Teghut Mine
|
Open-pit mining at Teghut (summer 2014) | |
| Location | |
|---|---|
![]() Teghut Mine Location in Armenia | |
| Location | Teghut |
| Province | Lori |
| Country | Armenia |
| Coordinates | 41°05′17″N 44°50′47″E / 41.088087°N 44.846274°ECoordinates: 41°05′17″N 44°50′47″E / 41.088087°N 44.846274°E |
| Production | |
| Products | Copper, molybdenum |
| Production |
1.6 million tons of copper 100,000 tons of molybdenum |
| Type | Open pit |
| History | |
| Opened | 2014 |
| Owner | |
| Company | Vallex Group (via Armenian Copper Programme) |
| Website |
www |
| Year of acquisition | 2001 |
Teghut Mine is a major copper and molybdenum open-pit mine in Armenia's northern province of Lori in the village of Teghut with deposits valued at $15.5 billion USD (in 2010). In December 2014, Vallex Group launched production operations at the mine, which is a $380 million USD project.[1] The mine will be comparable in size to the Kajaran Mine in southern Armenia.
Available deposits and value
The Teghut forest lies atop ore deposits containing an estimated 1.6 million tons of copper and about 100,000 tons of molybdenum.[1] In 2010, with the price of copper at $7,500 USD per ton and molybdenum at $35,000 USD per ton, this amounts to about $12 billion USD in copper and $3.5 billion USD in molybdenum. Therefore, the total value of the mine's deposits was about $15.5 billion in 2010.
Mine financing and ownership
Vallex, which is run and at least partly owned by Russian-Armenian businessman Valeri Mejlumyan, claims to have already invested almost $340 million in Teghut.[1] It has borrowed the bulk of that money from VTB, a leading Russian bank.[1]
In 2013, the company also attracted $62 million in funding from a Danish pension fund which was due to be partly or fully channeled into purchases of metallurgical equipment.[1]
Mine operations
Vallex claims to have created about 1,300 new jobs and has pledged to build new schools and upgrade infrastructure in nearby villages.[1] The company has said that it plans to manufacture $182 million worth of non-ferrous ore concentrates there already in 2015.[1]
Environmental impact
Open-pit mining at Teghut will lead to the destruction of 357 hectares of rich forest, including 128,000 trees.[1] Environmentalists claim that ore crushing and enrichment will also pollute a local river and underground waters.[1]
Gallery
- 2015
The Shnogh River, muddied by the mine, meets the Debed
A muddied Shnogh River
- 2014
View of the open-pit from past the southern border of the mine
- 2013
Stream next to main entrance with tailing dump in background
General view near administrative building
Main entrance
Main entrance security
Security building at main entrance
Ore processing facility under construction atop hill, behind which is the massive tailing dump
Open pit and eastern border of the mine property
Location of open pit mine
Location of open pit mine and waste rock storage
Waste rock storage area
Closeup of waste rock storage area
Closeup of upper rock storage area
Eastern boundary and explosives storage area
Closeup of open pit
Open pit
Open pit
Closeup of lower waste rock storage area
Super closeup of lower waste rock storage area
Raw ore receiving facility
Raw ore receiving facility
Building 1 of ore processing facility
Building 2 of ore processing facility
Building 3 of ore processing facility
- 2012
Destruction of the old-growth forest at Teghut in summer 2012
Mining trucks at work
Forest destruction in summer 2012- Main entrance and administrative buildings, with beginning of tailings dump on the lower right
- Construction of tailings dump
- Construction of massive tailings dump with Teghut village in the background
- General view of ore processing facility (under construction) and forest
- Closeup of main ore processing facility area
- Construction of ore processing facility
- Construction of ore processing facility
- Closeup of raw ore receiving area

- 2008 (Deforestation)
- Trees cut into logs
- Logs for sale
- Logs loaded onto a truck
- Forest converted to logs
- Administrative or workers' quarters
- 2008 (Location of waste rock storage area)
- 2008 (Location of future tailings dump)
General view
Another general view
Horses grazing
Livestock grazing
Peach trees
Tree marked to be cut
Trees
Beehives- A cultural monument
- 2008 (administrative building)
- Administrative building
- Log storage
Heavy machinery
Cement trucks- Tree cutting machinery
Panoramas from September 2013





References
See also
External links
- Teghout CJSC, official website of Vallex Mining subsidiary.
- Save Teghut Civic Initiative, an independent and voluntary network of free and concerned people from Armenia, Diaspora and various parts of the world who believe and fight for healthy and dignified human livelihood. The initiative was founded in 2007.
- Teghut: Bread of the Children, a 2009 documentary film (35 minutes) about the Teghut mine project
- Mining in Armenia, a 10-minute documentary, produced by Robert Davidian and Liana Hakobyan.
- Serj Tankian in defense of Teghut Forest (2012). Famous Armenian-American rock band vocalist Serj Tankian speaks out against mining in Armenia, specifically against mining at Teghut.
