Cigar Lake Mine


The Cigar Lake Mine is a large high grade underground uranium mine, located in the uranium rich Athabasca Basin of northern Saskatchewan, Canada. The deposit, discovered in 1981, is second in size of high-grade deposits only to the nearby McArthur River mine. Other deposits, such as Olympic Dam in Australia, contain more uranium but at lower grades.

History

Full scale construction began in 2005 with production originally planned for 2007, but the mine experienced a catastrophic water inflow in October 2006, which flooded the mine. A second inflow occurred in 2008 during the first attempt at dewatering the mine after sealing the initial inflow. Remediation efforts continued, and re-entry was successfully accomplished in 2010. Production was delayed several times with the startup dates being announced for 2011, 2013, and 2014.
On March 13, 2014, ore production began at the mine, with the mining system and underground processing circuits operational and ore transported to the McClean Lake mill operated by AREVA Resources Canada Inc. located northeast of the minesite.
The deposit is located at depth of, surrounded by and isolated within a layer of water-impermeable illite-chlorite clay, within the Athabasca Sandstone formation. Its age is estimated to be 1.3 billion years. Due to natural containment and lack of any traces of radioactive elements on the surface, the deposit is used as an example of an effective natural deep geological repository.

Reserves & resources

As of December 31, 2019, Cigar Lake had Proven and Probable Reserves of 172.5 million pounds of U3O8 at an average grade of 14.69%, for 782,400 tonnes of U3O8, and a Measured and Indicated Resource of 101.6 million pounds of U3O8 at an average grade of 14.44%, for 460,600 tonnes of U3O8.

Ownership

The mine is owned by Cameco Corporation, AREVA Resources Canada Inc, Idemitsu Canada Resources Ltd., and TEPCO Resources Inc.. Cameco is the project operator.

Wolf attacks

In 2005, a worker was killed by wolves at Points North Landing, near Cameco’s Rabbit Lake mine.
On August 29, 2016, a 26-year-old shift worker walking between buildings at the Cigar Lake mine on his midnight break was attacked and mauled by a lone timber wolf. A nearby security guard frightened the wolf away, administered first aid, and called for an air ambulance which airlifted him to a hospital in Saskatoon where he had his recovery. After the attack, authorities ordered that area wolves be shot, that food disposal systems and fencing be inspected, and that staff be educated.