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Economic Development

Tungsten West steps up £45m revamp of vast Plymouth tungsten mine

Top-of-the-range equipment on order and construction work due to start on new sorting plant as company eyes full production in 2023

Inside the tungsten production facility at Plymouth's Hemerdon Mine

Work is about to accelerate on a £45m rebuild of the processing plant at Plymouth’s vast tungsten mine - which will create hundreds of jobs.

In the next few months new equipment will arrive and another building will be constructed to complete the processing line at the Hemerdon Mine, Plympton.

This will create hundreds of construction jobs and mean the mine, the third largest tungsten resource in the world, is expected to be in full production by 2023.


It will then see the current 70 workers joined by more that 200 other permanent staff, with potentially 2,400 jobs supported through the supply chain.

AIM-listed Tungsten West, which bought the mine out of receivership for £2.8m in 2019, will also be producing tin from the open cast pit and selling waste granite as aggregate for the construction industry.

“We are very excited about this,” said Max Denning, chief executive of Tungsten West. “There will be hundreds of people involved in the rebuilding phase and then 300 people working on site during its operation. That’s direct jobs.

“For the supply chain we have an eight times multiplier on every job on the mining project. And there are 20 years of mine-life.”

Tungsten West completed a feasibility study in 2021 and has been carrying out internal work on the processing plant left by previous operator Wolf Minerals Ltd at the mine.