Agnew Gold Mine

Gold mine in Western Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Agnew Gold Mine, formerly the EMU Mine, is a gold mine located 3 km (1.9 mi) west of Agnew, Western Australia. It is owned by Gold Fields.[1] As of 2022, it is one of four mines the company operates in Australia, the others being the Granny Smith, Gruyere and St Ives.

LocationAgnew
CountryAustralia
Coordinates28°00′26″S 120°30′28″E
Quick facts Location, State ...
Agnew
Agnew is located in Western Australia
Agnew
Agnew
Location in Western Australia
Interactive map of Agnew
Location
LocationAgnew
StateWestern Australia
CountryAustralia
Coordinates28°00′26″S 120°30′28″E
Production
ProductsGold
Production244,900 ounces
Financial year2023
Owner
CompanyGold Fields
Websitewww.goldfields.co.za
Year of acquisitionNovember 2001
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Ore is mined at Agnew in the under ground Waroonga complex and the open pit Songvang operation.[2]

History

Gold mines in the Mid West region

Gold mining at Agnew commenced in the early 1900s, with mining being carried out by East Murchison United,[3] EMU, which gave the mine its original name, the EMU mine, as well as a company owned by Claude de Bernales.[4]

WMC acquired the mining tenements in the early 1980s, opening an open cut mine and process plant there in 1986, near the town of Agnew. At this point the town, which had once had a population in the thousands, just consisted of a run-down hotel, the near-by newly established mining town of Leinster serving the Leinster Nickel Mine. When WMC acquired the Leinster mine in 1989 and renamed it Leinster Nickel Operations, the gold mine at Agnew became the Leinster Gold Operations, with both operations sharing a number of facilities.[4]

In 1990, underground mining at Agnew commenced. In 1994, WMC restructured its organisation and separated the gold and nickel operations, with the gold mine becoming the Agnew Gold Operation.[4][5] A second gold mine in the area, the Lawlers Gold Mine, was operated by Barrick Gold, until purchased by Gold Fields in October 2013.[6][7]

On 13 June 1989 the mine, then called the EMU mine, was the scene of one of the worst mining disasters in Western Australia when six workers drowned in the underground operations during a flood.[8][9]

The mine was purchased by Gold Fields from WMC in late 2001.[10][11] The combined price for the two Australian operations Gold Fields purchased, St Ives and Agnew, was US$180 million in cash and $52 million in Gold Fields shares.

Agnew, in 2009, employed 114 permanent staff and 298 contractors.[2]

A 4 MW solar farm was added in 2019,[12] along with a 17 MW wind farm and a 13MW/4MWh battery,[13] supplying half the mine's power needs.[14]

Production

Annual production of the mine:[10][15][2][16][17][18][19][20][21]

More information Year, Production ...
Year Production Grade Cost per ounce
2000 209,598 ounces 6.27 g/t
2001 185,400 ounces 6.08 g/t
Jan to June 2002 66,200 ounces 3.56 g/t A$436
2002–03 144,000 ounces 3.5 g/t A$437
2003–04 202,000 ounces 5.3 g/t A$317
2004–05 212,500 ounces 5.6 g/t A$315
2005–06 222,000 ounces 5.2 g/t A$370
2006–07 212,000 ounces 5.0 g/t A$380
2007–08 204,000 ounces 4.8 g/t A$496
2008–09 192,100 ounces 5.6 g/t A$541
2009–10
2010–11
2011–12
2012–13
2014 7.1 g/t
2015 237,000 ounces 6.4 g/t US$959
2016 229,000 ounces 6.5 g/t US$971
2017 241,000 ounces 6.5 g/t US$977
2018 238,000 ounces 6.49 g/t US$1,026
2019 219,000 ounces 5.7 g/t A$1,656
2020 233,000 ounces 5.8 g/t A$1,528
2021 223,000 ounces 5.53 g/t A$1,741
2022 239,000 ounces 6.21 g/t A$1,875
2023 244,900 ounces 5.67 g/t A$1,939
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References

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