BQE Water–Nuvumiut at Nunavik Nickel: cold-climate treatment lessons for mine engineers
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan
First reported on International Mining – News
30 Second Briefing
BQE Water and Nuvumiut Development have signed a three-year contract with Canadian Royalties Inc to operate seasonal mine water treatment plants at the Nunavik Nickel Project in northern Québec. The JV will manage treatment of contact water and metallurgical bleed streams under Arctic conditions, where short operating windows and freeze–thaw cycles place tight constraints on plant availability, reagent dosing, and sludge handling. For mine operators in cold climates, the deal signals growing reliance on specialist contractors to maintain compliance with stringent metal and sulphate discharge limits.
Technical Brief
- Three-year operating contract covers multiple mine water treatment plants across Nunavik Nickel operations.
- Scope includes treatment of mine contact water plus metallurgical process bleed streams from CRI’s concentrator.
- Operations must be ramped up and shut down seasonally in line with Arctic hydrological conditions.
- Process control must accommodate large seasonal variations in flow and influent chemistry from snowmelt and rainfall.
- Similar Arctic and sub-Arctic mines are increasingly outsourcing complex water treatment to specialist operators under multi-year contracts.
Our Take
Nunavik features in only a handful of our nickel items, with the Raglan Mine automation milestone nearby signalling that high-latitude Canadian nickel operations are simultaneously pushing both digital and environmental performance baselines.
With a three-year JV-style operating agreement at Nunavik Nickel, BQE Water Inc and Nuvumiut Development are effectively locking in specialised water-management capacity over at least one full planning cycle, which can materially de-risk compliance in a region where short field seasons limit remedial options.
Nickel appears frequently in our mining coverage alongside decarbonisation themes, and the combination of advanced automation at Raglan and enhanced water treatment at Nunavik Nickel suggests that northern Canadian sulphide producers are positioning themselves as low-footprint suppliers into premium ESG-sensitive nickel supply chains.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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