Inaugural Ceremony held with Government Officials and Mining Cooperatives
Coeur d’Alene Mines Corporation (NYSE:CDE) (TSX:CDM) (ASX:CXC) announced today that its new San Bartolomé mine, the world’s largest pure silver mine, has poured its first silver doré. Additionally, representatives of the Company, local and national mining cooperatives and Bolivian government officials recently marked the inauguration of the new facilities at the San Bartolomé silver mine, located in South America’s historically richest silver mining area.
San Bartolomé is expected to produce six million ounces of silver this year and nine million ounces in 2009, its first full year of production. The complete crushing, milling, leaching, thickening, Merrill-Crowe and smelting facilities are now all commissioned and fully operational. San Bartolomé contains an estimated 153 million ounces of probable silver mineral reserves and an additional 34 million ounces of measured and indicated silver mineral resources, with an expected 14-year mine life.
The new plant and tailings facilities were constructed by 2,200 Bolivian workers and employs 250 local workers from Potosi and generates an additional 1,000 mining related jobs in the nearby community. Construction work at San Bartolomé, which surpassed five million man hours without a lost time accident, was recently recognized with a top safety award from the International Society of Mine Safety Professionals.
“The San Bartolomé mine, a cornerstone of Coeur’s growth, is the culmination of the efforts of a great many people, and we at Coeur are especially proud to be associated with the mining cooperatives of Potosi on this project,” Dennis E. Wheeler, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Coeur said at the inaugural event in Potosi. “Mining has been taking place here for nearly 450 years, and San Bartolomé represents an entirely new way of mining at Potosi. The San Bartolomé construction effort is of the highest quality, bringing economic development to Potosi, protecting the environment, and building a state-of-the-art processing plant under the safest levels of worker safety.”
Mr. Wheeler added, “Production from the San Bartolomé silver mine will drive a 40% increase in our silver production this year to sixteen million ounces and lead to a doubling of our 2008 operating cash flow based on current silver and gold prices.”
The mineral rights at San Bartolomé are owned by COMIBOL, the Bolivian mining authority, which leases the rights to Empresa Manquiri, Coeur’s wholly-owned Bolivian subsidiary, and to the cooperatives. Both COMIBOL and these cooperatives also receive a royalty. Mining taxes applicable to San Bartolomé production are returned to the local community in Potosi.
Local and National Bolivia Officials Speak at Inaugural Event in Praise of San Bartolomé
Those attending the Inaugural event in support of the project included representatives of the Bolivian Government, the state mining company COMIBOL, and representatives of the mining cooperatives in Potosi. They included:
Honorable Carmen Rosa Velásquez – Senator of Bolivian Government
Ing. Freddy Beltran Reyes – Representative of the Ministry of Mining and Metallurgy
Ing. Germán Elias – Departmental Secretary of Mining and Metallurgy and Representative of the Prefect of the Department of Potosi
Ing. Mario Zeballos – Municipal Councilman of the City of Potosi
Ing. Alejandro Vargas – Manager of Technical Services of COMIBOL
Mr. Benedicto Llano – President of the Departmental Federation of Mining Cooperatives of Potosi
Mr. Esteban Martinez – Vice President of the National Federation of Mining Cooperatives and representative of Reserva Fiscal Cooperative
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