Atlantic mining nova scotia The company received industry approval today to process approximately three million tons of remaining unprocessed gold ore at its Tokoi mine site in Moose River, Halifax County.
Provincial officials granted approval on April 10 for the processing operations that will handle the stored ore when mining stops in 2023. The company will not conduct new mining or extraction activities, with all work limited to the existing disturbed footprint.
The remediation process will last 10 to 14 months and will create an estimated 197 jobs while contributing $151 million to Nova Scotia’s GDP. Workers will place all the treated waste into the existing open pit.
Site reclamation began in 2024 and will continue in most areas, although officials will temporarily halt cleanup work in the mill area while the ore is processed. The county holds a $79.9 million bond from Atlantic Mining to ensure the site is fully reclaimed under environmental law requirements.
The approval comes as Nova Scotia’s mining industry supports at least 2,500 jobs that pay an average of $100,000 a year in wages and benefits. The Department of Environment and Climate Change’s Large Industrial Profile Team monitors a company’s compliance with terms and conditions of approval designed to protect the environment and human health.
Nova Scotia launched its critical minerals strategy in 2024 and updated it in 2025, identifying 20 critical minerals and four strategic minerals, including gold, as priorities for the province’s resource development.
Industrial approvals regulate daily operations at projects and facilities, and establish mandatory terms and conditions that companies must follow to protect environmental and human health standards.
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