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  • Amulsar Questions and Answers

    Geoteam CJSC
    37 Hanrapetutyan street, 4 floor
    Yerevan 0010, Armenia
    tel. /fax +374 10 546037 / 586037


    The Project is the largest private investment project in Armenia at
    the moment. According to preliminary estimates, the Project will
    contribute an estimated USD 488 million to the budget of the RA during
    its operational life, in the form of taxes and royalties.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    In response to the questions addressed to Geoteam

    During the last 8 years Geoteam CJSC has held 11 public hearings and
    more than 170 meetings with the communities. Taking into consideration
    the fact that the Amulsar mine is not being operated yet, the number
    of such community meetings is unprecedented. During these 8 years
    representatives of the affected communities have been provided with
    the details of the Project, issues have been discussed and responses
    given to any question raised. We have achieved an atomosphere of
    mutual trust and continuous open communication with the communities.

    Nevertheless, even if one community resident is not satisfied with the
    answers to his/her questions, we are happy to discuss the questions
    addressed to us in the form of the open letter sent on March 12th.

    Below is the brief content of the questions and the answers of the
    Company specialists:

    1. Since 2011 the location of the heap leach facility has changed
    three times. `...What advantages does the selected area have as
    compared to the first two; whether the ecological, health and
    environmental risks are smaller or greater, since the area is closer
    to the communities than the previous ones'.

    First of all, we would like to remind that about 600 heap leach
    facilities are operating all over the world, including in the USA,
    Canada, Australia, Chile, Russia, etc. Some of them are adjacent to
    communities, forests, and water resources. The Amulsar HLF will be a
    modern facility, subject to current best-practice design principles.

    A geotechnical survey is carried out before selecting a location for
    the heap leach pad, and if the area meets stability, safety, and other
    technical criteria, it is deemed suitable. In this respect, two former
    locations selected in 2011 and 2013 were not significantly better or
    worse as compared with the current location.

    According to the specialists and independent experts, the pad could
    operate safely for the environment in either the two former locations
    or the currently selected one.

    However, two amendments were made in the Armenian legislation during
    the last 3 years. According to the first amendment, the immediate
    impact zone of Lake Sevan was extended in 2012 to cover the area where
    the heap leach facility was planned at the time, prohibiting ore
    processing in this area. And according to the second amendment, a 3 km
    buffer zone was set in 2013 around the inactive Spandaryan-Kechut
    tunnel, and this area was also considered as part of the Lake Sevan
    immediate impact zone.

    Irrespective of our belief that both the first and second locations
    would have ensured safe operation of the pad from environmental,
    health or other viewpoints, to stay compliant with the Armenian
    legislation the Company has changed the pad location.

    The new location was selected as a result of the two-month activity of
    the joint working group with the RA Government.

    Furthermore, the Company has invested significant funds and 5 years of
    work to identify the environmental risks not only of the pad, but also
    all the infrastructre of the Amulsar mine, and to design the
    mechanisms of their management, involving about 50 international and
    national specialists and organizations, which is unprecedented for
    Armenia and also exemplary in complying with international standards.

    2. `Which international standards envisage building the cyanide pad
    500m far from the community, within the newly planted orchards of
    Gndevaz, if it is internationally accepted that such facilities should
    be 30 km far from the settlements?': We would be happy to familiarize
    ourselves with any regulatory document, according to which `it is
    internationally accepted that such facilities should be 30 km far from
    the settlements'.

    We and numerous international experts who have worked on the Project
    are not familiar with any international standard which sets such a
    limited zone around the heap leach pad. As we have already mentioned,
    as long as the pad is properly managed and complies with technical
    requirements, it can operate safely in the neighbourhood of
    settlements.

    In 2013 we visited the USA with the mayors of Gndevaz, Gorayk and
    Saravan and visited the Cripple Creek and Victor mines, where various
    infrastructure, including the heap leach facility, are 500m from the
    town of Victor and 900m from Cripple Creek. There are many other such
    examples.

    The Amulsar pad will be 1 km away from the nearest community, Gndevaz,
    and at a considerably lower elevation.

    Finally, Geoteam employees have been working closely with the
    inhabitants of the adjacent communities for 8 years, having
    established warm and friendly relationships with them. Most of our
    employees - engineers, geologists, social and environmental
    specialists - spend a considerable part of their working time at the
    communities and Amulsar. The safety of the communities and our staff
    is top priority for us, and we are working to assure this in the
    Project.

    3. `You plan to use 2,000 tons of sodium cyanide per year. 4 million
    tons of solution will be obtained for preparing a solution with 500
    mg/l concentration. You will pour out this 4 million tons in a year on
    the heap leach pad with an area of 134 ha and you plan to develop 2
    ponds: collection ponds (with 200,000 m3 capacity) and HLF storm event
    ponds (with 170,000 m3 capacity). We would like you to explain what
    ecological calamity may be caused to Vayots Dzor by the 3.63 Mt
    cyanide solution and waters in 134 ha HLF area polluted by million
    tons of heavy metals, cyanide, hydrochloric acid from rainfalls and
    snowmelt, flowing into the Arpa River, as a matter of fact, all the
    villages irrigate the fields by the waters of Arpa'.

    The heap leach is a closed cycle facility and there will be no
    industrial discharge to the Arpa River or any other environmental
    receptor.

    Cyanide is used to extract gold from the ore stacked on the heap leach
    pad, which is designed to ensure there are no releases, thus
    preventing the possibility of both environmental and economic lossess.

    The calculations of the author of the letter regarding the 3.63 Mt of
    cyanide solution is likely a result of misunderstanding. As mentioned
    in many sections of the EIA report, the cyanide solution will be
    supplied by a closed circulation system. This means that at a given
    period there will be 415-470 m3 circulating diluted cyanide solution
    in the pad, with about 230kg cyanide dissolved in approximately 460t
    water, which will be pumped back to the process without any
    emission. The cyanide and water content will be refreshed
    periodically, as the cyanide decays during the production process.

    Now as for `million tons' of heavy metals: the metals to be extracted
    from the ore are the gold and silver, and the overall content does not
    exceed 350 tons of metal over the life of the mine. As for other
    metals, the ore naturally contains only trace concentrations. The
    concentration of the traces of metals in the ore in heap leach will
    not be more than it was in the rock naturally. Once again, the heap
    leaching is a closed circuit and neither the gold or silver nor the
    trace amounts of other metals will discharge into the
    environment. After the mine closure the heap leach will be rinsed for
    12 months, cleaned from cyanide, drained down, covered with clay and
    topsoiled.

    As for the snowmelt and rainfalls, again there will be zero discharge
    of process waters into the Rivers Arpa and Vorotan or other natural
    environment. The Surface Water Management Plan is summarized in
    Section 5.2.5 of the EIA and Appendix 16. The third pond out of those
    mentioned will be empty and will have 170 000m3 capacity. It is
    designed to collect storm event waters. All surface waters related to
    the production process will be collected by the drainage system and
    pumped back to the production process, as it is done in hundreds of
    modern mines in the world. Additional drainage will be built
    underneath the pad to collect snowmelt waters.

    4. `Acquiring the lands for the heap leach facility and other
    infrastructures you will destroy the orchards and fields there. You
    are requested to make clear is it possible to use or sell to you as
    food the crops from the orchards and gardens several dozen meters far
    from that area.'

    The majority of the orchards in Gndevaz are outside the land areas to
    be acquired by the Company. The areas to be acquired for locating the
    infrastructure will be demarcated and separated from the community
    lands. As already mentioned, the heap leach facility does not have
    process discharge and the materials used in the pad will not have any
    contact with the community lands.

    However, despite all the safety measures in the design, it is natural
    that some of the inhabitants may have concerns about the potential
    impact on the orchards. Taking into consideration the potential of
    such concerns, the Company has undertaken an additional commitment to
    carry out monitoring of the produce from adjacent orchards, and to
    inform all stakeholders of the results.

    The studies predict there will be no damage to the orchards adjacent
    to the HLF. Nevertheless, if it turns out that there has been any
    impact, inlcuding economic loss due to the activities of the Company,
    then the Company will be committed to compensate these losses.

    Locally produced food will be an important source of supplies for the
    mine.

    5. `You state that in the heap leach pad the pH of sodium cyanide
    should be 11 and more in order to change the acid to base, and there
    will be no hydrogen cyanide emission, a small quantity of which is
    killing. You are requested to explain how are you going to fulfill it
    in 134 ha area with 4 Mt solution under -30 to +300C temperature, in
    rain/snow, or what equipment will be installed on 134 ha area that 600
    kg will be emitted when 20 tons of cyanide vapours pass through that
    device and 300 kg from 10t of hydrochloric acid. In case of fulfilling
    all this, whether the 4 Mt alkaline solution and 600 kg cyanadie, 300
    kg hydrochlorid acid are not hazardous for the local residents and the
    ecology of the area.

    To wrap-up the discussion of cyanide and to dispel the doubts on the
    =80=9Cmillion tons' used in Amulsar, we'd like to say that IN TOTAL
    only 1.1 million tons of sodium cyanide annually is produced all over
    the world, with only 6% of this used in the mining industry
    worldwide. The remaining 94% is used in production of metallic
    (galvanical) materials, chemical fertilizers used in agriculture,
    paints, plastic, pharmaceutics, cosmetics and other production.

    There is cyanide in nature as well. For example, the kernel of one
    bitter almond may contain 6.2 mg cyanic acid. The kernels of apricot,
    apple, peach and more than 1,000 species of plants contain cyanide
    (according to the website of the International Cyanide Management
    Code).

    As already mentioned, there will not be `million tons' of
    solution. The very dilute solution (500 mg cyanide in a liter of
    water, which is 0.05% cyanide) is circulating; there will be about
    460t of solution in circulation at any given time. The statement on
    the hydrogen cyanide emissions is also a result of misunderstanding.
    The heap leach will not be generating any emissions of hydrogen
    cyanide. There is a small risk of hydrogen cyanide emission during the
    preparation of the reagents, which takes place in an enclosed facility
    within the process plant. As mentioned in Section 5.1 of the EIA, any
    possible emissions would be collected by the ultimate air ventilation
    system, and filtered in scrubbers. The circulating system in the
    scrubbers is formed by a diluted solution of sodium hydroxide, which
    absorbs vapours of cyanic acid and hydrochloric acid and neutralizes
    them. The effectiveness of the scrubbers is 97%.

    Of course, as in the case of other chemical materials used in various
    industrial sectors, special safety measures are required for using the
    cyanide.

    The Company has committed to obtaining, transportation, storage and
    use of cyanide in compliance with the requirements of the
    International Cyanide Management Code.

    In accordance with the above Code and the Company's preliminary
    Cyanide Management Plan, the staff working with cyanide in future will
    receive rigorous training to ensure safe storage and use of cyanide.

    As for the pH, the internationally accepted way to ensure high pH is
    to add lime to keep the pH at level of 10.5 and to prevent generation
    of the hydrogen cyanide (gas).

    As a further precaution, hydrogen cyanide gas detectors will be
    located at the cyanide mixing tanks and within the surrounding areas
    to identify even small amounts of emissions.

    We have grouped the below-mentioned questions as the presented
    statements are not always followed by a relevant question.

    The letter states the fact that the samples analysed by Geoteam
    contain other metals, besides gold and silver.

    `(bismuth, cadmium, cobalt, chromium, copper, ferrum, gallium,
    molybdenum, nickel, lead, antimony, scandium, titanium, uranium,
    strontium, vanadium, zinc and wolfram) and toxic elements (arsenic,
    beryllium, thallium, selenium, mercury and cadmium), all of which are
    very toxic for human organisms'.

    It is worth reminding that the mining operations at Amulsar have not
    been launched yet and current activities will neither increase nor
    decrease the metals concentrations in ore or soil within the project
    area.

    Our studies show that the ore, water and soil within the surrounding
    area contain certain metals. In the analysed soil samples from the
    project area, concentrations of arsenic, lead, cobalt, copper, nickel
    and antimony are regularly found to be higher than Armenia's Maximum
    Allowable Concentrations. It indicates that the concentrations of
    these metals are `naturally' elevated in the area, as a result of the
    characteristics of the underlying geological strata from which the
    soils are derived.

    In addition, the sampling of waters has revealed elevated
    concentrations of the above-mentioned metals in the Vorotan, Arpa and
    Darb rivers. The springs and tributaries within the area also exhibit
    low pH, that is they tend to be acidic. Groundwater originating from
    beneath Amulsar is often similarly elevated in lead, nickel, copper
    and iron. Again, these `naturally' elevated metal concentrations
    reflect the underlying lithology. The concentrations of the metals are
    not expected to increase due to the mining.

    `In the open pit area of 113.9 ha annually 12088.2 tons of explosives
    will be used: each well will be charged with 239.6 kg of explosives,
    50452 explosions will be carried out, dust emission accounts for
    761.56 tons per year and dust will be spread in distance of 100-1000m,
    noise level will be almost inaudible in adjacent communities. If the
    person, who made these calculations, had been to Amulsar, winds would
    have blown him off for 100 meters... Emissions in case of mine
    development will be as follows. Inorganic dust - 1185.8 t/y, Nitrogen
    dioxide - 1365.86 t/y, Carbon monoxide - 1107,75 t/y, Hydrocarbons -
    222.4 t/y, Hard particles - 113.92 t/y, Sulfur dioxide - 106.35
    t/y. We would like you to clarify the ecological impact in the area
    and Vorotan-Arpa Tunnel.'

    The calculations have been made by international and local specialists
    who have been visiting Amulsar and making wind measurements, during
    different seasons, within 6 consecutive years and comparing them with
    Armenian Hydrometeorological Service data. A dust settlement model has
    been developed as part of the environmental studies. According to this
    model, the dust generated by blasting will mostly settle within a 100
    meters' radius and the small particles within a 1000 meters' radius of
    the open pit. Gorayk, which is the closest community to the open pit,
    is located at a distance of 4 km.

    Amulsar is not the most challenging deposit in terms of climate. There
    are a lot of other projects in the world that are being operated in
    much more challenging climatic conditions, including those located in
    close vicinity of cities. For example, the Swedish Kiruna deposit that
    is just adjacent to the city.

    The modern blasting methods make it possible to significantly reduce
    emissions.

    The composition of the dust was estimated from chemical analysis of
    more than 20,000 samples of ore rock and more than 50,000 samples of
    barren rock, and modelling was then undertaken to estimate the
    resulting concentrations of the elements in the soil (due to dust
    settlement) at the end of mine operations.

    The element concentrations were then compared with both ecological and
    human health screening criteria and were concluded not to present a
    risk to either cattle grazing on the soils or to humans drinking milk
    or eating beef from the cattle.

    With respect to the impact of blasting on the Vorotan-Arpa tunnel, a
    preliminary assessment has indicated that there is no risk. The
    tunnel is 3 km horizontally and 1km vertically removed from the open
    pits where blasting will take place, and is in a different geological
    environment.

    `Barren Rock Storage Facility is located in the area of 140 ha in a
    distance of 5 km from the open pit and 7 km from Kechout reservoir,
    which is located in the drainage basin of Kechout and Spandaryan
    reservoirs. Annually around 46.7 million tons of ore and 10 million
    tons ore will be transported here, which will be crushed with three
    crushers located in a distance of 4.5 km, and then transported via
    four overland conveyors, on a 1200mm wide belt, for 7.2 km up to track
    stucking spot adding thousands tons of sodium hydroxide. Afterwards 3
    trucks of BelAz-7513 make will transport them to the heap leach
    facility located in a distance of 1 km. If we spread the crushed ore
    in the area of 134 ha, we will get a layer of 8 meters high...'

    To clarify, barren rock is not crushed; it is taken directly from the
    open pit to the Barren Rock Storage Facility. It is the ore that is
    crushed. The conveyor will be covered to minimize the dust
    emission. Lime will be added to the ore before placement on HLF to
    neutralize the acidity.

    `....where you mention that dust emission of one ton of ore will make
    up only 1.5 grams after passing the filters of three crushers, a
    technology any pharmaceutical plant will be jealous of.'

    The mentioned figures are a reality for many modern mining
    operations. And this is how it is done: the primary crusher building,
    secondary/tertiary crusher building, and screening building are all
    enclosed structures, and each building will be fitted with a separate
    dust collection system. Dust hoods will be placed over the conveyor
    transfer points and crusher feed points within the crushing and
    screening buildings. Thus, emissions will be very low.

    Finally, about the economic benefits, Jermuk, inconsistence of the
    future mining and agriculture, as well as the developments, following
    the mine-closure in 13 years.

    Briefly, on figures. The Project is the largest private investment
    project in Armenia at the moment. According to preliminary estimates,
    the Project will contribute an estimated USD 488 million to the budget
    of the RA during its operational life, in the form of taxes and
    royalties. Another USD 156 million will be paid as taxes due to
    operation of other associated small and medium business entities. The
    wage fund will make an estimated USD 230 million. The annual average
    effect on the overall GDP of Armenia is calculated to make some USD
    120 million. This is a good opportunity for an economic effect, which
    is obvious even for a non-economist. It will create many investment
    opportunities for community development, agriculture, tourism and
    other sectors both in Jermuk and surrounding communities. The
    efficiency of the funds application, the strategic investments and the
    management will depend on the joint efforts to be taken by all the
    parties, namely the communities, State authorities, civil society and,
    to a certain extent, the company. On the effective management of the
    investments within the 13 years will depend the economic
    sustainability.

    As to the compatibility of agriculture and mining, this will be
    possible if correct management is provided. There are many examples of
    countries that have both large agriculture and mining sectors - the
    US, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Argentina and Spain among them.

    The Amulsar mine closure process is planned to meet all the
    international standards. It is worth mentioning that around USD 10
    million is stipulated for the mine closure, including environmental,
    social and land and water management plans.

    And lastly, we would like to remind that all the above-mentioned
    figures, percents and industrial processes descriptions represent a
    well-tested and widely used technology.

    The lack of trust in mining is easy to understand and the concerns and
    anxiety are fully legitimate and appropriate considering the previous
    experience of Armenia.

    However, there are hundreds of operating mines in the world now and
    many are modern and well-managed operations. The mining sector, just
    like the other industries, has reported a fast technological growth
    over the last decades. Some of the deposits in developed and
    developing countries apply the above-mentioned practices and
    environmentally sound management and provide economic benefits for the
    country. We believe that it will be possible to achieve the same in
    Armenia as well. However, we understand the concerns and are ready to
    continue the dialogue and arrange meetings with international experts
    as requested by the authors of the letter.

    With best regards,

    Geoteam

    Copyright © All rights reserved.




    From: A. Papazian
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