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Western Copper and Gold Corp T.WRN

Alternate Symbol(s):  WRN

Western Copper and Gold Corporation is a Canada-based exploration stage company. The Company is engaged in developing the Casino Project. The Casino Project is a copper-gold mining project in Yukon, Canada. The Casino porphyry copper-gold-molybdenum deposit is located in west central Yukon, in the northwest trending Dawson Range mountains, approximately 300 kilometers (km) northwest of the territorial capital of Whitehorse. The Casino project is located on Crown land administered by the Yukon Government and is within the Selkirk First Nation traditional territory and the Tr’ondek Hwechin traditional territory lies to the north. The Casino Property lies within the Whitehorse Mining District and consists of approximately 1,136 full and partial Quartz Claims and 55 Placer Claims acquired in accordance with the Yukon Quartz Mining Act. The total area covered by Casino Quartz Claims is approximately 21,126.02 hectares (ha). The total area covered by Casino Placer Claims is 490.34 ha.


TSX:WRN - Post by User

Post by EvenSteven27on Apr 15, 2024 6:38pm
96 Views
Post# 35990525

And now for something completely different

And now for something completely different Pied piper or headless horseman... we need a gold company to turn up the juice. 

Global mining investment too low to support energy transition, Rio Tinto chairman says
By David Stanway
April 15, 20243:37 PM GMT+9Updated 16 hours ago
 
Global mining investment too low to support energy transition, Rio Tinto chairman says
By David Stanway
April 15, 20243:37 PM GMT+9Updated 16 hours ago
 
 
Companies
Rio Tinto PLC
 
Rio Tinto Ltd
 
SINGAPORE, April 15 (Reuters) - Low rates of investment in the global mining sector have put the global energy transition at risk, widening the supply gap in critical minerals like copper, Rio Tinto (RIO.AX), opens new tab(RIO.L), opens new tab chairman Dominic Barton said on Monday.
"The gap is humungous, and I am actually very worried about whether we will be able to close (it)," Barton said via video link at the Ecosperity conference in Singapore.
The global effort to slash climate-warming carbon dioxide emissions will depend on securing large supplies of minerals like copper, lithium and cobalt required to build electric vehicles, solar plants and wind farms.
 
The amount of metals required for each kilowatt of generation capacity has risen by 50% since 2010, and electric cars require six times more minerals than traditional combustion engine, according to the International Energy Agency.
Barton said the world isn't just facing a shortage of minerals, but also a shortage of the capital required to dig new mines, which take far longer to develop than before.
 
"The mining industry has reduced its investments significantly since the 2015-2016 period ... We're hundreds of billions of dollars below what we need."
He said the industry needed to build trust, and had not done a great job in persuading the public of the vital role it will play in a global decarbonisation project that could require more copper in the next 25 years than has ever before been produced.
 
He said the industry needed to do a better public relations job, adding that Rio itself had "caused our own problems" in 2020 after destroying rock shelters considered sacred by Aboriginal communities, a move Barton described as "terrible" and "embarrassing".
Scott Clements, a partner at Tribeca Capital, said there were still enormous opportunities in the mining sector that could "generate phenomenal returns".
 
"The challenge for the industry is to be seen as part of the solution and not part of the problem," he told the conference on Monday.
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