North

96 Snap Lake mine workers transferred to Gahcho Kué project

De Beers Canada says 96 former Snap Lake mine employees have now been transferred to the company’s next N.W.T. diamond mine, Gahcho Kué.

More Gahcho Kué jobs will open up as mine opening nears, says De Beers

The Gahcho Kue diamond project, co-owned by De Beers Canada and Mountain Province Diamonds, is located at Kennady Lake, about 280 km northeast of Yellowknife. (Mountain Province Diamonds)

De Beers Canada says 96 former Snap Lake mine employees have now been transferred to the company's next N.W.T. diamond mine, Gahcho Kué.

About 40 of those people, including two managers, live in the Northwest Territories, according to De Beers.

Tom Ormsby, a spokesperson for the company, said more Gahcho Kué jobs will open up to former Snap Lake employees in the months leading up to Gahcho Kué's opening later this year.

Tom Ormsby, a De Beers Canada spokesperson, says more Gahcho Kué jobs will open up to former Snap Lake employees in the months leading up to Gahcho Kué's opening later this year.

"As construction winds down throughout the next several months, and the commissioning gets completed and we get ready to start feeding ore into the plant, there will be a requirement for other positions," he said.

The company announced in December it was closing the unprofitable Snap Lake mine and cutting 434 direct De Beers jobs in the process. At the time it said about 100 workers would be transferred to Gahcho Kué.

Ormsby said workers are almost done suspending operations at Snap Lake, paving the way for the site's continued care and maintenance. That phase will still require 63 workers.

De Beers' review of whether to restart production at Snap Lake remains "ongoing," said Ormsby.