Top 10 Lowest Cost Gold Mines Make Money If Price Falls 50%: 1. Novoshirokinskoye

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Top 10 lowest cost gold mines make money if price falls

50%
mining.com/10-mines-still-making-good-money-if-the-gold-price-falls-50

February 24, 2017

Frik Els | Feb. 24, 2017, 3:34 PM | 19,275 |


After coming unnervingly close to triple digits at the end of 2015, the price of gold ended a
three-year losing streak last year. So far in 2017, gold has gained 9.5% in value, trading at
more than $1,250 an ounce on Friday.

MINING.com's sister company IntelligenceMine looked at costs at 140 primary gold mines
and found 10 operations that would still make money even if gold halves in value from
today's levels.

IntelligenceMine ranked the mines on an all-in sustaining costs or AISC per ounce basis
rather than cash costs, a measure that excludes many overhead outlays and sustaining
capital for mine development and ongoing exploration.

The ranking also excludes mine complexes and gold operations where the precious metal
is produced as a byproduct (where through some clever accounting gold can be mined at
negative costs) or companies that report gold-equivalent output.

The ranking is based on annual costs for 2015 since 2016 mine-level cost breakdowns are
not yet available from most of the miners in the top rankings. Quarterly reported costs at
the same mine can also vary widely so in order to find the consistent winners annual data
was used.

These are the 10 mines – and there are only 10 in the world – that mine gold for less than
$600 an ounce:

1. Novoshirokinskoye

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Image: Highland Gold

Highland Gold's underground mine in the Zabaykalsky region of Russia enjoys lucky $777
margins at today's price. In 2014, the open stope mine which also produces silver, lead and
zinc, also kept costs below $600. The mine about 350 km west of the city of Chita near the
border with China opened in 2009. Average winter temperatures at the site is a teeth-
clattering -30 degrees centigrade. London-listed Highland Gold is targeting 255koz–265koz
of production for the full year.

2. Voro

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Doesn't cost much to keep the lights on at Voro. Image: Polymetal

Polymetal International's Voro gold-silver mine and processing facility is located in the
Sverdlovsk region of Russia. AISC costs to mine the orogenic deposit ranks Voro as one of
only three operations in the world that can produce an ounce of gold for less than $400 (see
BTRP below). The opencast and heap leach operation started up in 2000 and have another
nine years of life. London-listed Polymetal operates eight gold and silver mines in Russia,
Kazakhstan and Armenia.

3. Blagodatnoye

Blagodatnoye boasts Russia largest gold processing plant. Image: Polyus Gold

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Polyus Gold, the world's eighth largest gold producer, commissioned AISC $444/oz
Blagodatnoye in Krasnoyarsk eastern Siberia in July 2010. Processing capacity at the open
pit, located 25km from the Moscow-based company's flagship Olimpiada mine, is 6m
tonnes of ore per year, which makes it the largest facility of its kind in Russia.
Blagodatnoye AISC dropped further over the first nine months of 2016 to just $402 an
ounce. Poluys has six operating mines (two of which made this ranking) and claims the
world’s fourth largest gold reserves of 64.3 million ounces.

4. Lagunas Norte

Lagunas Norte. Image: Barrick Gold

Barrick Gold's Lagunas Norte in La Libertad region of Peru, 140 kilometers east of the
coastal city of Trujillo is the largest mine on the list with 2015 output of just over 560,000
ounces although ounces produced in 2016 fell by more than 100,000 ounces. All-in costs in
2015 was a measly $514 per ounce and Barrick's most recent breakdown saw costs creep
up only by $15 an ounce during Q3 last year. Lagunas Norte sits at an elevation of 4,000 to
4,260 meters above sea level. It's an open-pit, valley-fill heap leach operation. Proven and
probable gold reserves as of December 31, 2015, were 3.7 million ounces (63.6 million
tonnes, grading 1.82 grams per tonne).

5. Verninskoye

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Verninskoye. Image: Polyus Gold

Polyus Gold's Verninskoye mine is a conventional shovel-and-truck open-pit operation that


was commissioned at the end of 2011. In 2015 Verninskoye produced 161,000 ounces for
$530 per ounce all in. For the first nine months of 2016 the company was able to shave off
another 3% of costs at the mine in the Irkutsk region of Eastern Siberia. Verninskoye, the
Russian company's third mine, hosts 3.8 million ounces of proven and probable reserves
and 6 million ounces of gold resources. Across Polyus's portfolio of mines costs are now
below $600 thanks to falling costs at Olimpiada up to Q3 last year. Polyus hopes to
produce 2.7 million ounces per year by the end of the decade.

6. Belaya Gora

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Processing plant Belaya Gora, Highland Gold. Image: Step

Highland Gold started up Belaya Gora located in the Khabarovsk region of Russia in 2014,
but small scale mining in the area dates back to the 1930s. Highland worked with Barrick
drilling the property and in 2010 Highland expanded the licence to cover 37km2. Belaya
Gora which last year achieved average grades of 1.23g/t and produced 46,000 ounces is
an open pit, gravity and cyanide leaching operation.

7. Otjikoto

Otjikoto gold mine in Namibia. Image: B2Gold

B2Gold produced a record amount of gold in 2016, it's eighth year of output expansion.
The Vancouver-based miner's Otjikoto mine in northern Namibia produced 166koz last
year, 14% or 20.5koz more than in 2015 thanks to a mill expansion project completed in
September 2015. 2017 production should match last year's but costs at the 90%-owned
open pit, are creeping up. From a skinny $565 an ounce overall in 2015, B2Gold now
expects 2017 costs will be in the mid- to high $800s. Otjikoto, acquired in 2011 through the
takeover of Auryx Gold in 2011 poured its first gold in December 2014.

8. Gwalia

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Gwalia gold mine in Australia. Image: By Geomartin [ CC BY-SA 4.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Gwalia in its current incarnation was commissioned in 2008 by 100%-owners St Barbara,


but Welsh miners (Gwalia is an archaic term for Wales) established the mine in Western
Australia more than a hundred years ago. The storied mine must also be the only gold
operation that employed a future US president – Herbert Hoover served as mine manager
at Gwalia during 1898 after convincing his London employers to acquire the property. Now
an underground mine, Gwalia produced 267koz of gold at an all-in cost of $573 an ounce
in 2015, but last year costs accelerated, albeit to a still healthy $644 an ounce. ASX-listed
St Barbara will spend around $36 million expanding the operation that uses long hole
stoping and cement paste back fill, trucking ore and waste to the surface. Proven and
probable reserves come in at 9.4 million tonnes grading a mouthwatering 6.6g/t as at June
2016.

9. Akyem

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Newmont Mining Akyem gold mine Ghana. Image: Newmont Mining

Newmont Mining's Akyem mine produced 473koz at AISC of $574 an ounce in 2015 and
the Denver-based giant managed to keep costs at the operation in eastern Ghana, 180km
for the capital Accra, at the same level in 2016. But Newmont's Q4 earnings released last
week indicates that Akyem will fall out of the top 10 this year as costs jump to $745 – $795
an ounce and production drops off due to processing harder, lower-grade ore and following
the depletion of high-grade stockpiles. Full production at the surface mine started in
October of 2013 with a 16-year mine life.

10. Agbaou

Agbaou gold mine in Cote d'Ivoire. Image: Endeavour Mining

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Endeavour Mining's Agbaou mine in Côte d'Ivoire is the Cayman Island-based miner's
largest and lowest cost with 2016 production of a record 196koz. West Africa-focused
Endeavour which has five operating mines in the region managed to squeeze all-in costs at
Agbaou further in 2016 – $535 an ounce vs the $576 an ounce that places it tenth on this
ranking. Endeavour says it's spending $27 million ($7 million on a drill program) at Agbaou
this year with the operation returning to more normalized and sustainable production in
2017 around 175–180koz with fresh ore representing 50% of the total. Costs will jump to
$660–$700 an ounce.

Bonus: BTRP

BTRP tailings processing mine. Image: Pan African Resources

With all-in costs per ounce of just $503, BTRP ranks no.4, but unlike others on this list Pan
African Resources' operation in South Africa processes tailings and is not a mine producing
ore. Hydromining waste of the Fairview and New Consort underground mines in the historic
1885 gold rush region around Barberton in the east of the country near the Swaziland
border, BTRP produces 25–30koz a year with a life of mine in excess of 14-years. Just how
rich the Barberton gold fields once were is evidenced by the fact that head grades from the
tailings dams is still an above average 1.7g/t.

Data retrieved from the IntelligenceMine database. Get access to more than 12,000 listed
and private company profiles, 33,000 mines, projects and processing facilities and 1.6m
regulatory and source documents.IntelligenceMine also provides powerful multi-faceted
search with comparative result grids, sorting and download capabilities, an online
interactive mapper and more.

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