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American mining company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Newmont Corporation is an American gold mining company based in Greenwood Village, Colorado. It is the world's largest gold mining corporation.[2] Incorporated in 1921, it owns gold mines in Nevada, Colorado, Ontario, Quebec, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Australia, Ghana, Argentina, Peru, and Suriname.[3] In addition to gold, Newmont mines copper, silver, zinc and lead.[4]
Formerly |
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Company type | Public |
ISIN | US6516391066 |
Industry | Metals and Mining |
Founded | 1921 |
Founder | William Boyce Thompson |
Headquarters | Greenwood Village, Colorado, U.S. |
Key people |
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Products | Gold, copper, silver, zinc, lead |
Revenue | US$11.8 billion (2023) |
US$−1.7 billion (2023) | |
US$−2.5 billion (2023) | |
Total assets | US$55.5 billion (2023) |
Total equity | US$29.2 billion (2023) |
Number of employees | 21,700 (2023) |
Subsidiaries | |
Website | newmont |
Footnotes / references [1] |
The Newmont Corporation bought Canadian mining company, Goldcorp in 2019 for $10 billion.
Newmont has approximately 31,600[5] employees and contractors worldwide, and is the only gold company in the S&P 500 stock market index.
The Newmont Company was founded in 1916 in New York by Colonel William Boyce Thompson as a holding company to invest in Worldwide mineral, oil, and related companies. According to company lore, the name "Newmont" is a portmanteau "New York" and "Montana", reflecting where Thompson made his fortune and where he grew up. Newmont made its first major gold investment in 1917, with a founding 25 percent in the Anglo American Corporation of South Africa. Four years later, in 1921, the Newmont Company reincorporated as the Newmont Corporation.[6]
In 1929, Newmont became a mining company with its first gold product in by acquiring California's Empire Star Mine. By 1939, Newmont was operating 12 gold mines in North America.
The company acquired interests overseas. For decades around the middle of the 20th century, Newmont had a controlling interest in the Tsumeb mine in Namibia and in the O'Okiep Copper Company in Namaqualand, South Africa.
Beginning in 1925, Newmont acquired interests in a Texas oil field. Eventually, Newmont's oil interests included more than 70 blocks in the Louisiana, Gulf of Mexico area and oil and gas production in the North Sea.
Fred Searls became president in 1947, after serving as the company's exploration geologist. Searls retired in 1954, and Plato Malozemoff took over as president.[7]
Newmont began mining at Carlin, Nevada, in 1965. The "Carlin Trend" or "Carlin Unconformity" is the largest gold discovery in North America during the 20th century. In 1971 Newmont began heap leaching low grade ores there.[8]
In 1971, the South-West African (now Namibia) Tsumeb & Kombat mines managed by Newmont, had its operations stopped during the 1971–72 Namibian contract workers strike over the contract labor system and apartheid.[9][10]
In the 1980s, Newmont thwarted five takeover bids – from Consolidated Gold Fields (ConsGold), T. Boone Pickens, Minorco, Hanson Industries and James Goldsmith – who sought to break Newmont apart and sell its assets to increase shareholder value.
In 1987, defending against a $6.3 billion bid by T. Boone Pickens, the company paid a US$33 per share special dividend to all shareholders, US$2.2 billion in cash, of which US$1.75 billion was borrowed. To reduce this debt the company undertook a divestment program involving all of its copper, oil, gas, and coal interests.[11]
As a further step in the restructuring, the company moved its headquarters from New York City to Denver in 1988. A decade later, Newmont Mining Corporation and Newmont Gold Company combined assets to form a unified worldwide gold company. Shareholders of both companies had identical interests in the reserves, production and earnings of Newmont Gold's operations.
Newmont then merged with Santa Fe Railroad (a former Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway subsidiary, sold in preparation for the merger that produced the BNSF[12]) to form North America's largest gold producer.
On June 21, 2000, Newmont announced a merger with Battle Mountain Gold. The merger was completed in January 2001.
In February 2002, Newmont completed the acquisition of Normandy Mining and Franco-Nevada. Newmont faced competition in its bid for Normandy from AngloGold. By eventually outbidding the South African company, Newmont became the world's largest gold producer, with an annual production in excess of 8 million ounces.[13]
In 2007, the company eliminated its 1.5 million ounce legacy hedge book to make Newmont the world's largest unhedged gold producer. The following year, Newmont acquired Miramar Mining Corporation and its Hope Bay deposit in the Canadian Arctic.
In 2009, Newmont purchased the remaining one-third interest in Boddington Gold Mine from AngloGold Ashanti, bringing its ownership to 100 percent.
In April 2011, the company acquired Canada's Fronteer Gold Inc. for CA$2.3 billion. This made the company the world's second-largest gold producer.[14]
In 2017, Newmont produced 5.65 million ounces of gold at all-in sustaining costs of US$924 per ounce.[15] The company reported adjusted net income of $780 million for the year,[15] and further reduced net debt down to US$0.8 billion.[15]
In 2019, it acquired Canada's Goldcorp for $10 billion.[16] In May 2023, Newmont agreed terms to purchase Newcrest.[17][18] The Deal was completed in November 2023.[19]
Goldcorp had previously been under public scrutiny for documented human-rights abuses, including poisoning river-water that led to severe illnesses in local children living close to the mining operation (https://theviolenceofdevelopment.com/the-true-cost-of-gold-in-honduras/)
In August 2004, the Indonesian Ministry of Environment filed a civil lawsuit against Newmont,[20] claiming tailings from the company's Minahasa Raya mine polluted Buyat Bay. The company was cleared by an Indonesian court, with the judge ruling the pollution charges could not be proven.[21]
In 2009, a group of NGOs awarded Newmont with the Public Eye on Davos award (a criticism for "purely profit-oriented globalization") for its Akyem project in Ghana. Newmont said the award was issued based on several paragraphs of text which “clearly were intended to distort the facts”.[22]
In 2010, Newmont was fined $4.9 million by the Ghanaian Environmental Protection Agency for not preventing, reporting and investigating a cyanide spill at Ahafo mine in an "appropriate and timely manner".[23]
Pueblo Viejo mine is an open-pit gold and silver mine in the Sánchez Ramírez Province of the Dominican Republic where mining operations started in 2012 and expect to cease in 2041.[24] It is the largest gold mine in Latin America and 13th largest gold mine in the world.[25] The mine is run by Pueblo Viejo Dominicana Corporation (PVDC), which is 60% owned by Barrick Gold Corporation and 40% owned by Newmont Corporation.[24]
Pueblo Viejo employs approximately 2,350 employees and 2,500 contractors.[26] The economic activities of the mine represent 2% of the Dominican Republic’s gross domestic product[27] and Pueblo Viejo is the largest corporate taxpayer in the country.[28]
The mine has generated an environmental conflict, because pollution from the tailings dam and windblown particulates have contaminated rivers and killed local livestock who ingested the toxins.[29] Local communities say that the mine has ruined their lives and caused many health problems: skin lesions are common;[30] children are sickened by chemical vapors;[31] and agricultural land is no longer productive.[32] Local people have asked to be relocated away from the mine since 2013,[33] but the government nor the company have responded to their requests.
The company proposed to expand the mine in 2019, meeting with fierce resistance from communities in Yamasá who would be impacted by the expansion.[34]Asset | Country | Ownership[35] | Mine Type | Metals | Projected attributable gold production in 2021 (troy ounces)[36] | Attributable gold reserves in 2020 (troy ounces)[37] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cripple Creek & Victor Gold Mine | United States | 100% | Surface | Gold, Silver | 260,000 | 2.49 million |
Nevada Gold Mines | United States | 38.5% | 10 Underground, 12 Surface | Gold, Copper, Silver | 1.37 million | 17.39 million |
Éléonore | Canada | 100% | Underground | Gold | 270,000 | 1.26 million |
Musselwhite mine | Canada | 100% | Underground | Gold | 200,000 | 1.79 million |
Porcupine mine | Canada | 100% | Underground, Open Pit, Stockpiles | Gold | 360,000 | 3.05 million |
Peñasquito Mine | Mexico | 100% | Open Pit | Gold, Silver, Lead, Zinc | 660,000 | 7.1 million |
Cerro Negro mine | Argentina | 100% | Underground | Gold | 270,000 | 2.57 million |
Merian | Suriname | 75% | Surface | Gold | 320,000 | 3.97 million |
Pueblo Viejo mine | Dominican Republic | 40% | Open Pit | Gold | 325,000 | 4.11 million |
Yanacocha | Peru | 100%[38] | Surface | Gold | 160,000 | 3.41 million |
Ahafo mine | Ghana | 100% | Surface | Gold | 515,000 | 6.06 million |
Akyem | Ghana | 100% | Surface | Gold | 400,000 | 2.27 million |
Boddington Gold Mine | Australia | 100% | Surface | Gold, Copper | 830,000 | 12.69 million |
Tanami Mine | Australia | 100% | Underground | Gold | 500,000 | 5.87 million |
Newmont has purchased and sold a number of operations in recent years:
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