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maplesilverbug
18th June 2009, 19:19
Compare the Japanese who are willing to um....re-refine the already refined... to the Royal Canadian Mint who lose $7 million because business picks up!

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TOKYO, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Resource-poor Japan just discovered a new source of mineral wealth -- sewage.

A sewage treatment facility in central Japan has recorded a higher gold yield from sludge than can be found at some of the world's best mines. An official in Nagano prefecture, northwest of Tokyo, said the high percentage of gold found at the Suwa facility was probably due to the large number of precision equipment manufacturers in the vicinity that use the yellow metal. The facility recently recorded finding 1,890 grammes [61 troy ounces] of gold per tonne of ash from incinerated sludge.

That is a far higher gold content than Japan's Hishikari Mine, one of the world's top gold mines, owned by Sumitomo Metal Mining Co Ltd (5713.T), which contains 20-40 grammes of the precious metal per tonne of ore.

The prefecture is so far due to receive 5 million yen ($55,810) for the gold, minus expenses.

It expects to earn about 15 million yen ($167,000) for the fiscal year to the end of March from the gold it has retrieved from the ashes of incinerated sludge.

"How much we actually receive will depend on gold prices at the time," the official said.

Some gold industry officials expect prices this year to top the all-time high above $1,030 per ounce set in 2008, on buying by investors worried about the deepening economic downturn.

(Reporting by Miho Yoshikawa; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

fullsafe
24th June 2009, 11:55
The saying goes that gold (and silver) are where you find it.
When I first started stacking and searching 15 years ago , a fellow came in to a friends prospecting shop with a mayo jar that was half full of gold! He was a plumber that was remodeling a building for the National Guard to move in and had to redo the sewer line. The previous tenant was a jewelry caster and the slag from casting had been going down the drain for years! He probably had 20 oz. of 14 karat.
At todays $900+ you can bet they now use screens over the drains!