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Harmony Gold Mining Company is progressing studies to recover the gold from its Free State tailings dams as well as those that span the West Wits area around its Mponeng gold mine.
The Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed company's Free State tailings alone host 5.7-million ounces of surface gold.
"We've not progressed those studies to the full extent yet. We're in the process of doing that, which will firmly fit into the quadrant of our surface production, which is high-margin safe production for the future," Harmony Gold CEO Beyers Nel pointed out to Mining Weekly following this week's declaration by Harmony of a record R3.4-billion half-year dividend. (Also watch attached Creamer Media video).
"We are most pleased to return more of the gold-price tailwind upside over the last while to our shareholders while also replacing ounces mined."
In addition to Harmony's investments in the CSA copper mine, which Nel describes as being "phenomenal", and Eva copper project, in Australia, he spoke of South Africa Inc looking up, "and we're also quite positive about investing back into South Africa in order to sustain jobs and to make sure that South Africa's gold mining industry continues to be as strong as it always has been."
Mining Weekly: During the presentation, you twice used the word phenomenal. The first was about CSA. You said, 'this is a phenomenal orebody'. Can you tell us why you used the word phenomenal?
Nel: CSA is the highest-grade copper orebody in Australia. It's got a 3% reserve grade and we've got new drill intercepts there, which already indicate potential mine life extension. We're very excited about that orebody, which I think is going to be very valuable going forward. But it's an orebody that, technically, we need to de-constrain, both on the ventilation side and through the creation of the necessary underground flexibility, so that we can have consistent, predictable production coming from the CSA mine.
You also used "phenomenal" when speaking about Wafi-Golpu in Papua New Guinea. We've been hearing those two words Wafi and Golpu for decades now, but I got the feeling during your presentation that we're getting a bit closer to seeing operational activity there.
Wafi-Golpu's a once-in-a-generation asset and that's why we use the word phenomenal. It's a porphyry, so it will be a big, bulk underground copper/gold mine. Not a narrow tabular or a batching process or an openpit mine, but a big underground block cave mine. Quality gold and quality copper are going to come from Wafi-Golpu. I wouldn't risk saying we're getting closer, but we're certainly progressing the discussions with the Papua New Guinean government, through the Spear Review Team, as well as the State Negotiating Team and our JV partners, to take the mine up the value curve.
The very next step is getting the mining permit, remembering that a mining permit in Papua New Guinea has got a 40-year tenure. So, yes, it's been taking long. It's been taking maybe longer than anticipated, but with such a long tenure it's important to get it right, and the quality of the asset is so good that it's worth the wait and worth getting the permit conditions 100% right for maximum value for all stakeholders.
Regarding South Africa's cyanide, tell us about the solution you've come up with in briquette form.
Yes, sodium cyanide is the main reagent we use to extract the gold out of the gold-bearing ore. It's a chemical that we use, and we get it in liquid form. We're not manufacturing or developing the cyanide briquettes ourselves. There are other players in the industry that followed the same strategies. This is just flexibility and supply chain alternative, which is a fixed form called a cyanide briquette that one can import from overseas...