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Ontario court ruling opens up potential road access to ‘Ring of Fire’ mineral belt

Drill samples from the Ring of Fire sit in stacks in northern Ontario.Development of Northern Ontario's mineral-rich belt could be in for a boost after a court ruled a small mining company should not have exclusive access to a transportation corridor.

TORONTO – The planned growth and development of Northern Ontario’s “Ring of Fire” mineral belt got a potential boost on Wednesday when an appeals court ruled that the small junior mining firm shouldn’t have exclusive use of a transportation corridor.

The decision opens the door to construction of a north-south route to the Ring, which is thought to contain about $60 billion of chromite and other minerals. The Ontario government supports a road, partly since it would connect with remote First Nations communities.

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In 2009, a Toronto-based company called KWG Resources Inc. staked more than 200 mining claims going from the Ring of fireside all the way down towards the CN rail line in Exton, Ont. Effectively, this gave KWG control over an important 340-kilometre access path to the mineral belt.

U.S. mining company Cliffs Natural Resources Inc. was keen to build up a road as much as the Ring that would cross a lot more than 100 of KWG’s claims. Nevertheless its tries to achieve this were thwarted.

In 2013, the Ontario Mining and Lands Commissioner rejected Cliffs’ request an “easement” on KWG’s states develop a road, saying it could negatively affect the claims.

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