Gold production is slated to increase to about 200,000 ounces in financial year 2025, the company backed by Egyptian billionaire Naguib Sawiris said.
“We discovered Lafigué for a cost of $31 million, equivalent to an industry-low discovery cost of just $12 per ounce of measured and indicated resources,” chief executive Ian Cockerill said in the statement.
Paul Day, general manager at Lafigué, with the first gold bar poured at the mine. (Image courtesy of Endeavour Mining.)
The gold and silver miner’s leader expressed pride in reaching the milestone at Lafigué. Cockerill noted that the achievement, coupled with the inaugural gold pour at the Sabodala-Massawa expansion earlier in April, marked the fruitful culmination of Endeavour’s investment and expansion efforts initiated in the second quarter of 2022.
“We believe this level of value creation is repeatable in West Africa, and we have already identified the Assafou deposit on the Tanda-Iguela property in Côte d’Ivoire, where we have delineated a top tier resource and another potential cornerstone asset,” Cockerill said.
The news injects some positivity into Endeavour Mining’s recent history, which was tainted by the firing earlier this year of former president and chief executive officer Sébastien de Montessus for serious misconduct.
It also follows accusations of misrepresentation over the sale of two African gold mines, Wahgnion and Boungou in Burkina Faso, as the fallout from the tenure of the ousted executive continues.
The announcement comes only a day after reports of a cyanide spill at Ity gold mine, Endeavour’s second-biggest operation, located in southern Côte d’Ivoire.
London-traded shares jumped slightly on the news and were trading 0.12% higher at 1,724p by 1:30 p.m. local time. This leaves Endeavour Mining with a market capitalization of ÂŁ1.39 billion ($1.76bn).
This article was published by: Cecilia Jamasmie
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