Sudbury

$1B Victoria Mine in Sudbury is moving ahead after years of delays

After being mothballed a decade ago because of sagging mineral prices, a Sudbury mine is springing to life. But it is still years and hundreds of millions of dollars away from actually pulling minerals out of the northern Ontario rock.

KGHM says despite recent progress, Victoria Mine is still likely years away from being in production

Cranes and other construction equipment surround a large grey structure with two big legs and square windows at the top arranged in the shape of a smiley face.
After years of delay, the headframe at KGHM's Victoria Mine went up in 2022, but the company says it is still years away from production. (Erik White/CBC)

After being mothballed a decade ago because of sagging mineral prices, a Sudbury mine is springing to life.

But the Victoria project by Polish mining giant KGHM International is still years and hundreds of millions of dollars away from actually pulling minerals out of the ground. 

The new mine in the Whitefish area in the western reaches of Greater Sudbury was announced to great fanfare in the early 2010s.

Construction workers in orange jackets and blue hard hats push a piece of wood into place, surrounded by a snowy landscape
Construction is continuing this winter on the new hoist house at Victoria Mine, expected to open at some point in 2023. (Erik White/CBC )

But when mineral prices went into a prolonged gully, the project — which aims to mine a mineral deposit that was the site of several previous mines, including a now ghost town named Victoria Mines — was mothballed for years. 

Steve Dunlop, the Canadian general manager for KGHM who has worked on this deposit since it was owned by FNX, says they used the delay to better plan out of the mine and strengthen partnerships with area First Nations. 

Steve Dunlop smiles for the camera wearing a hard hat, protective glasses and orange jacket.
Steve Dunlop is the general manager of KGHM International's Canada operations. (Erik White/CBC)

"So we've done subsequent exploration to that, proofed up a portion of that ore body," he said.

"We're convinced and it was a matter of mitigating some of the risks that are there."

However Dunlop says they won't have a full sense of the nickel, copper and platinum down below until they sink an exploration shaft, which is expected to happen sometime in 2023. 

The inside of a water treatment plant with tanks and pipes and colourful railings
KGHM built a full water treatment plant at its new Victoria Mine, which is expected to cost more than $1 billion by the time it is actually in production. (Erik White/CBC)

He says the total cost of building Victoria Mine — including a headframe, full water treatment plant and hydro substation— is expected to be over $1 billion. 

Dunlop says they expect to have a workforce of 400 when they go into production, but it's a bit early for miners to start dropping off their resumes. 

"It will still be a number of years out for getting to full scale production," he said. 

"We have very high hopes for this."

A mining headframe and cranes poke out from behind a big pile of rock, partly covered in snow.
While lots of work is being done at the new Victoria Mine, expected to one day employ as many as 400 people, KGHM says it's too early to drop off your resume. (Erik White/CBC)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Erik White

journalist

Erik White is a CBC journalist based in Sudbury. He covers a wide range of stories about northern Ontario. Send story ideas to [email protected]