St Barbara Limited has achieved a significant regulatory milestone with the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada confirming that the company’s Initial Project Description for the 15-Mile Processing Hub passed conformity review on 2 June 2026. The submission triggers the formal planning phase for what stands to be a major gold production asset in Nova Scotia, marking a pivotal moment in the company’s development pipeline after nearly three years of project redesign and community consultation.
The IPD will now enter a 20-day public comment period, followed by a Summary of Issues review and response phase before the IAAC determines whether a Provincial Environmental Assessment Registration Document will suffice or if a full Impact Assessment is required. The regulatory pathway has been streamlined following a newly signed Cooperation Agreement between the Nova Scotia and Canadian governments, which commits to a “one project, one review” process intended to reduce duplication and improve efficiency. St Barbara is targeting submission of the Environmental Assessment Registration Document in Q3 FY27 while continuing to advance associated studies and permits in parallel.
The 15-Mile Processing Hub itself represents a consolidation of three historic mining sites: the 15-Mile Mine with four open pits and the relocated Touquoy processing facility, the Old Austen Mine as a single optimised quarry, and the Old Mitchell Mine. The project design basis, validated in January 2026’s Pre-Feasibility Study, supports gold production exceeding 100,000 ounces per annum over more than 11 years from Proven and Probable Ore Reserves. The company emphasizes that the current design incorporates years of engineering refinement and feedback from First Nation communities, local stakeholders, regulators, and environmental experts.
The economic case for approval appears compelling. St Barbara projects the hub will generate approximately C$5 billion in GDP impact across construction, operations, and closure phases, with more than 1,300 jobs created during construction and over 700 jobs sustained during operations. For a jurisdiction like Nova Scotia, these figures represent material economic stimulus and employment generation. The project’s advanced design maturity and stakeholder alignment suggest St Barbara has substantially de-risked the permitting pathway compared to earlier stages.
Investors should note that the next critical junctures are the public comment resolution period and the IAAC’s determination on assessment requirements. Should the regulator opt for the full Impact Assessment rather than EARD-only approval, the timeline would extend materially. Conversely, a streamlined pathway could position the Feasibility Study completion and potential financing discussions well within the next 12 to 18 months. St Barbara’s track record of stakeholder engagement and project redesign suggests management has addressed material concerns, though regulatory outcomes in Canadian jurisdictions remain subject to political and community variables. This announcement has been classified as price sensitive and flagged as material by the ASX.
View the full ASX announcement (PDF)
About St Barbara Limited (ASX: SBM)
St Barbara Limited is an Australian-based gold mining company with operations in Canada and Papua New Guinea. The company operates the Atlantic Operations in Nova Scotia, Canada, which includes the Touquoy mine, and the Simberi Operations in the province of New Ireland, Papua New Guinea. The company engages in the exploration, development, mining, and sale of gold, with additional interest in silver exploration.
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