Morgan Michaud with one of Goldcorp's bee hives on the Porcupine property. The honey they make is referred to as “liquid gold,” a reference to the area's former life as a gold mine. (July 14, 2011)
Lisa Wright Business Reporter
After decades in the mining game, Goldcorp Inc. has finally figured out a way for its worker bees to make “liquid gold.”
The enterprising environmental team at the Canadian company’s subsidiary in Timmins has transformed an old mine tailings property into a real hive of activity, where bees make honey amid the tall grass and flowering vegetation that until recently was a barren wasteland.
The Vancouver-based mining giant inherited the mined-out land as part of its purchase of a massive property known as Porcupine Gold Mines (PGM) in the northern Ontario city back in 2006.
The 58 hectares called the Coniaurum (which is Latin for constant gold) was mined for nearly 50 years and then abruptly abandoned in 1961 following a serious storm that breached tailings containment dams and caused discharge problems. Back then the industry was an unregulated wild west where miners would dig in and then just duck out when they were done.
Enter Goldcorp and modern day mining. Coniaurum is one of 20 burnt out mines amid its PGM operations and the first to be renewed as a wildlife habitat and rolling green field — and also an experimental ground on how to resurrect the rest of these eyesores.
“As a kid, I used to play with my buddies there and I can tell you it was a very different place,” says Timmins Mayor Tom Laughren, a lifelong resident.
“It reminded me of pictures you would see of war zones around the world, so to see how green and clean it is today is just amazing,” he says.
Former companies that mined the Porcupine area — now the longest continually operating gold district in North America with two operating mines and exploration still underway after a century — gave the industry a black eye because they would take the resources and disappear without giving back, says Laughren.
“Mining has evolved, and we aren’t just going to leave that mess behind,” says Dave Bucar, PGM’s strategic development manager who oversaw the $3 million project.
Goldcorp has committed about $10 million a year to an extensive rehabilitation across the city. For its efforts, the company’s team in Timmins won the top annual environmental award at a Sudbury mining convention in June for the unique reclamation project, which went above and beyond the usual requirements for re-greening old tailings sites.
It didn’t happen overnight. After consultations with local community group, Porcupine Watchful Eye, work began six years ago to stabilize the site that resembled a moonscape. Over time, depression areas were filled in and bio-solids were applied and topped with wild seed mix to promote vegetation growth such as natural grass, shrubs and trees.
This in turn has attracted wildlife. Coniaurum is now home to various birds of prey along with bears, moose, foxes and rabbits.
They also installed an enclosed area of hives (fenced off to keep the bears out) so that bees can safely produce what the company refers to as “liquid gold” — a tip of the hat to the historic use of the site.
“It’s the best honey I’ve ever tasted,” says Goldcorp’s environmental manager László Götz, who is admittedly a tad biased.
They only produce 40 litres a season so it’s not for sale, he says.
The project has also drawn the curiosity of local students and tour groups from around the world — namely Shania Twain fan clubs looking for an authentic experience in their favourite singer’s birthplace.
Underground mine tours have always been a popular attraction in the gold-rich city, but people are also interested to see what happens once miners have packed up and left, notes Götz.
Since 2008, guided tours are carried out on the site to showcase how mine tailings can be successfully converted into a green environment and flourishing habitat. Recent visitors have been from Shania’s fan clubs in the U.S., Sweden and Poland.
“We get some very interesting people visiting us from all over the world, and they get a real local experience,” says the Hungarian native.
“Our tourism industry has been hit by the strong dollar just like everyone else’s, so it’s nice to be able to offer many different things to international visitors,” says Laughren.
Local students also enjoy tours because they get to plant trees on the site.
“Typically people see all the bad things associated with mining. In this case it looked like a moonscape, fully eroded with no vegetation,” says PGM’s general manager Chris Cormier.
The tour groups “come to the understanding that this used to be a tailings dam (where the waste rock is stored) and now it’s like a farmer’s field,” says Cormier.
Goldcorp has begun rehabilitation work on two other abandoned mine sites and expects to have all 20 projects completed in the next 10 to 15 years.