[PHNOM PENH POST]
WITH OZ Minerals – the frontrunner to establish a commercial gold mine
in Cambodia – looking to roughly treble its current resource to justify
production, 2011 was always going to be a critical year for the
country’s nascent mining industry.
Unfortunately, the Australian
firm’s latest results published on Thursday mean Cambodia remains no
nearer to a lucrative first gold operation. In many ways the
disappointing drill programme at Mesam in Mondulkiri province suggests
the country’s gold mining sector has taken a step backwards.
OZ’s
results for the first quarter noted that seven of a proposed 10
exploration drills led to mineralisation results inferior to the firm’s
key resource at Okvau, the site of an inferred resource of some 600,000
ounces.
That means Mesam is looking increasingly unlikely as a
viable production site, as the company looks to secure total deposits of
roughly 2 million ounces to justify a commercial gold mine in Cambodia.
Overall,
this puts the firm’s operations in this country in doubt – for the
first time following promising results at Okvau during the first quarter
of 2010, OZ has hinted it may pull out of the project.
“Results
from the current exploration program at Mesam will be taken into
consideration as part of the review of the gold assets in Cambodia,”
said last week’s company report for the first quarter.
OZ retains the right to enter a joint venture in Mesam “should results warrant”, but at the moment they simply do not.
Should OZ Minerals pull out of Cambodia, the repercussions for commercial gold mining here would be significant.
Firstly,
the country’s most promising gold resource would be shown to be not
that promising after all, and the long process towards production would
essentially halt.
Also, the exit of a major mining firm from
Cambodia would hardly contribute to confidence during a period that has
seen a number of international mining firms issue shares in a bid to
raise capital to conduct exploration here. The problem is few other
mining companies are anywhere near as close as OZ to producing gold or
indeed any other mineral on a commercial level.
The government
has stated publicly in the past that it has actively sought to attract
mining companies of the calibre of OZ Minerals, to contribute to good
practice in the sector.
The prospect the company may leave without producing minerals is therefore a sorry one for Cambodian mining.
With
more drilling to do at Mesam and elsewhere in the surrounding area, OZ
still has more opportunities to locate further promising gold
mineralisation in Cambodia.
But with every disappointing drill,
the possibility that the company could stay here diminishes, and with it
the prospect of a commercial gold mine in the near term.
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