AMMC is structured in two partnerships ArcelorMittal Mining Canada G.P. and ArcelorMittal Infrastructure Canada G.P. (AMIC), which are both held at 85% by ArcelorMittal with a 15% noncontrolling interest held by 9404-5515 Québec Inc., a consortium constituted, among others, of POSCO, a South Korean Steel Company and China Steel Corporation. The mines at Mont-Wright and Fire Lake are owned and operated by AMMC.
Summary:
The Mont-Wright, Fire Lake and Mont-Reed deposits are all Lake Superior–type banded iron formations, the metamorphic equivalent to other iron formations within the Labrador Trough iron district. While Mont-Wright and Fire Lake are hematite-rich deposits, Mont-Reed has a greater ratio of magnetite.
The Mont-Wright and Fire Lake mines are part of the highly-folded and metamorphosed southwestern branch of the Labrador Trough. The most important rock type in the area is the specular hematite iron formation forming wide, massive deposits that often form the crest of high ridges extending for many kilometers in the Quebec Labrador area.
The Labrador Trough consists of Paleoproterozoic sedimentary and volcanic rocks that extends for more than 1100 km, from the northwest corner of Ungava Bay south to Lake Pletpi. It forms the western part of a larger orogenic belt called the New Québec Orogen¸ which records the oblique convergence and collision of the Archean Superior Craton to the west and an Archean core zone to the east. The Labrador Trough largely represents a foreland basin and comprises three sedimentary cycles, which are together referred to as the Kaniapiskau Supergroup.
Reserves at December 31, 2023
Mineral reserves for AMMC are estimated at a cut-off grade of 15% and a mass recovery of 33%.
Mineral resources for AMMC are estimated at a cut-off grade applied for all deposits is 15% Fe with a mass recovery of 32.5%.
Category | Tonnage | Commodity | Grade |
Proven
|
2,106 Mt
|
Iron
|
29.1 %
|
Probable
|
33 Mt
|
Iron
|
31.1 %
|
Proven & Probable
|
2,139 Mt
|
Iron
|
29.1 %
|
Measured
|
1,793 Mt
|
Iron
|
28.2 %
|
Indicated
|
1,842 Mt
|
Iron
|
29.1 %
|
Measured & Indicated
|
3,635 Mt
|
Iron
|
28.6 %
|
Inferred
|
1,805 Mt
|
Iron
|
27.8 %
|
Summary:
Mont-Wright and Fire Lake are surface pit producing mines, with the mining operations carried out in conventional large-scale open pits employing industry standard technology and equipment to mine ore with grades averaging approximately 29% Fe.
The Mont-Wright mining complex and Fire Lake mine run day and night, 365 days a year, to produce more than 26 million metric tons of iron ore concentrate every year.
The Mont-Wright mining complex
This sector of operation consists of an open-pit mine, huge pieces of mining equipment, the crusher, concentrator, gigantic maintenance workshops, a warehouse with massive rooms and a train loading system.
Generally speaking, 2.6 metric tons or raw ore need to be extracted from the ground to produce one metric ton of iron ore concentrate. Drill operators drill deep 16-meter holes in line with a predetermined plan. These holes are filled with an explosive mixture that smashes the rock by blasting.
Once the rock is fragmented by blasting, it is loaded onto giant trucks by powerful shovels. The buckets of some of them have a capacity of 60 cubic verges (yards) and three or four loads are all it takes to load our largest 400-metric ton trucks – the first to make their appearance in Québec.
Fire Lake is an extraction mining site without a crusher or concentrator. Mining activities are carried out as at Mont-Wright but the mining equipment is smaller in size.
Comminution
Crushers and Mills
Type | Model | Size | Power | Quantity |
Gyratory crusher
|
|
|
|
2
|
Summary:
The ore is crushed in two gyratory crushers and the concentrator operates with seven lines of three stage spiral classifiers and horizontal filters.
Processing
- Spiral concentrator / separator
- Gravity separation
- Centrifugal concentrator
- Sintering
- Rotary kiln & Electric furnace
Summary:
All mined ore from Mont-Wright and Fire Lake is processed at the Mont-Wright processing plant, with material from Fire Lake brought in by train. Feed ore material is fed through the crusher and concentrated in the processing plant in Mont-Wright using a gravity separation method. Concentrate is shipped to PortCartier, Québec, Canada, via private railroad, to the pelletizing facilities and port operations. The main products sold are concentrate and a variety of pellets.
The concentrator at Mont-Wright consists of 8 silos to continuously receive the raw material crushed in the crusher. The blocks contained in the silos are carried to one of the seven autogenous grinders: the blocks of ore are broken down as they knock together. On leaving the grinders, the particles are sieved by vibration. The particles that are too large are returned to the grinding process and the others are directed to circuits of spirals for the concentration stage.
The 8,500 spirals enable the iron content of the raw ore to be increased via a centrifugal force principle: by adding water, the iron particles that are heavier than the tailings are separated by gravity. Concentrate with an iron content of over 66% is obtained while the tailings (mainly silica, better known as sand) is carried to the containment area that will be restored when mining is finished.
Once the water has been removed from the Mont-Wright concentrate, it is taken to the silo for loading onto trains that carry it to Port-Cartier, in four or five convoys a day.
Fire Lake is an extraction mining site without a crusher or concentrator.
The pelleting process operates with two production lines and its main stages can be summarised as follows:
- enrichment of the concentrate
- crushing of the concentrate
- filtration
- integration of additives and mixing
- sintering
- sieving
- baking.
The plant at Port-Cartier has enrichment facilities that enable the silica in the concentrate to be reduced if necessary, according to customer requirements for higher quality pellets.
After this optional stage, the concentrate is taken to one of the six grinding balls with water and additives. As they knock together inside the grinders, the balls – made of a very hard alloy – reduce the particles of concentrate to the size of a grain of dust.
The material obtained which resembles mud is pumped to one of the 10 vertical filters for partial drying. After this stage, the substance called filter cake is tipped into one of the three mixers where other additives are incorporated.
This mixture is taken into one of the 10 sintering disks positioned diagonally. These large saucers turn on themselves, forming the pellets with a rotating movement thanks to the centrifugal force and angle of the equipment.
The pellets then move to the sieving section which enables those of the right size to be selected. Pellets that are too large or small are redirected to the disks, while the ones of the right size are sent to the last stage, hardening. To do this, the brittle pellets (also called “green” pellets) are baked in one of the two large furnaces at a temperature of 1300 degrees Celsius.
AMMC continues to study and trial low-emissions iron ore pellet production. In 2021, it announced a CAD$205 million investment with support from the Quebec government, enabling AMMC to convert its entire 10 million tonnes per year pellet production to DRI pellets by the end of 2025. It will become one of the world’s largest producers of DRI pellets, the raw material feedstock for iron-making in a DRI furnace. The project includes the implementation of a flotation system that will enable a significant reduction of silica in the iron ore pellets, facilitating the production of a very high-quality pellet. It will also deliver a direct annual carbon emissions reduction of approximately 200,000 tonnes at AMMC’s Port-Cartier pellet plant, equivalent to over 20% of the pellet plant’s total annual carbon emissions. This reduction in carbon emissions will be achieved through a reduction in the energy required during the pelletizing process.
Production
Commodity | Product | Units | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015 |
Iron Ore
|
Concentrate & Pellets
|
Mt
| 22 | 24 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 24 | 25 | 25 | 26 |
Iron Ore
|
Pellets
|
Mt
| | | | 8.7 | 9.9 | 9.5 | 9.9 | | |
Iron Ore
|
Concentrate
|
kt
| | | | 14,500 | 13,900 | 15,000 | 15,400 | | |
Operational metrics
Metrics | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 |
Ore tonnes mined
| 65.3 Mt | 66.9 Mt | 65.6 Mt | 67 Mt | 66.4 Mt | 70.7 Mt | 66.8 Mt |
Annual production capacity
| | | 26 Mt of iron ore concentrate | 26 Mt of iron ore concentrate | 26 Mt of iron ore concentrate | 26 Mt of iron ore concentrate | |
Annual mining capacity
| | | | 150 Mt | | | |
Production Costs
Commodity production costs have not been reported.
Financials
| Units | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 |
Revenue
|
M USD
| 3,216 | 3,467 | 3,997 | 2,746 |
2,655
|
2,396
|
1,943
|
After-tax Income
|
M USD
| 943 | 1,171 | 1,713 | 849 |
766
|
636
|
617
|
Operating Cash Flow
|
M USD
| 997 | 1,159 | 2,310 | 922 |
1,045
|
735
|
947
|
Heavy Mobile Equipment
HME Type | Model | Quantity |
Loader
|
Komatsu L1850
|
5
|
Shovel (rope)
|
|
11
|
Truck (haul)
|
Caterpillar 793
|
55
|
Personnel
Job Title | Name | Profile | Ref. Date |
Engineering Manager
|
Blaise Potvin
|
|
Mar 21, 2024
|
General Manager - Processing
|
Romain Precheur
|
|
Mar 21, 2024
|
Mining Director
|
Michel Gagné
|
|
Mar 21, 2024
|
Plant Manager
|
Patrick Girard
|
|
Mar 21, 2024
|
VP Environment & Sustainability
|
Grace Barrasso
|
|
Mar 21, 2024
|