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Pogo Officials Consider Extending Life of Gold Mine, If Exploration Shows Promising Deposits

pogominealaska.com

Pogo Mine officials say the company may extend the life of the mine northeast of Delta Junction if exploration they’re conducting this summer confirms the presence of potentially rich gold deposits.

“What we’re doing this summer is quite a bit of exploration,” Pogo spokeswoman Wendie MacNaughton said. “We are dedicating about 21 million dollars to exploration and definition drilling, which will really just help us determine where the rest of the gold is – how do we get it, how much is there.”

MacNaughton says it was the discovery of additional gold reserves around the Fort Knox Mine north of Fairbanks that prompted Kinross Gold Corporation officials to announce Tuesday they’ve extended the life of that mine through the coming decade.

“They did their exploration, and they found very favorable results earlier in the spring,” she said, “and so they have since translated that to extend the life of the mine to 2030.”

MacNaughton says officials with Sumitomo Metal Mining Pogo already have extended the life of the Pogo mine since it began operation in 2006, because additional gold reserves were discovered. And it’s now extended to 2021. She says that could change, depending on what this summer’s exploration reveals.

“So we’re hoping towards the end of the summer we’ll have a pretty good idea of how much gold we can access,” she said.

MacNaughton says the exploration will focus on two areas near the mine, the Fun Zone and West Goodpaster. Company officials said during the annual Alaska Miners Association conference in April that initial exploration last year showed promising prospects in those areas.

“It is very, very promising,” she said. “I think we’re all very optimistic that there’s quite a bit of gold out there.”

The Pogo Mine is located about 38 miles northeast of Delta. It employs about 320 people and does business with more than a hundred contractors.

Tim has worked in the news business for over three decades, mainly as a newspaper reporter and editor in southern Arizona. Tim first came to Alaska with his family in 1967, and grew up in Delta Junction before emigrating to the Lower 48 in 1977 to get a college education and see the world.