On the semi-frozen surface of Faraday Lake in Canada鈥檚 subarctic, two diamond rigs are drilling around the clock. It鈥檚 spring breakup north of the 63rd parallel, which means the Kennady Diamonds Inc. exploration team is running out of time.
鈥淚t鈥檚 starting to candle,鈥 says geologist Martina Bezzola, scuffing her rubber boot over the fast-melting ice where vertical tunnels, or 鈥渃andles,鈥 have recently appeared. The thaw means the team has two weeks to extract kimberlite samples from beneath the lake before they鈥檙e banished to drilling onshore. 鈥淏asically it鈥檚 like sticking a needle into a haystack to determine what鈥檚 in the haystack.鈥
Twenty-five years after the first diamonds were found in Canada鈥檚 Northwest Territories, it鈥檚 still a game of hurry-up-and-wait. For every thousand grassroots exploration projects, only one becomes a mine. Snap Lake, one of three operating mines in the region, was shuttered by De Beers last year, a casualty of harsh geography and falling diamond prices. Government attempts to add production value with a cutting industry collapsed years ago; all that remains of 鈥淒iamond Row鈥 in the territorial capital Yellowknife is a line of derelict buildings behind barbed wire.
Gahcho Ku茅
And yet the dream lives on. At a time when global miners are shedding assets, De Beers is about to open the largest new diamond mine in the world, Gahcho Ku茅, 280 kilometers (175 miles) northeast of Yellowknife. A little further north, Rio Tinto Group last year found鈥攁nd just sold鈥攖he largest gem-quality diamond ever recorded in North America at its Diavik mine, the 187-carat Foxfire. Dominion Diamond Corp. last week agreed to extend the life of the neighboring Ekati mine beyond 2020.
鈥淭he return in diamonds is fantastic, but you need the patience of Job,鈥欌 says Jonathan Comerford, chairman of Kennady Diamonds, on site at the Kelvin Camp on Faraday Lake to represent the interests of Irish billionaire Dermot Desmond.
Desmond owns almost a quarter of Toronto-based Kennady and 23 percent of its former parent company, Mountain Province Diamonds Inc., which these days is focused on developing Gahcho Ku茅 with De Beers. Canada has a couple of marks in its favor that keep the majors interested amid a grim market, says Kim Truter, chief executive officer of De Beers Canada.
Engineering Challenge
Prices for rough stones have rebounded 10 percent this year after plunging 44 percent in the five years ending in January. The country is politically stable and has a long mining history, mitigating the snail鈥檚 pace at which projects proceed; Gahcho Ku茅 took 21 years to bring into production. And Canada鈥檚 diamond deposits tend to be predictable, with high concentrations of bridal-quality gems.
Canada produces approximately 10 percent of world diamond output by volume but about 15 percent by value, said Truter, 51. 鈥淭he price we receive for the diamonds in Canada is actually quite high compared to other regions of the world.鈥
Ice Road
So is the cost to produce them. Gahcho Ku茅鈥檚 billion-dollar price tag could have been 30 percent less elsewhere in the world, Truter says. In seven years of operation, Snap Lake never made money, crippled by the costly engineering challenge extracting diamonds from beneath a subarctic lake.
The best way to understand what it takes to mine diamonds in this part of the world is to view it from above. The landscape, for hundreds of miles in all directions, is almost entirely binary: snow-covered rock and too many lakes to count. The temperature ranges from minus 50 degrees Celsius (-58 Fahrenheit), to plus 35 in the summer. Scattered aboriginal communities inhabit the area, along with caribou and grizzlies.
Each winter, mine operators spend three months constructing a 350-kilometer ice road across this terrain. Once the ice is thick enough to support the movement of heavy equipment, a convoy of trucks crawls along at one-kilometer intervals to avoid stressing the ice. This year, the road was open eight weeks before it started to melt. After that, the only way in is by air.
Irish Billionaire
Historically, diamonds in Canada have tended to be found by lean and nimble junior exploration companies, although De Beers continues to invest heavily in exploration. Those that go broke scare off future investors, making a benefactor like Ireland鈥檚 Desmond and his private equity money invaluable.
鈥淲ithout the support of the Irish we would be up the creek,鈥 says Patrick Evans, 60, Mountain Province鈥檚 CEO and, until this April, also of Kennady. It was Desmond鈥檚 team that insisted Kennady be spun off to maximize the value of both companies. The Irish billionaire, who made his fortune in software and betting shops, has done well this year with diamonds: Kennady鈥檚 stock is up about 40 percent in Toronto. Mountain Province has gained about 60 percent. Neither company has any revenue.
Friendly Debate
Evans, Comerford and Kennady鈥檚 new CEO, Rory Moore, have flown into Kelvin Camp to go over the geological data. It鈥檚 a spare but cozy operation: two neat rows of red-walled sleep tents surrounded by an electric bear fence. There鈥檚 also a plywood office, communal washroom (hand sanitizer, no sinks), carb-heavy kitchen and a core shack. The latter is crowded with executives, a handful of camp personnel and Tom McCandless, an independent director of Kennady.
A geologist, McCandless, 61, has been wheelchair-bound since a desert bike accident in 1975. That鈥檚 never kept him out of the field; he鈥檚 spent the day gamely wheeling through snow. At frequent intervals Evans and the others step in to lift his chair in and out of buildings, vehicles and aircraft, at one point jury-rigging a sled to drag him through a challenging patch of slush.
Inside, crowded between tables of kimberlite samples and geological maps, this esprit de corps morphs into a friendly debate between McCandless and Moore as they grill Bezzola鈥檚 fellow geologist David Cox, 31, on the team鈥檚 progress. The discussion is technical but the underlying question is clear: could Kelvin Camp be sitting on the kind of deposit De Beers is developing a stone鈥檚 throw away?
Kelvin Camp
Kelvin Camp is located just up the road from Gahcho Ku茅 (or would be, if there were a road). How Ireland鈥檚 Desmond came to have a foot in both camps is a story Evans and Comerford never tire of telling.
The area was discovered by Mountain Province in the early 鈥90s. Like most exploration companies, to fund development it ended up in bed with a major, in this case De Beers.
鈥榃hat Fools鈥
Back in 2005, as Evans recounts it, De Beers was focused on developing Gahcho Ku茅 and balked at paying C$10,000 ($7,600) to extend permits on the surrounding land. 鈥淚 sat in the meeting and thought: my God, what fools,鈥 he said. Mountain Province leapt in to take over the mineral rights for free and when it got around to drilling in 2011, Evans鈥檚 instinct was validated. 鈥淚t was clear from the results we were getting that they鈥檇 put their holes in the wrong place and we asked the question: what the hell is going on?鈥
The Mountain Province team tracked down a geologist who solved the mystery: A builder changed the height of the building on which the radio beacon was located without alerting the geologists and the company ended up drilling the wrong coordinates.
How Chuck Fipke and Stewart Blusson, two prospectors down to their last nickels, found diamonds in this part of the world back in 1991 is also the stuff of legend. The discovery started a frenzy reminiscent of the 1940s gold rush on which Yellowknife was founded. Tom Hoefer, executive director of the NWT & Nunavut Chamber of Mines, remembers the heady days well. People mortgaged their houses and every helicopter for miles around was booked, ferrying prospectors to remote areas. Above the tree line, even the wood for the stakes had to be flown in after Yellowknife hardware stores ran out of two-by-fours. Some 50 million acres were staked, he says.聽
Strong Personalities
Since then, strong personalities have persevered but also, at times, got in the way of investors, says Comerford. Consolidation makes sense yet has been slow in coming. Rio Tinto鈥檚 Diavik mine and Dominion鈥檚 Ekati are on the same lake and Dominion has a 40 percent interest in Diavik.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been quite public that if they were ever for sale, we鈥檙e certainly interested,鈥 Dominion鈥檚 CEO Brendan Bell said in an interview. He said it appears 鈥淩io Tinto is committed to the diamond space and the asset isn鈥檛 for sale.鈥
In a recent interview in New York, Rio Tinto鈥檚 former head of Diamonds & Minerals, Alan Davies, wouldn鈥檛 discuss the possibility of consolidation other than to say the company is looking at options to extend Diavik鈥檚 life beyond 2024.
Not Aligned
鈥淔or whatever reason, the stars haven鈥檛 aligned quite yet鈥 for consolidation, says De Beers鈥 Truter. 鈥淭here鈥檚 probably a bit of inevitability about it.鈥
Evans agrees but for now he鈥檚 focused on more nitty-gritty matters. Back at Kelvin Camp, the Hagglunds all-terrain ground vehicle has broken down and a helicopter is being discussed as the best option to ferry the executives to the Twin Otter plane waiting a few hundred meters out on the lake.
鈥淐an鈥檛 we walk?鈥 Comerford demands impatiently. 鈥淟et鈥檚 just walk.鈥
Given the melting ice, it will mean a stroll through shin-deep water. David Cox looks at him like he鈥檚 mad. 鈥淵ou can try.鈥