Victoria Gold (TSXV: GCX) reported on Monday that its Eagle gold mine in the Yukon has resumed operations, having weathered the impacts of wildfire activity in the Canadian territory with the help of the Yukon Wildland Fire Management team.
On July 30, the company reported a partial evacuation of the Eagle mine site due to the proximity (approximately 4 km) of the East McQuesten wildfire, leaving only “a volunteer contingent of employees” nearby to operate and maintain critical operational assets. A second evacuation occurred on August 4.
A total of 335 people were evacuated off the Eagle mine site, either to Banyan Gold’s exploration camp nearby, the Silver Trail Lodge or into Whitehorse. By then, the fire was about 60,000 hectares in size, approaching the mine from the southwest.
Since then, favourable conditions have allowed for the return of employees to the site, Victoria stated in Monday’s press release. Full production rates at the operation were resumed on August 11, and Yukon Wildland Fire Management demobilized from Eagle two days later.
Separately, the evacuation order for the village of Mayo was lifted on August 13 and the company has re-established its normal supply chain and crew change logistics, Victoria said.
“We are pleased that operations have returned to normal. Rainy conditions over the past week have significantly reduced the wildfire risk near Eagle,” Victoria Gold CEO John McConnell said in a news release.
“We would like to thank our employees and contractors for their excellent response to this situation, which allowed a smooth restart of production. The Yukon Wildland Fire Management team provided a comprehensive, professional response to the East McQuesten wildfire for which we are grateful.”
Victoria’s Eagle mine is an open-pit, heap-leach gold operation located about 275 km east of Dawson City. It is the only producing gold mine in the Yukon, having begun commercial productions in 2020.
Shares of Victoria Gold were up 0.9% by 12:15 p.m. in Toronto, giving the company a market capitalization of C$443 million ($326.8m).