Cameco to restart Cigar Lake uranium mine in northern Sask.
Production suspended in December following COVID-19 cases at the operation
Cameco Corp. says it plans to restart production this month at its Cigar Lake uranium mine in northern Saskatchewan after suspending it in December to deal with risks from the pandemic.
The suspension followed six positive COVID-19 tests in the company's northern operations, including three at the fly-in-fly-out mine site.
The Saskatoon-based company said in December the mine would be placed in a "safe state of care and maintenance," resulting in a significant reduction in personnel and $8 million to $10 million in costs.
CEO Tim Gitzel says the company has implemented enhanced safety protocols for Cigar Lake, including increased distancing on flights, mandatory medical-grade masks for all workers and increased sanitization and physical barriers in eating areas.
He says there's also a licensed COVID-19 testing facility at the mine site.
Great news! The Cigar Lake Mine will be ready to restart production mid-April.<br> <br>This will increase the total workforce to 640 employees & contractors from the current 120 who have been operating the mine since production was suspended in Dec. 2020.<br> <a href="https://t.co/yNfNJAYmdG">https://t.co/yNfNJAYmdG</a>
—@PremierScottMoe
The timing of production restart and the production rate at Cigar Lake will be dependent on how quickly Cameco can bring workers back to site.
There were about 300 workers on site at peak production last fall.
Premier Scott Moe says the mine will be ready to restart production soon with a workforce of 640 employees and contractors.
The Cigar Lake mine is located approximately 650 kilometres north of Saskatoon.