Champion Iron (TSX: CIA, ASX: CIA) has temporarily halted activities at its Bloom Lake mine in northern Quebec near the Labrador border, as forest fires draw nearer.
The community of Labrador City, located about 20 km from Bloom Lake, was ordered to evacuate last Friday.
With the forest fires only a few kilometres from Bloom Lake, the company initiated its emergency response protocol and said it is gradually evacuating its workforce.
Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey said on Sunday that a change in wind direction, cooler temperatures and possible precipitation made for favourable conditions for tackling the wildfire threatening the town.
Reserves at Bloom Lake are estimated at 716 million proven and probable tonnes at an average grade of 28.6% iron.
The life-of-mine average iron metallurgical recovery is 82%, with a plant feed grade of 28.6% iron and an average yearly production of 15.2 million wet metric tonnes of high-purity iron ore concentrate at 66.2% iron.
The company ships iron ore concentrate from Bloom Lake by rail, to a ship loading port in Sept-Îles, Québec, and has delivered its iron ore concentrate globally, including in China, Japan, the Middle East, Europe, South Korea, India and Canada.
Champion shares were down 2.3% to C$5.95 apiece at mid-day in Toronto on Monday, valuing the company at $3.1 billion.
Be the first to comment on "Champion Iron halts Bloom Lake ops as forest fires close in"