either negative or positive, on the commodity pricing and exchange rate assumptions, and on the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
· | Capital costs are considered to have a reasonable basis, assuming equipment and infrastructure operates as envisaged. Unexpected equipment or infrastructure failures will result in increases to the capital cost estimate as such equipment or infrastructure is repaired or replaced. That will have an effect on the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
· | Operating costs are considered to have a reasonable basis, assuming equipment and infrastructure operates as envisaged, and inputs, such as wages, power costs, consumables costs remain as forecast in the LOM plan. Changes to these assumptions will result in changes to the operating cost estimates, and on the economic analysis that supports the mineral reserve estimates; |
· | The mines have many legacy old workings that cannot be accessed and assessed for asset condition, and historical mining that connects to surface old workings. As such, there are uncertainties with the operations’ ability to manage water and prevent water inrush; |
· | The Ontario Operations are planning productivity improvements as a result of the implementation of new processes such as dispatch and short-term scheduling. There is a risk that the mines will not achieve the forecasted improvement, potentially impacting cashflow. |
22.20.2 Opportunities
Opportunities for the Ontario Operations as a whole include:
· | Conversion of some or all of the measured and indicated mineral resources currently reported exclusive of mineral reserves to mineral reserves, with appropriate supporting studies; |
· | Vale conducts internal mining studies using mineral resource estimates to determine if there is potential for new or in-mine expansion projects to be built. If these studies support mineral reserve estimates and can be incorporated into the LOM plan, such projects represent upside potential for the Ontario Operations; |
· | Upgrade of some or all of the inferred mineral resources to higher-confidence categories, such that such better-confidence material could be used in mineral reserve estimation; |
· | Higher metal prices than forecast could present upside sales opportunities and potentially an increase in predicted Project economics; |
· | Increased emphasis on core drill budgeting and execution to ensure a healthy mineral inventory pipeline is in place to capitalise on the potential of the Ontario Operations. This includes a robust target ranking and review process to ensure the right deposits and targets are prioritised to potentially extend the LOM. |
22.21 | Conclusions |
Under the assumptions presented in this Report, the Ontario Operations have a positive cash flow, and mineral reserve estimates can be supported.
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23 | RECOMMENDATIONS |
The QPs make the following recommendations, which will require an overall budget of about US$116 million:
· | Complete the feasibility study and early works capital for Copper Cliff mine Phase 3 Project. This project envisages the development of the 178 and 191 zones to sustain production through the North shaft at the Copper Cliff mine. The recommended multi-year budget is about US$60 million, and includes provision for engineering and advanced development for collection of geological, geotechnical, and metallurgical data; |
· | Complete a feasibility study to develop the Copper Cliff Pit. The deposit has the potential to provide low-cost mill feed from an open pit mine and use available capacity at the Clarabelle Mill. The proposed budget is approximately US$11 million; |
· | Complete a feasibility study on the development of the 400 and 310 zones, located at depth in the Creighton mine. A two-year budget allocation of about US$28 million is recommended, and work will focus on studying extension of ramp network at depth, to mine high-grade mineralization below the 8590 Level; |
· | Complete, in conjunction with Glencore, an updated feasibility study on developing the 24N, BL28, and NR14 zones, located at 1,500–2,800 m below surface at the Victor property. The study should focus on using existing Nickel Rim South mine infrastructure for the development evaluation. The proposed two-year budget is approximately US$17 million. |
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24 | REFERENCES |
24.1 | Bibliography |
Amec Foster Wheeler, 2016: Ontario Operations, Ontario, Canada, NI 43-101 Technical Report (draft).
Bailey, G., 2012: Sudbury Basin Overview: Vale Inco Exploration, internal presentation.
Boucher, B.M., 2015: A Mineralogical and Geochemical Investigation of Sulfide Mineralization in the McConnell Ni-Cu-PGE Occurrence, McConnell Offset Dyke, Garson Mine area, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada: MSc thesis, St Mary’s University.
Darton Commodities, 2022: Cobalt Market Review 2022: report dated 7 March, 2022.
Davis, C.R., Anderson, J.M., Tavchandjian, O., and Cochrane, L.B., 2002: Quality Assurance/Quality Control (QA/QC) for Resource Estimation at Inco Technical Services Limited: Explor. Mining Geol., Vol. 10, No. 4, pp. 303–312.
Dressler, B.O., Peredery, W.V. and Muir, T.L., 1992: Geology and Mineral Deposits of the Sudbury Structure: Ontario Geological Survey, Ontario. Ministry of Northern Development and Mines, Geological Guidebook 8.
Fullagar, P.K., Livelybrooks, D.W., Zhang, P., Calvert, A.J., and Wu, Y., 2000: Radio Tomography and Borehole Radar Delineation of the McConnell Nickel Sulfide Deposit, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada: Geophysics, Vol. 65, No. 6; pp. 1920–1930.
Hall, M.F., 2019: Emplacement of Sharp-Walled Sulphide Veins During Reactivation of Impact-Related Structures at the Broken Hammer Mine, Sudbury, Ontario: MSc thesis, Laurentian University
Lesher C.M., and Thurston, P.C., 2002: Special Issue on Geology and Ore Deposits of the Sudbury District: Economic Geology Vol. 97 No. 7, 250 p.
Lesher, C.M. and Keays, R.R., 2002: Komatiite-Associated Ni-Cu- (PGE) Deposits: Mineralogy, Geochemistry, and Genesis, in L.J. Cabri (Editor), the Geology, Geochemistry, Mineralogy, and Mineral Beneficiation of the Platinum-Group Elements: Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, Special Volume 54, pp. 579–617.
Lightfoot, P.C., and Naldrett, A.J., eds, 1994: Proceedings of the Sudbury - Noril'sk Symposium: Ontario Geological Survey special volume, Ministry of Northern Development and Mines, Toronto, v. 5, 423 p.
Lightfoot, P.C., Keays, R.R., Morrison, G.G., Bite, A., and Farrell, K., 1997a: Geochemical Relationships in the Sudbury Igneous Complex: Origin of the Main Mass and Offset Dykes. Economic Geology, 92, pp. 289–307.
Lightfoot, P.C., Keays, R.R., Morrison, G.G., Bite, A., and Farrell, K., 1997b, Geologic and geochemical relationships between the contact sublayer, inclusions, and the main mass of the Sudbury Igneous Complex: A case study of the Whistle Mine Embayment: Economic Geology, 92, pp. 647–673.
Lightfoot, P.C., Keays, R.R., and Doherty, W., 2001: Chemical Evolution And Origin Of Nickel Sulfide Mineralization In The Sudbury Igneous Complex, Ontario, Canada: Economic Geology, 96, pp. 1855–1875
Lightfoot, P.C. and Farrow, C.E., 2002: Geology, Geochemistry, and Mineralogy of the Worthington Offset Dyke: A Genetic Model for Offset Dyke Mineralization in the Sudbury Igneous Complex: Economic Geology, vol. 97, pp. 1419–1446.
Lightfoot, P.C., 2007: Advances in Ni-Cu-PGE Sulphide Deposit Models and Implications for Exploration Technologies: in Proceedings of Exploration 07: Fifth Decennial International Conference on Mineral Exploration" edited by B. Milkereit, 2007, pp. 629–646.
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Muir, T.L. and Pedery, W.V., 1984 The Onaping Formation: in Pye, E.G., Naldrett, A.J. and Giblin, P.E., eds, The Geology and Ore Deposits of the Sudbury Structure: Toronto, Ministry of Natural Resources, Ontario Geological Survey, Special Volume 1, pp. 139–210.
Naldrett, A.J., Bray, J.G., Gasparrrini, E.L., Podolsky, T., and Rucklidge, J.C., 1970: Cryptic Variation and the Petrology of the Sudbury Nickel Irruptive: Economic Geology, Vol 65, pp. 122–155.
Ontario Ministry of Energy, Northern Development and Mines, 2020: https://www.mndm.gov.on.ca/en/mines-and-minerals/exploration-and-developing-minerals-ontario.
Pattison, E.F., 1979: The Sudbury Sublayer: Canadian Mineralogist 17, pp. 257–274
Podowski, D.W., Dominique, B.P., Bennett, M.T., and Chapman, S., 2019: Cassels Brock & Blackwell LLP https://uk.practicallaw.thomsonreuters.com/w-019-6669?transitionType=Default&contextData=(sc.Default)&firstPage=true&bhcp=1 1 March 2019.
Pye, E., Naldrett, A.J. and Giblin, P. eds. 1984: The Geology and Ore Deposits of the Sudbury Structure: Ontario Geological Survey Special Vol. 1, 603 p.
Rousell, D.H. and Brown, G.H., 2009: A Field Guide to the Geology of Sudbury, Ontario; Ontario Geological Survey, Open File Report 6243, 200 p: http://www.geologyontario.mndm.gov.on.ca/mndmfiles/pub/data/imaging/ofr6243//OFR6243.pdf
Samal, P., and Newkirk, J., 2015: Powder Metallurgy Nickel and Nickel Alloys: in ASM Handbook, vol 7, 2015.
SFA Oxford, 2022: 2040 PGM Market Outlook: report dated 14 October, 2022.
Stewart, M.C. and Lightfoot, P.C., 2010: Diversity in Platinum Group Element (PGE) Mineralization at Sudbury: New Discoveries and Process Controls: 11th International Platinum Symposium June 21–24, 2010.
Vale, 2016: Ground Control Management Guidelines For Underground Mines, Edition 1, November 2016.
Wood Mackenzie, 2022a: Global Nickel Investment Horizon Outlook Q4 2022, Nickel Demand Analysis, December, 2022: excel spreadsheet dated 14 December, 2022.
Wood Mackenzie, 2022b: Global Copper Investment Horizon Outlook Q4 2022, Copper Demand Analysis, December, 2022: excel spreadsheet dated 16 December, 2022.
Wolf, A., and Mitrašinović, A.M., 2016: Nickel, Copper And Cobalt Coalescence in Copper Cliff Converter Slag: J. Min. Metall. Sect. B-Metall. 52 (2) B, pp. 43–150.
24.2 | Abbreviations and Symbols |
Abbreviation/Symbol | Term |
DA-ID2 | dynamic anisotropy inverse distance weighting to the second power |
DTM | digital terrain model |
G&A | general and administrative |
GPS | global positioning system |
ICP | Inductively coupled plasma |
IP | induced polarization |
LOM | life-of-mine |
LOMP | life-of-mine plan |
NN | nearest neighbor |
NPV | net present value |
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24.3 | Glossary of Terms |
Term | Definition |
acid rock drainage/ acid mine drainage | Characterized by low pH, high sulfate, and high iron and other metal species. |
amphibolite facies | One of the major divisions of the mineral-facies classification of metamorphic rocks, the rocks of which formed under conditions of moderate to high temperatures (500° C, or about 950° F, maximum) and pressures. Amphibole, diopside, epidote, plagioclase, almandine and grossular garnet, and wollastonite are minerals typically found in rocks of the amphibolite facies |
ANFO | A free-running explosive used in mine blasting made of 94% prilled aluminum nitrate and 6% No. 3 fuel oil. |
azimuth | The direction of one object from another, usually expressed as an angle in degrees relative to true north. Azimuths are usually measured in the clockwise direction, thus an azimuth of 90 degrees indicates that the second object is due east of the first. |
ball mill | A piece of milling equipment used to grind ore into small particles. It is a cylindrical shaped steel container filled with steel balls into which crushed ore is fed. The ball mill is rotated causing the balls themselves to cascade, which in turn grinds the ore. |
Bond work index (BWi) | A measure of the energy required to break an ore to a nominal product size, determined in laboratory testing, and used to calculate the required power in a grinding circuit design. |
comminution/crushing/grinding | Crushing and/or grinding of ore by impact and abrasion. Usually, the word "crushing" is used for dry methods and "grinding" for wet methods. Also, "crushing" usually denotes reducing the size of coarse rock while "grinding" usually refers to the reduction of the fine sizes. |
concentrate | The concentrate is the valuable product from mineral processing, as opposed to the tailing, which contains the waste minerals. The concentrate represents a smaller volume than the original ore |
crosscut | A horizontal opening driven across the course of a vein or structure, or in general across the strike of the rock formation; a connection from a shaft to an ore structure. |
crown pillar | An ore pillar at the top of an open stope left for wall support and protection from wall sloughing above |
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Term | Definition |
flotation | Separation of minerals based on the interfacial chemistry of the mineral particles in solution. Reagents are added to the ore slurry to render the surface of selected minerals hydrophobic. Air bubbles are introduced to which the hydrophobic minerals attach. The selected minerals are levitated to the top of the flotation machine by their attachment to the bubbles and into a froth product, called the "flotation concentrate." If this froth carries more than one mineral as a designated main constituent, it is called a "bulk float". If it is selective to one constituent of the ore, where more than one will be floated, it is a "differential" float. |
flowsheet | The sequence of operations, step by step, by which ore is treated in a milling, concentration, or smelting process. |
footwall | The wall or rock on the underside of a vein or ore structure. |
frother | A type of flotation reagent which, when dissolved in water, imparts to it the ability to form a stable froth |
gangue | The fraction of ore rejected as tailing in a separating process. It is usually the valueless portion, but may have some secondary commercial use |
granulite facies | One of the major divisions of the mineral facies classification of metamorphic rocks, the rocks of which formed under the most intense temperature-pressure conditions usually found in regional metamorphism. At the upper limit of the facies, migmatite formation may occur. Temperatures of 650–1,100 °C (1,200–2,000 °F) and pressures of 3–10 kilobars may be reached. The more common minerals include pyroxene, biotite, garnet, calcium plagioclase, and quartz or olivine. |
greenschist facies | One of the major divisions of the mineral facies classification of metamorphic rocks, the rocks of which formed under the lowest temperature and pressure conditions usually produced by regional metamorphism. Temperatures between 300 and 450 °C (570 and 840 °F) and pressures of 1 to 4 kilobars are typical. The more common minerals found in such rocks include quartz, orthoclase, muscovite, chlorite, serpentine, talc, and epidote |
hanging wall | The wall or rock on the upper or top side of a vein or ore deposit. |
hydrometallurgy | A type of extractive metallurgy utilizing aqueous solutions/solvents to extract the metal value from an ore or concentrate. Leaching is the predominant type of hydrometallurgy. |
indicated mineral resource | An indicated mineral resource is that part of a mineral resource for which quantity and grade or quality are estimated on the basis of adequate geological evidence and sampling. The term adequate geological evidence means evidence that is sufficient to establish geological and grade or quality continuity with reasonable certainty. The level of geological certainty associated with an indicated mineral resource is sufficient to allow a qualified person to apply modifying factors in sufficient detail to support mine planning and evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit. |
inferred mineral resource |
An inferred mineral resource is that part of a mineral resource for which quantity and grade or quality are estimated on the basis of limited geological evidence and sampling. The term limited geological evidence means evidence that is only sufficient to establish that geological and grade or quality continuity is more likely than not. The level of geological uncertainty associated with an inferred mineral resource is too high to apply relevant technical and economic factors likely to influence the prospects of economic extraction in a manner useful for evaluation of economic viability. A qualified person must have a reasonable expectation that the majority of inferred mineral resources could be upgraded to indicated or measured mineral resources with continued exploration; and should be able to defend the basis of this expectation before his or her peers. |
internal rate of return (IRR) | The rate of return at which the Net Present Value of a project is zero; the rate at which the present value of cash inflows is equal to the present value of the cash outflows. |
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Term | Definition |
IP | Geophysical method, induced polarization; used to directly detect scattered primary sulfide mineralization. Most metal sulfides produce IP effects, e.g., chalcopyrite, bornite, chalcocite, pyrite, pyrrhotite |
liberation | Freeing, by comminution, of particles of specific mineral from their interlock with other constituents of the ore. |
life of mine (LOM) | Number of years that the operation is planning to mine and treat ore, and is taken from the current mine plan based on the current evaluation of ore reserves. |
magnetic separation | Use of permanent or electro-magnets to remove relatively strong ferromagnetic particles from para- and dia-magnetic ores. |
measured mineral resource | A measured mineral resource is that part of a mineral resource for which quantity and grade or quality are estimated on the basis of conclusive geological evidence and sampling. The term conclusive geological evidence means evidence that is sufficient to test and confirm geological and grade or quality continuity. The level of geological certainty associated with a measured mineral resource is sufficient to allow a qualified person to apply modifying factors, as defined in this section, in sufficient detail to support detailed mine planning and final evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit. |
metathetic | Chemical reaction between two compounds in which parts of each are interchanged to form two new compounds |
mill | Includes any ore mill, sampling works, concentration, and any crushing, grinding, or screening plant used at, and in connection with, an excavation or mine. |
mineral reserve |
A mineral reserve is an estimate of tonnage and grade or quality of indicated and measured mineral resources that, in the opinion of the qualified person, can be the basis of an economically viable project. More specifically, it is the economically mineable part of a measured or indicated mineral resource, which includes diluting materials and allowances for losses that may occur when the material is mined or extracted. The determination that part of a measured or indicated mineral resource is economically mineable must be based on a preliminary feasibility (pre-feasibility) or feasibility study, as defined by this section, conducted by a qualified person applying the modifying factors to indicated or measured mineral resources. Such study must demonstrate that, at the time of reporting, extraction of the mineral reserve is economically viable under reasonable investment and market assumptions. The study must establish a life of mine plan that is technically achievable and economically viable, which will be the basis of determining the mineral reserve. The term economically viable means that the qualified person has determined, using a discounted cash flow analysis, or has otherwise analytically determined, that extraction of the mineral reserve is economically viable under reasonable investment and market assumptions. The term investment and market assumptions includes all assumptions made about the prices, exchange rates, interest and discount rates, sales volumes, and costs that are necessary to determine the economic viability of the mineral reserves. The qualified person must use a price for each commodity that provides a reasonable basis for establishing that the project is economically viable. |
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Term | Definition |
mineral resource |
A mineral resource is a concentration or occurrence of material of economic interest in or on the Earth’s crust in such form, grade or quality, and quantity that there are reasonable prospects for economic extraction. The term material of economic interest includes mineralization, including dumps and tailings, mineral brines, and other resources extracted on or within the earth’s crust. It does not include oil and gas resources as defined in Regulation S-X (§210.4-10(a)(16)(D) of this chapter), gases (e.g., helium and carbon dioxide), geothermal fields, and water. When determining the existence of a mineral resource, a qualified person, as defined by this section, must be able to estimate or interpret the location, quantity, grade or quality continuity, and other geological characteristics of the mineral resource from specific geological evidence and knowledge, including sampling; and conclude that there are reasonable prospects for economic extraction of the mineral resource based on an initial assessment, as defined in this section, that he or she conducts by qualitatively applying relevant technical and economic factors likely to influence the prospect of economic extraction. |
modifying factors | The factors that a qualified person must apply to indicated and measured mineral resources and then evaluate in order to establish the economic viability of mineral reserves. A qualified person must apply and evaluate modifying factors to convert measured and indicated mineral resources to proven and probable mineral reserves. These factors include, but are not restricted to: mining; processing; metallurgical; infrastructure; economic; marketing; legal; environmental compliance; plans, negotiations, or agreements with local individuals or groups; and governmental factors. The number, type and specific characteristics of the modifying factors applied will necessarily be a function of and depend upon the mineral, mine, property, or project. |
net present value (NPV) | The present value of the difference between the future cash flows associated with a project and the investment required for acquiring the project. Aggregate of future net cash flows discounted back to a common base date, usually the present. NPV is an indicator of how much value an investment or project adds to a company. |
net smelter return royalty (NSR) | A defined percentage of the gross revenue from a resource extraction operation, less a proportionate share of transportation, insurance, and processing costs. |
open pit | A mine that is entirely on the surface. Also referred to as open-cut or open-cast mine. |
open stope | In competent rock, it is possible to remove all of a moderate sized ore body, resulting in an opening of considerable size. Such large, irregularly-shaped openings are called stopes. The mining of large, inclined ore bodies often requires leaving horizontal pillars across the stope at intervals in order to prevent collapse of the walls. |
peridotite | A plutonic rock which has a mafic content equal to or greater than 90, and the olivine content, divided by the total plagioclase, orthopyroxene and clinopyroxene content is greater than 40. |
plant | A group of buildings, and especially to their contained equipment, in which a process or function is carried out; on a mine it will include warehouses, hoisting equipment, compressors, repair shops, offices, mill or concentrator. |
portal. | The surface entrance to a tunnel or adit |
Poisson’s ratio | The fraction of expansion divided by the fraction of compression |
preliminary economic assessment | A study, other than a pre-feasibility or feasibility study, that includes an economic analysis of the potential viability of mineral resources |
preliminary feasibility study, pre-feasibility study |
A preliminary feasibility study (prefeasibility study) is a comprehensive study of a range of options for the technical and economic viability of a mineral project that has advanced to a stage where a qualified person has determined (in the case of underground mining) a preferred mining method, or (in the case of surface mining) a pit configuration, and in all cases has determined an effective method of mineral processing and an effective plan to sell the product. A pre-feasibility study includes a financial analysis based on reasonable assumptions, based on appropriate testing, about the modifying factors and the evaluation of any other relevant factors that are sufficient for a qualified person to determine if all or part of the indicated and measured mineral resources may be converted to mineral reserves at the time of reporting. The financial analysis must have the level of detail necessary to demonstrate, at the time of reporting, that extraction is economically viable |
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Term | Definition |
royalty | An amount of money paid at regular intervals by the lessee or operator of an exploration or mining property to the owner of the ground. Generally based on a specific amount per tonne or a percentage of the total production or profits. Also, the fee paid for the right to use a patented process. |
semi-autogenous grinding (SAG) | A method of grinding rock into fine powder whereby the grinding media consists of larger chunks of rocks and steel balls. |
shaft | A vertical or inclined excavation for the purpose of opening and servicing a mine. It is usually equipped with a hoist at the top, which lowers and raises a conveyance for handling men and material |
specific gravity | The weight of a substance compared with the weight of an equal volume of pure water at 4°C. |
stope | An excavation in a mine, other than development workings, made for the purpose of extracting ore. |
strike length | The horizontal distance along the long axis of a structural surface, rock unit, mineral deposit, or geochemical anomaly. |
tailings | Material rejected from a mill after the recoverable valuable minerals have been extracted. |
tunnel | A horizontal underground passage that is open at both ends; the term is loosely applied in many cases to an adit, which is open at only one end |
uniaxial compressive strength | A measure of the strength of a rock, which can be determined through laboratory testing, and used both for predicting ground stability underground, and the relative difficulty of crushing. |
Young’s modulus (elastic modulus) | A property of a material that defines how easily that material can stretch and deform |
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25 | RELIANCE ON INFORMATION PROVIDED BY THE REGISTRANT |
25.1 | Introduction |
The QPs fully relied on the registrant for the information used in the areas noted in the following sub-sections. The QPs consider it reasonable to rely on the registrant for the information identified in those sub-sections, for the following reasons:
· | The registrant has been owner and operator of the mining operations for more than 100 years; |
· | The registrant has employed industry professionals with expertise in the areas listed in the following sub-sections; |
· | The registrant has a formal system of oversight and governance over these activities, including a layered responsibility for review and approval; |
· | The registrant has considerable experience in each of these areas. |
25.2 | Macroeconomic Trends |
Information relating to inflation, interest rates, discount rates, and taxes was obtained from the registrant.
This information is used in the economic analysis in Chapter 19. It supports the assessment of reasonable prospects for economic extraction of the mineral resource estimates in Chapter 11, and inputs to the determination of economic viability of the mineral reserve estimates in Chapter 12.
25.3 | Markets |
Information relating to market studies/markets for product, market entry strategies, marketing and sales contracts, product valuation, product specifications, refining and treatment charges, transportation costs, agency relationships, material contracts (e.g., mining, concentrating, smelting, refining, transportation, handling, hedging arrangements, and forward sales contracts), and contract status (in place, renewals), was obtained from the registrant.
This information is used in the marketing section in Chapter 16, and the economic analysis in Chapter 19. It supports the assessment of reasonable prospects for economic extraction of the mineral resource estimates in Chapter 11, and inputs to the determination of economic viability of the mineral reserve estimates in Chapter 12.
25.4 | Legal Matters |
Information relating to the corporate ownership interest, the mineral tenure (concessions, payments to retain property rights, obligations to meet expenditure/reporting of work conducted), surface rights, water rights (water take allowances), royalties, encumbrances, easements and rights-of-way, violations, and fines, permitting requirements, and the ability to maintain and renew permits was obtained from the registrant.
This information is used in support of the property description and ownership information in Chapter 3, the permitting and mine closure descriptions in Chapter 17, and the economic analysis in Chapter 19. It supports the reasonable prospects of economic extraction for the mineral resource estimates in Chapter 11, and the assumptions used in demonstrating economic viability of the mineral reserve estimates in Chapter 12.
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25.5 | Environmental Matters |
Information relating to baseline and supporting studies for environmental permitting and monitoring requirements, ability to maintain and renew permits, emissions controls, closure planning, closure and reclamation bonding requirements, sustainability accommodations, and monitoring for and compliance with requirements relating to protected areas and protected species was obtained from the registrant.
This information is used when discussing property ownership information in Chapter 3, the permitting and closure discussions in Chapter 17, and the economic analysis in Chapter 19. It supports the reasonable prospects of economic extraction for the mineral resource estimates in Chapter 11, and the assumptions used in demonstrating economic viability of the mineral reserve estimates in Chapter 12.
25.6 | Stakeholder Accommodations |
Information relating to social and stakeholder baseline and supporting studies, hiring and training policies for workforce from local communities, partnerships with stakeholders (including national, regional, and state mining associations; trade organizations; fishing organizations; state and local chambers of commerce; economic development organizations; non-government organizations; and state and federal governments), and the community relations plan was obtained from the registrant.
This information is used in the social and community discussions in Chapter 17, and the economic analysis in Chapter 19. It supports the reasonable prospects of economic extraction for the mineral resource estimates in Chapter 11, and the assumptions used in demonstrating economic viability of the mineral reserve estimates in Chapter 12.
25.7 | Governmental Factors |
Information relating to taxation and royalty considerations at the Project level, monitoring requirements and monitoring frequency, bonding requirements, and violations and fines was obtained from the registrant.
This information is used in the discussion on royalties and property encumbrances in Chapter 3, the monitoring, permitting and closure discussions in Chapter 17, and the economic analysis in Chapter 19. It supports the reasonable prospects of economic extraction for the mineral resource estimates in Chapter 11, and the assumptions used in demonstrating economic viability of the mineral reserve estimates in Chapter 12.
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Signatures
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
Vale S.A. (Registrant) | ||
By: | /s/ Ivan Fadel | |
Date: April 12, 2023 | Head of Investor Relations |