Good morning, and welcome to Newmont's Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you require any assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Tom Palmer, President and Chief Executive Officer. Tom, please go ahead.
Thank you, operator. Good morning, and thank you all for joining Newmont's second quarter 2022 earnings call. Today, I'm joined by Rob Atkinson and Nancy Buese, along with other members of our executive team, and we will be available to answer questions at the end of the call. Before I begin, please note our cautionary statement and refer to our SEC filings, which can be found on our website. Newmont delivered a solid second quarter as we continue to differentiate ourselves through our leading portfolio of assets and projects, our proven integrated operating model, our balanced and disciplined approach to capital allocation, and most importantly, our values-driven commitment to our purpose of creating value and improving lives through sustainable and responsible mining.
Underpinned by these key differentiators and guided by our clear and consistent strategy, Newmont remains well-positioned to safely manage through the evolving and unprecedented challenges that our industry and world, and the world at large face. During the second quarter, Newmont produced 1.5 million oz of gold, an increase of over 150,000 oz from the first quarter and as expected. In addition, we produced more than 330,000 Gold Equivalent Ounces from copper, silver, lead, and zinc, bringing us to well over 1.8 million Gold Equivalent Ounces for the quarter from our balanced global portfolio. We generated significant operating cash flow of $1 billion and free cash flow of $514 million, an improvement of more than $260 million from the first quarter.
With $7.3 billion in total liquidity, we have maintained an investment-grade balance sheet with a net debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 0.3x, preserving our financial flexibility while we continue to invest in our most profitable organic projects and return cash to shareholders. In June, we completed the acquisition of Sumitomo's interest in Yanacocha, bringing Newmont's ownership in this operation and the exciting sulfides project to 100%. Last week, we declared a second quarter dividend of $0.55, maintaining an attractive dividend yield of between 3% and 4% for the last seven consecutive quarters. Set within our established industry-leading framework and calibrated at a $1,800 gold price, our second quarter dividend demonstrates our confidence in the strength of both our portfolio and our operating model to deliver sustainable long-term value.
In May, we published our second annual climate report, part of the suite of reports in our company's non-financial performance. To address climate change and make a real impact, we will need to leverage Newmont's leading ESG practices, our integrating operating model, and the scale and mine life of our global portfolio. These are all important components, not only for creating long-term value, but also for addressing the critical issues that our industry must solve. None more important than the elimination of fatalities. Safety is a core company value, and it is at the very heart of operating any sustainable business. I expect it to be the first consideration before anyone begins work at any Newmont location, ensuring that our workforce returns home safely after each and every shift.
We have continued our disciplined and dedicated approach to safety, maintaining a clear focus on managing the Critical Controls that must be in place at all times to prevent fatalities. During the second quarter, we completed 155,000 conversations by leaders in the field that were focused on these Critical Controls. two years ago, we commissioned mobile technology to gather consistent data globally around these important discussions, which we call Critical Control verifications. I'm pleased to say that since then, our leaders have now completed more than 800,000 of these conversations. Over the last three years, Newmont has continued to evolve our approach to safety across our global business, improving our fatality risk management program to ensure it is as effective and as insightful as possible.
By combining our learnings from significant potential events and critical control verification data, we are now able to gain a deep understanding of the fatality risks of each operation, and importantly, what is needed to be done to reduce these risks. At Newmont, we have created a robust and diverse portfolio of operations, along with a pipeline of more than 20 organic projects with the scale and mine life to deliver strong long-term results. Newmont will produce more than 60 million o unces of gold each year and almost 2 million Gold Equivalent Ounces from copper, silver, lead, and zinc. Combined, that is nearly 8 million Gold Equivalent Ounces every year for at least the next decade. The most of any company in our industry. Among our 12 operating mines and two joint ventures, nearly 9% of our attributable gold production comes from top-tier jurisdictions.
Because we firmly believe that where we choose to invest and operate matters. Underpinning our portfolio is a robust foundation of reserves and resources, which combined with the gold industry's best organic project pipeline, provides the pathway to steady production and cash flow well into the 2040s. We are in a period of meaningful reinvestment as we continue to advance our near-term projects, including the second expansion at Tanami in Australia's Northern Territory, the development of Ahafo North in Ghana, and the Yanacocha Sulfides project, the next exciting chapter in Newmont's long and profitable journey in Peru. In addition to our three near-term projects, Newmont has a deep pipeline of longer-term projects that represent growth opportunities for later in this decade and beyond.
These projects and operations are managed through a proven integrated operating model with a strong track record of delivering long-term value to all of our stakeholders. Newmont's operating model is built upon the fundamental principle that the whole is worth more than the sum of the individual parts, and it is strongly supported by our Full Potential continuous improvement program. A program that has been in place for over eight years and is more important today than it has ever been. Our team is taking the lessons learned during the pandemic to address the challenges that our industry faces today, including tight labor markets, inflation, and supply chain disruptions. As the world is reacting to these pressures, we are actively deploying strategies to reduce our exposure.
Our global supply chain team is leveraging our scale and the strong partnerships we have developed over many years with our key suppliers and equipment manufacturers. As the industry leader, we have best-in-class pricing as well as sophisticated rise and fall formulas built into our long-term contracts to reduce both volatility and mitigate logistical constraints in order to prevent disruption at our operations. Now, while we can't talk about specific contracts, several of our major equipment and part suppliers have recently issued comprehensive price increases for the industry that range from 15%-30%. However, through the efforts of our global supply chain team, we have negotiated lower price increases, in some cases of only 3%-5% for the coming year.
In addition to this, we are challenging the gold industry by implementing new technology to improve productivity and reduce labor risk, such as our transition last year to a fully autonomous haul truck fleet at Boddington. We are leveraging our Full Potential program, which has been instrumental in delivering value during these unprecedented times, helping to offset the impacts from current market conditions. We are utilizing real-time data and our global team of subject matter experts to share knowledge and talent across our global portfolio, providing critical insights and driving improved performance that our operating teams simply cannot achieve on their own. As one of the most tangible examples of this, we have designed and implemented three operational support networks covering our core areas of mining, processing, and asset management.
These global networks bring together our technical experts from around the world, providing 24-hour monitoring, coaching, and support through a consistent platform. In the mining industry, we traditionally expect our frontline leaders to obtain their own data and insights as they manage everything involved in safely leading a team of people at the start, during, and end of a shift. Through our support networks, we help our leaders by monitoring operational performance and providing insights into the areas that need their attention, saving time, improving focus, and removing the need for so many people at our mine sites. By offering a more flexible work environment, Newmont is able to attract the best talent from within and beyond our industry, creating a more diverse, motivated, and highly skilled team to coach and support not one, but all of our operations.
In addition to our dedicated and disciplined approach to cost management, you can also expect that we will remain transparent about what we are experiencing today and what we are anticipating in the future from this unprecedented environment. Over the last eight months, we have observed cost pressures, including the impact from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, an increasingly competitive labor market, and the highest global inflation rates our world has seen in nearly 40 years. As a consequence, we are anticipating an additional 7% of cost escalation this year. That is on top of the 5% we had already included in our full-year outlook we established last December. Around 1/3 of this increase is related to labor costs.
We are seeing contracted services rates that are more than 10% higher than December last year, driven primarily by strong competition for specialized labor, higher levels of post-pandemic attrition resulting in higher demand, and the pass-through of higher commodity prices and transportation costs. The next third of the impact comes from an increase in prices for global commodities and raw materials. We're observing escalation in the range of 20%-30% for certain items, such as cyanide and explosives, which is being driven by the increase in the price of natural gas and the availability of ammonia, as well as an increase in the price of steel that is being used in our grinding media and spare parts. The final third of the impact is coming from higher fuel and energy costs.
As an example, diesel prices have increased by more than $50 per barrel, adding approximately $20 per ounce to our All-In Sustaining Costs compared to our original guidance. I'll now turn it over to Rob and then Nancy for a more detailed look at our operational and financial performance. They will discuss how our second quarter results have been impacted by the current environment. I will then wrap up with an overview of our outlook for the remainder of this year as we remain focused on implementing productivity improvements and offsetting the impacts of these challenging market conditions. Over to you, Rob.
Thank you, Tom, and good morning, everyone. Turning to the next slide, let's dive into our operations and projects, starting with Africa. Akyem delivered a solid performance in the second quarter due to higher ore grade and tonnes mined, in addition to strong mill performance. The team is working to complete an open pit layback, and we expect stripping to decrease in the third quarter as we begin to reach the ore and create future optionality for both underground and open pit growth. Ahafo South delivered a strong second quarter performance, increasing gold production by more than 25% compared to the first quarter due to improved ore grades, higher underground and open pit ore tonnes mined, and steady mill performance.
Despite the challenges experienced during the first quarter from supply chain disruptions and global border closures as a result of COVID, the team continues to successfully ramp up mining rates in the Subika underground, which Tom will discuss later on. We anticipate production at Ahafo to be weighted around 60% to the second half of this year as we continue to increase underground tonnes through increased development and reach higher grades, positioning Ahafo for a strong finish to the year. Finally, the team continues to progress engineering and procurement for the Ahafo North project. All of the permitting has been completed, and we are encouraged by our recent discussions as we continue the important stakeholder engagement work with local communities, traditional leaders and regulators to ensure full land access that it is properly cleared of all structures and crops.
As I have mentioned in previous updates, this will be an important milestone which will give us the opportunity to update the remaining costs and schedule to develop this prolific ore body, ensuring that we can properly incorporate the impacts from this land access delay. As a consequence of working through this important activity, preliminary capital costs are expected to be approximately 15% higher than our original estimate, and we are anticipating a shift in commercial production from 2024 to mid-2025. We look forward to providing additional detail later this year as we work to add profitable production from the best unmined gold deposit in West Africa. Now turning to South America. Cerro Negro delivered another strong performance in the second quarter as a result of steady ore grade and ongoing improvements to mining rates and mill performance.
The team continues to advance the first wave of expansions at Cerro Negro, including the expansion of the Marianas District and the development of the Eastern District to extend existing operations beyond 2030. The development of the San Marcos decline is progressing, and we have successfully completed the first blast in the Eastern District in May of this year. An exciting accomplishment as we continue to explore and develop the district potential in Argentina. At Merian, the team delivered a steady performance despite very heavy rainfall in the second quarter, impacting mine sequencing and resulting in lower ore tons mined and milled in addition to lower grades. We anticipate higher production in the third and fourth quarter as the rainy season comes to an end, improving mill performance and reaching higher ore grades in the second half of the year.
Finally, Yanacocha continued to deliver solid production during the second quarter, accelerating ounces from the releaching program and improving recoveries from the use of a richer leaching solution. We anticipate production at Yanacocha to be weighted around 55% to the first half of this year as the site decreases ore tonnes mined and placed on the leach pads while we work to develop the first phase of the Sulfides project. Engineering is nearly 60% complete and procurement is around 45% complete, with approximately 1/3 of the local contracts already awarded. As you can see in the picture here, the team is progressing the camp construction and early earthworks as planned, ensuring we have in place proper accommodations for our construction workforce and for future mine operations.
The project team is preparing for an investment decision in late 2022, and we currently expect capital spend to be around $2.5 billion from the full funds approval date, with commercial production in mid-2026. We look forward to providing an update towards the end of the year, and we remain very excited about the opportunity to develop the sulfide potential at Yanacocha. Now over to North America. Peñasquito delivered another solid quarter as higher gold and silver grades helped to offset the impact from planned mill maintenance and higher costs associated with the workforce negotiation announced earlier this month.
As part of the newly established profit-sharing agreement, Newmont Peñasquito has agreed to pay an uncapped profit-sharing bonus up to 10% of profits from the operation, with an expense of $70 million related to 2021 results, adding more than $65 per ounce to North America's second quarter All-In sustaining Costs for gold and over $180 per ounce for co-product Gold Equivalent Ounces. For 2022, we expect the profit-sharing bonus to add additional costs of around $15 million at an $1,800 gold price, adding approximately $4 per ounce to North America's All-In Sustaining Cost for gold and $10 per ounce for co-product Gold Equivalent Ounces.
We reached this agreement with the workforce at Peñasquito without interruption to the site, and we continue to build an aligned and valued relationship with union leadership to support the safe and viable operation of the mine well into the future. Looking ahead, costs are expected to stabilize as gold production from this large polymetallic mine increases in the third quarter due to higher grades delivered from the Peñasco Pit. While co-product grades from silver, lead, and zinc begin to decline in the second half of the year as planned due to mine sequencing. Moving to Canada, productivity and costs continue to be impacted by ongoing challenges stemming from a very competitive labor market. In addition to these challenges, Éléonore experienced COVID-related absenteeism during the second quarter as flight capacity restrictions and strict protocols remained in place to protect the health of our First Nation communities and workforce.
Musselwhite and Porcupine both delivered an improved performance compared to the first quarter, increasing ore tons mined and processed, with Musselwhite delivering its best monthly performance in over three years. Productivity and ore grades at both sites are expected to continue improving in the second half of the year as mining at Musselwhite progresses to the north in the PQ Deeps area, and Porcupine reaches higher grades from Hoyle and Borden beginning in the third quarter. Finally, at CC&V, the site delivered improved production compared to the first quarter due to higher ore tons mined and processed at our leach facilities. As Tom will discuss later on, the mine is now operating as a leach-only facility with steady production from optimized ore placement and declining per unit costs for the remainder of the year. Now, turning to Australia.
As mentioned during the first quarter earnings call, the Western Australian border was reopened in early March, resulting in significantly higher case counts, ongoing testing requirements, and strict close contact protocols throughout the state. Approximately 1/3 of the Boddington workforce and half of the Tanami workforce tested positive for COVID in the second quarter, and high levels of absenteeism from positive cases and close contact isolation protocols continued to challenge productivity at both sites. In addition, Australia is experiencing a tightening of the labor market as a competition for skilled workers and contracted services has intensified in recent months. Yet despite these challenges, Boddington delivered a strong second quarter performance. The team reported an increase in gold and copper production of more than 25% compared to the first quarter as higher mill throughput and grade more than offset lower tons mined due to inclement weather.
Performance from Boddington's fleet of fully autonomous haul trucks continues to improve each quarter, and for the remainder of the year, Boddington will focus on achieving record mill throughput rates and increasing tons mined from this cornerstone asset. At Tanami, the site also delivered improved production with an increase of more than 25% compared to the first quarter due to higher ore grades, an increase in tons mined, and improved mill performance, helping to offset the impacts from higher contracted services costs in a very competitive labor market. With the ongoing challenges of securing specialized labor and contracted services, the team continues to successfully progress the second expansion of Tanami, a project that will extend mine life beyond 2040. Nearly 90% of the project engineering and procurement has been completed, protecting the project from a number of inflationary pressures.
During the third quarter, the team will complete the reaming of the 1.5 km-deep, 5.5-meter-wide shaft, and the installation of the headframe and hoisting infrastructure, which as you can see here, is nearly 95% complete. As I have mentioned in previous updates on this project, this will be an important milestone as we evaluate the remaining schedule and cost to complete the project, with the key work remaining involving the concrete lining of this production shaft. This process will also ensure that we properly incorporate the significant impacts from COVID-related restrictions and protocols and the current market conditions for labor and materials. We continue to operate in a very competitive labor market in the Northern Territory, with significant demand from mining competitors and infrastructure initiatives throughout Australia.
Based on our preliminary view, we expect capital costs to be approximately 25% higher than our prior estimate and a shift in commercial production from 2024 into early 2025. We look forward to providing additional detail later this year, and we remain excited to deliver significant ounce, cost, and efficiency improvements at this world-class asset. With that, I'll turn it over to Nancy on the next slide.
Thanks, Rob. Let's start with a look at the financial highlights. Newmont delivered a solid performance in the second quarter with $3.1 billion in revenue at a realized gold price of $1,836 per ounce, adjusted EBITDA of $1.1 billion, and solid free cash flow of $514 million. Our strong cash flow generation allows Newmont to provide superior shareholder returns, largely through our industry-leading dividend framework. Last week, we declared a regular quarterly dividend of 55 cents per share, calibrated at $1,800 per ounce, demonstrating our confidence in our future outlook and our commitment to leading returns. As Tom mentioned earlier, we're in a period of meaningful reinvestment, an essential component in growing production, improving margins, and extending mine lives.
In the second quarter, we invested more than $600 million through capital, exploration, and advanced project spend as we continue to progress our near-term projects and invest in our future. In July, we paid $34 million in advanced project spend, part of our initial $100 million commitment to Caterpillar as we work to develop autonomous battery electric haul trucks for our open pit at CC&V and our underground mine at Tanami. Compared to the first quarter, Adjusted Net Income declined more than $0.20 due to the macroeconomic factors that Tom mentioned earlier. In addition to lower realized metal prices for gold, copper, silver, lead, and zinc.
We sold 46% of our metal in the month of June at an average gold price of $1,834 per ounce, substantially decreasing our average realized gold price for the quarter compared to the LBMA gold price of $1,871 per ounce. Average realized metal prices were also impacted by $105 million of unfavorable mark-to-market adjustments on provisionally priced sales due to a sharp decline in metal prices on June 30. These impacts alone resulted in a reduction to net income of approximately $0.19 per share compared to the first quarter, largely offsetting a 12% increase in gold sales volumes due to higher production from our operations in Australia and Africa.
In addition, we experienced an increase of approximately $80 million from higher labor and materials costs, and nearly $50 million from higher diesel and energy prices compared to the first quarter. As Rob mentioned, we incurred a $70 million expense in the second quarter related to the Peñasquito profit-sharing agreement. These impacts, along with smaller, less meaningful items, resulted in second quarter Adjusted Net Income of $362 million or $0.46 per diluted share. Despite the current market environment, our capital allocation priorities remain unchanged with a clear strategy, to reinvest in our business through exploration on organic growth projects, to maintain financial strength and flexibility on our balance sheet, and to continue to provide industry-leading returns to shareholders.
In the first half of this year, we delivered on each of these priorities by progressing our profitable reinvestment into the business with the advancement of our near-term projects and an ongoing commitment to our robust exploration strategy, enhancing our ownership of world-class assets in proven mining jurisdictions through the acquisition of the remaining interest in Yanacocha and the Sulfides project, maintaining our industry-leading dividend of $2.20 per share on an annualized basis, and sustaining a strong balance sheet with $7.3 billion in liquidity and a net debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 0.3x . Preserving Newmont's financial flexibility with no debt due until 2029.
As we look towards the second half of the year, we remain confident in our ability to continue delivering strong results and free cash flow to maintain our disciplined approach to capital allocation and creating long-term value for the business and all of our stakeholders. With that, I'll hand it back to Tom to talk about what to expect for the remainder of 2022.
Thanks, Nancy. Turning to the next slide. During our first quarter earnings call in late April, we provided an update on the impacts to our managed operations as a consequence of safely managing through the Omicron surge over the first four months of this year. We also discussed the emerging impacts from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, combined with the ongoing impacts from the global pandemic on labor markets and global supply chains, and as a consequence, input costs. We advised that we would be closely monitoring these matters during the second quarter and would provide an update with our Q2 earnings in July. As a consequence of this work, we have decided to update our full-year guidance to incorporate the following items.
First, as we discussed in our earnings call in April, ramp up mining rates at our new Subika underground mine at Ahafo South have been impacted by supply chain disruptions that have delayed the delivery of the required production drills and global border closures that have impacted labor availability of the key talent necessary to develop this new mine and train our operators. As also discussed in April, I can now confirm that we are advancing the development of a third production level at Subika, which will add optionality for this mine and minimize future disruptions. We expect first ore from this new third level around the middle of next year.
Second, as we discussed in April, with the pending conclusion of our contract to supply concentrate from Cripple Creek & Victor, Nevada Gold Mines, we stepped back to assess our operating strategy at Cripple Creek & Victor to determine if there was the potential for a simpler, higher value, longer life Leach-Only Operation that does not carry the complexity and cost of running a mill to process a relatively small amount of the ore mined. This work has now been completed, and we have made the decision to put the mill into care and maintenance and move to a heap Leach-Only Operation, reducing production levels into the second half of this year and beyond as a consequence. Third, as Rob discussed, we continue to be impacted by the ongoing challenges associated with safely managing through the global pandemic.
These challenges are particularly pronounced in Canada and Australia, where we continue to adhere to strict close contact isolation protocols and testing requirements, impacting productivity and increasing costs. Finally, as I discussed earlier, the impact on our input costs from escalation in the three key areas of labor, materials and consumables, and fuel and energy. These impacts to our managed operations have been built into our second half forecast as we work to address the critical global issues we face today and deliver on our updated guidance. For 2022, we now expect to produce 6 million ounces of gold, which is within our original guidance range, but now incorporates the following changes from the impacts I just described.
80,000 oz at our Ahafo South operation, 50,000 oz across our Canadian operations, 40,000 oz at Cripple Creek and Victor, and 30,000 oz across our Australian operations. The impact from these lower production volumes, coupled with higher input prices from inflationary pressures, has also increased our gold All-In Sustaining Costs for this year to $1,150 per oz. We remain within guidance for Sustaining Capital. However, we anticipate our spend to be weighted around 55% to the second half of this year due to global supply chain delays in the first half and higher input costs. The unprecedented and evolving market environment has also impacted our expectations for Development Capital since we established our guidance in December last year.
As a consequence, we have reduced our estimates for Development Capital for this year to $1.1 billion, incorporating delays in spending primarily associated with the Ahafo North and Yanacocha Sulfides. In addition, over the next few months, we will pass through the land access milestone for Ahafo North and the completion of shaft reaming milestone for the Tanami Expansion and be in a position to clearly evaluate the remaining cost and schedule to complete both these important projects. Building on the trends that Rob just described, we'll be in a position to provide additional detail on both these projects later this year. As we look ahead, we expect that inflationary pressures and the impacts from a competitive labor market will persist into 2023, resulting in production levels and unit costs that will be similar to this year.
We are actively working on our 2023 business plan and look forward to providing you additional detail on our long-term outlook when we deliver our annual guidance in early December. We will continue to be transparent regarding the challenges we are managing as a mining industry, and we remain firmly committed to advancing the initiatives that are most important to our business, including climate change. In May, we published our second annual climate report, providing stakeholders with a more comprehensive understanding of how we manage the impacts of climate change at our operations and projects. We believe that climate change is one of the greatest existential threats to our way of life, and this report outlines Newmont's climate related risks and opportunities, our strategic planning around various climate change scenarios, and the specific actions we are taking to reduce our carbon footprint.
In addition to our climate report and our annual sustainability report published in April, we will launch Newmont's inaugural tax transparency report during the third quarter, which will provide an overview of the taxes we pay as part of the value we create in the countries where we operate. In closing, we have a tremendous opportunity to address the challenges of our dynamic and changing world, from inflationary pressures and global supply chain disruptions to climate change and reducing fatalities in the mining industry. Guided by our clear and consistent strategy, we believe that Newmont has the size, scale, leadership, and experience to navigate these challenges as we continue into our next 100 years of sustainable and responsible mining. We are both ready and excited for what is ahead. With that, I'll turn it over to the operator to open the line for questions. Thank you, operator.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause to assemble our roster. Our first question comes from Mr. Lawson Winder from Bank of America. Lawson, your line is open.
Hi, Tom, Nancy, and Rob. Good morning. Thank you for the update. I wanted to start on the dividend. In light of, you know, everything that's happening in terms of cost inflation and as well as, you know, your comments and plans to spend quite a bit on capital projects in 2022, 2023, 2024, and perhaps even beyond, during this period of meaningful investment when, you know, free cash flow could be sort of pressured by these two factors, I mean, is the current dividend sustainable? Secondly, you've commented, Nancy, in the past that the dividend payout levels are assessed each quarter. I'm curious, when you think about that assessment and you go through that process, is it the yield that you're focusing on or is it the payout ratio? Thank you very much.
Thanks, Lawson, and good morning. I'll pick up, and Nancy, if you wanna chip in, I'll pass across to you. Lawson, the key aspect of our dividend framework is gold price. We look back at gold price over an extended period of time, not necessarily any volatility you may see in a particular quarter. Look at the gold price over an extended period of time, and we sit down and have that discussion with our board to ultimately decide the dividend that we pay, and determine the cash that we've generated and our capacity to pay a dividend. If you look back over a six-month, nine-month, 12-month period, gold price is averaging around between $1,800- $1,850 an oz over that period of time.
It's the gold price which drives our dividend framework. Then we look at our capacity to pay in terms of a percentage, the free cash flow we're generating based upon that gold price. Nancy, you might wanna comment on yield. It's more gold price than yield.
Yeah. It's certainly around gold price and margins much more. We're not solving for a particular yield. I would also indicate too, we've been on the more conservative side with the 40% payout at $1,800 as we were entering this period of reinvestment. The other piece I would note was when we put the framework in place several years ago, we started and have continued to enjoy quite high cash balances. We indicated at that time that that gives us quite a glide path if prices were to change. We have a great deal of conservatism built into the framework and the ability to continue to consider and evaluate based on those cash balances and our ongoing outlook.
Thanks, Nancy. To build on that, we also recognize that as a long-term business that will reinvest from time to time, you'll have periods of greater reinvestment and lower reinvestment over year-over-year or over a period of time. We take that long-term view into consideration as we look at the spend profile of Development Capital.
Great. Thank you for those comments. Very helpful. Maybe I would ask it just one follow-up along the lines of the dividend, which is when you speak of your capital allocation framework, which is, you know, reinvest in the business and maintain the balance sheet and then and then three, with industry-leading returns. Should we think of it as being one, two, three? So reinvesting first, strong balance sheet second, and then, you know, sort of if there's capital left over, then goes into the dividend? Or, you know, is there a bit of give and take there? For example, you know, could you sort of delay some of these projects in order to maintain a sort of more competitive dividend?
Yeah. The goal that we have is the long-term stability of the business, and that absolutely requires reinvestment in these significant capital projects. That will continue to be a very high priority for us, and certainly our investment-grade ratings and our balance sheet stability are also important. We will endeavor to maintain our margins, so we can deliver on all three of those priorities. Certainly the long-term value of the business is very important to us. We'll continue to calibrate and balance across all three of those imperatives, but I would say reinvestment is certainly quite critical.
Okay. That's very helpful. Just maybe sort of a conceptual maybe a bit of a longer term question, but I mean, when you look at the cost pressures that you're facing and particularly the labor difficulties, I mean, does this create an imperative to accelerate your automation program and do what you did at Boddington with a greater number of mines? To what extent can you accelerate that?
Yes. Thanks, Lawson. Good question. I think technology is clearly part of the lever you have as a mining company to improve productivity and ultimately reduce costs. Rob, you might wanna comment. I think we have significantly benefited from having autonomous haulage in place at Boddington. Probably less so from the cost pressure at this point in time, Lawson, more directly as opposed to the productivity, given what Western Australia has seen in terms of the introduction of the virus to that state over the course of the second quarter.
Rob, I think if we had still had conventional people operating trucks at Boddington, there would have been quite a significant impact through the second quarter, as I think some mining companies who have conventional fleets in Western Australia will have experienced through the second quarter of this year.
Yeah. Without a doubt, Tom. The unpredictability of the virus, not knowing who's gonna turn up each day, would have really impacted. To have 36 trucks guaranteed running day in, day out has really delivered not only certainty, but continued productivity. It's been a good news story.
Lawson, thanks, Rob. Lawson, we actually moved. We have a control room that oversees these fleet of autonomous trucks. In the latter part of last year, knowing that borders would eventually open up in Western Australia, we actually built a fallback control room. On the village, on the Boddington mine site, we had several rooms set up from within which you could control the mine at Boddington so that if we did end up with a case of some of the key operators testing positive, they could continue to isolate and manage the mine from the comfort of their room in the village. We're well-positioned to use technology in this particular instance.
I think it will be a key driver in the mining industry when we think about how we can manage some of the cost and inflationary pressures that we're experiencing in certain jurisdictions.
I'm gonna ask one more. I apologize to my colleagues if I've asked too many questions here, but I just wanted to get your thoughts on buy versus build, just given the CapEx inflationary pressures here. Is there an incentive here to perhaps you know look at additional M&A opportunities and you know particularly larger, more meaningful M&A opportunities? I'll leave it there. Thank you so much for your patience.
Thanks. Thanks, Lawson. For those waiting in line, we'll stay on the call. With the amount of information we've shared this quarter, we'll stay on the call and work through everyone's question. Lawson, our strategy doesn't change. We are very much focused on running our business and investing back in our business. The best investments you can make are back within the projects that you know very, very well. That is our main focus, delivering value from our 12 managed operations and bringing on and developing our organic project pipeline.
That doesn't mean that our radar isn't turned on, and if an opportunity presented where we could pick up an asset or a portfolio that met Newmont's criteria around size, scale, cost profile, and jurisdiction, then we would run the ruler over that if we felt that we could add more value with that asset or portfolio sitting within our operation. To be frank, 99% of the people who work at Newmont are focused on delivering value from the portfolio that we are managing today. Thanks, Lawson.
Thank you. Our second question comes from Fahad Tariq from Credit Suisse. Fahad, your line is open.
Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my two questions. First, on the labor shortage that you're seeing, particularly in Australia and Canada, can you just touch on the steps you are taking to address that shortage going forward?
Yeah. Thanks, Fahad. I'll kick off, and Rob, you might want to build on both of those countries. Fahad, it's if you think about labor, it's our workforce, the people who are Newmont employees, is relatively stable. We're seeing turnover or voluntary attrition that is at higher levels than we've maybe seen in the past or towards the higher level, but still within manageable levels of what we've seen in the past. The inflationary pressures is really coming from the contracted services or the particular technical expertise that we see. It's the labor you need to bring in to do large shutdowns or to repair specialized equipment or to do particular contracted services work.
There's the additional cost that we're starting to see as people bid for work through the work that we send that way. That is that area that we're watching very carefully. The area that equally is important to me, if not more important to me, is actually having the people you need to do the work. We have a scope of work we need to do for a shutdown of a mill that you might take down, say, a couple of times a year. If we can't get all of the people that you need, then how are we thinking about the scope of work to ensure that when we button that mill up and recommission it, that we can run reliably until its next shutdown.
There's the cost pressure, but probably more important for me is ensuring that we get the right people working on the equipment to ensure that it is maintained at the right level. Rob, did you want to build on that in Australia and Canada?
Yeah. I'll just give one example, Fahad, that at the last Boddington shut, we were 260 contractors short, and literally, we had some companies defaulting on entire packages of work. So that really means that we're spending a lot more time with our contractors and our business partners to make sure that we're aligned with those ones, not only for the short term, but also for the long term, and continuing to deepen those relationships. I think just going back to what Tom said about our own employees is that you know, the value proposition that Newmont offers with the safety aspect, our environmental credentials, as well as the leadership and the working conditions, that is very, very attractive to many people, both inside our company and outside.
It really is around our contracting partners where we're spending most time and most work to deepen those relationships.
Just to build a little more on that, Fahad . In my remarks, I talked about one of the measures we've got in place to mitigate some of these inflationary pressures are our operational support networks. One of those is in asset management, which is obviously around how we do our maintenance work. Through that asset management program, we are now looking at our maintenance shutdowns across our 12 managed operations around the globe. Looking at how we can smooth out the timing of those shutdowns and when we do the different scopes of work.
As there are particular specialist skills that are rare around the world, we're ensuring that we're able to balance their use across our various operations to ensure that we mitigate that risk of not having that critical resource available to do important maintenance work.
Okay. Thank you. Just my second question, switching gears to Yanacocha Sulfides. I noticed the CapEx estimate didn't change in this press release. Just curious if a CapEx review is done quarterly or monthly, or if we should expect something as part of the investment decision. If the CapEx review was done and the estimate wasn't changed, what's different about the dynamic in Peru versus other parts of the world where you're seeing, you know, labor and materials inflation? Thanks.
Thanks, Fahad. Where we're at with the Sulfides project is we've passed through the 50% engineering mark, which means that's when it's a. For a project of this size or any mining project, that's a significant amount of engineering to have completed at this stage of a project. We're now dropping out the quantities right as we speak through this quarter as we build towards investment decisions, and using those quantities to determine both the definitive schedule and the definitive estimate. The key amount of work or material that's still to come with Sulfides, if you recall, we've actually ordered a number of long lead time items.
The autoclave shells themselves, specialized steel involved with that, oxygen plants, key electric, mill motors and the like. We have de-risked that project because of both cost and schedule by ordering some of those critical components and managing their lead times. Looking forward, there are two key components. It's all the, what we call the bulks or structural steel to build a plant and all the steel involved in fabricating the amount of tanks and pipes that you have around this processing facility. There's the cost of steel, both specialist steel and standard steel for that work, and labor. Now, in the Peruvian context, we'll direct hire.
Labor is something that we've got a lot of control to be able to manage, and it'll be very much a local workforce. The risk is in the escalations that the world is seeing around the cost of steel. In giving an indication in this update of $2.5 billion from the point of full funds approval, we are incorporating an early look into some of the escalation we're seeing in steel for that go forward number from full funds. There is some consideration for that, Fahad, as we're right in the middle of doing our definitive estimate and schedule as we speak.
That's very clear. Thank you.
Thanks, Fahad.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Jackie Przybylowski from BMO Capital Markets. Jackie, your line is open.
Hi, Jackie. You there?
Jackie, unfortunately, we are not receiving any audio from you. Can you please make sure that you are unmuted locally?
Operator, we'll take the next question, allow Jackie to see if we can get that line connected. Let's go to the next caller, and we'll pick Jackie up again.
Of course. Our next question comes from Josh Wolfson from RBC Capital Markets. Josh, your line is open.
Thank you very much. Back to the topic of capital allocation, Tom and Nancy. On the theme of the dividend, the existing policy in place, I think, had talked about $300 gold price increments being the key factor in determining what the payout was gonna be. Nancy, I believe you mentioned that there had been some conservatism incorporated in there. You know, we're seeing in the current environment, gold prices come off and still cost inflation be meaningful. Does the current policy still maintain its relevance, or is there some sort of additional thoughts that we should sort of be thinking about rather than strictly that $300 increment determining the payout?
Yes. Thanks, Josh. I might pick up that for the start, Nancy. Have you build on it. I think we don't. Our dividend policy is deliberately set up to be stable and robust over the longer term. Although we're seeing some volatility in gold price during the last few weeks, we'd need to see how that plays out going forward, and I mean, there's lots of pundits and authorities that have views on what gold price may do or not do. We'll continue to follow that framework, look back at the gold price over an extended period of time, the cash we've generated and are generating, and make judgments within our framework.
I think the area that as we look forward in terms of the dividend framework is the debate we're having around what the floor is in the gold price, and then ultimately what gold price we use for doing our mine planning and for determining our reserves and resources and picking up the conversation we had on last earnings calls and conversations we've had since then. We're still midstream in that debate, looking at all of those things. If we were to lift the gold price that we use for mine planning and for reserve setting, then we would step back and look at our dividend framework and the construct around that floor in the gold price, which will have moved.
I think, Nancy, that's probably the most material thing, Josh, in terms of your question, but if you wanna build on that.
Yeah, that's exactly right, Tom. If you remember back to our framework, we had indicated a dollar-based dividend at $1,200 gold price. Through the inflationary pressures and what we are seeing, as Tom indicated around reserve pricing and everything else, the question becomes what is that floor today? What you may end up seeing, and we've still got quite a lot of work to do, is a slight shift in the framework, but certainly we have the ability and we'll retain the ability to pay a dividend into the future.
Great. Thank you for that insight. And then also on the share buyback, you know, I noticed there hasn't been much activity year to date and, you know, obviously look at the move today, but even before that, you know, prices were pretty much below where the stock was trading throughout 2021 when there was meaningful activity. You know, what's the current thought process on how cash is allocated towards the buyback?
Yeah, thanks for the question, and it's one where we continue to evaluate. As we've indicated previously, it's a very opportunistic tool, and so we will use that at certain times. As we've been doing the work over the past quarter to evaluate the impact on inflationary pressures with our capital projects in particular, we've made the decision to think about where we wanna spend our dollars, and that's really what's resulted in us holding for the moment. We will continue to evaluate our share price and the use of our cash. But yes, I would consider that to be an opportunistic tool that we will certainly use from time to time. We do have just a bit under $500 million remaining on the existing program.
Okay. Thank you very much.
Thanks, Josh.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Tanya Jakusconek from Scotiabank. Tanya, your line is open.
Great. Good morning, everyone. Can you hear me?
Loud and clear. Thank you, Tanya. Good morning.
Good morning, Tom. Thank you for taking my questions. I have a couple. I'm gonna start the first one maybe to Rob. I just wanna figure out what's happening at Tanami Phase Two, 'cause I was quite surprised at the increase in capital to that extent of 25%. That's mainly new projects that are coming in, and so 25% was a, quite a big number for me. And also the slippage of over a year was quite a slippage for me. I'm trying to understand what exactly is happening there to have had that amount of capital increase and slippage when we were quite advanced in that project.
Thanks, Tanya. Look, I'll pick that up and then pass for Rob for more color. The key milestone with the sinking of a production shaft of that depth, so 1.5 km, 1 mile deep and 5.5 meters wide, is you get to this point, where we now have a hole essentially within weeks away from being open at that width and depth.
To be able to move down and survey the conditions of the wall all the way down to understand therefore the work you have to do in lining that shaft, to do whatever bolting and shotcreting you have to do, and then to come down and do the establishment of the form work and the installation of the concrete lining. We're always building to this point in time where we will be able to survey the shaft and understand the time and materials required to complete the job. Put it in perspective for everybody on the call.
If you've ever seen a skyscraper being built, and the lift well going up, with normally the branding of whoever's building the building, you'll see the lift well going up in sort of a few meters once a week or every few days as they're putting the formwork together and lifting that structure up to establish that lift well for the height of that building. You'll now notice that takes many months to do that. We are about to start that process upside down for this shaft, and it's a depth that's the equivalent to three Empire State Buildings that we're heading underground to put the formwork in place where each and every day we're establishing formwork, pouring concrete, letting it set, moving forward, unpacking, moving forward, another step. We're into that serious task.
We have stepped back now that we have the shaft almost finished. We've done an initial survey. We've got to do the final survey, and then we can sit down with our contracting partners with absolute clarity on the condition of that shaft and the time and materials required over the next 18-24 months to line that shaft with concrete and the other supporting infrastructure all the way down.
We haven't provided an update on Tanami Two in terms of cost or schedule since the beginning of last year. What you're seeing us update or give you a trend while we do that remaining work is an indication now of the time and materials to complete that work with a clearer understanding of what the shaft looks like and a clearer understanding of what the inflationary conditions are in the Australian market. It is today's pricing and therefore cost and schedule based upon a hole we now have largely open in the ground that goes 1.5 km down. That those sorts of increases aren't dissimilar to the escalations that we've seen as an industry, particularly in Australia, over that 18-month period.
Rob, did you wanna provide any color on top of that?
Yeah. Thanks, Tanya. I'll just build off a couple of things that Tom said. In general terms, you know, aside from being at the moment in time where we can really get the specific quantities of what it's going to take to line that shaft, the way in which I'd look at the increases, about 60% of that is also due to COVID. You know, some of the key factors in that is that half of our project team was based in WA, so actually getting them there, we had that two weeks where we had a COVID case at Tanami, we had to shut down the whole operation, which ended up delaying the project by at least six weeks.
With the absenteeism, labor shortages, and logistics as well, that has also caused significant delay as well as the cost. I think the final point, just to really echo what Tom said, is that, you know, at the early part of a project, we obviously have engineering that we assume, but it's only now that we've actually done the work, you can actually see the geology, the overbreak, the actual specifics. Those engineering amounts or the engineering maturity have changed quite markedly. While I say about 60% of the capital increase is due to COVID, about 25% is really due to, you know, that engineering maturity among other things.
The last thing I'd certainly say, Tanya, is that hopefully you can see in the picture, you know, there is significant work that has been accomplished. You know, it's been done safely. You know, during a COVID pandemic, we're very, very proud of what we've achieved. As Tom said, you know, this is a point in time we're able to assess what have the last 18 months really meant to that project. This is the outcome.
Thanks, Robert. Tanya, still an absolutely terrific project. This production shaft, the crusher chamber underneath, opens up one of the great gold resources in the world. Still incredibly excited about this project as we reach this milestone and have greater clarity on the costs and schedule to bring it home.
Okay. Maybe just on the other projects, and I know I think it was Josh that asked about the CapEx at, you know, Yanacocha Sulfides. I'm just wondering, you mentioned that you've done the costing as of now, but you still are working on some steel and others. As we get to December, when you have to make an investment decision on that one, you know, I just wanna clarify, we are expecting potentially a further update on that one, including maybe Cerro Negro and Pamour?
Yeah. Thanks, Tanya. Why don't I pick up sulfides again, and Rob, maybe just cover off where we're seeing Cerro Negro and Pamour sitting. We have, as we've looked at some of the inflationary or escalation pressures on steel in particular and in providing that, sulfides number, the go-forward number of $2.5 billion from full funding is starting to incorporate some early views and trending views as to what that number looks like. We still have to do the definitive estimates, which will actually give us some quoted numbers. But we are starting to incorporate in that number some of those things in terms of the update this quarter. Rob, did you want to cover Cerro Negro and.
Yeah. I'll kick off with Pamour, Tanya. That's certainly good work is progressing there at the moment. That, as you may remember, a large part of the Pamour project is really about dewatering the current pit. We're well on track for having all the dewatering installed and mechanically complete by the end of this year. We actually take it forward to the investment committee in the latter part of this year for the actual layback. You know, we'll be able to provide the assumptions and the estimate there post that. The good thing about Pamour is that it's certainly progressing well. Certainly at Cerro Negro, you know, there's a lot of work going on there at the moment.
We've got three portals, which we're working on and have established. That's going great guns. I mentioned about the first blast as well. We are working along there quite nicely. Certainly again, come the end of the year, we'll provide updates, but it's really going to be more about progress and perhaps an update in terms of development. We're still looking at $300 million development CapEx for Cerro Negro in total. Again, the key thing I just want to get across is the very good progress that we're making at Cerro Negro, in particular around productivities.
Okay. Lastly, just another technical question. How should we think about CC&V going forward from an operational standpoint? I know you gave us guidance of reduction for this year, but I'm just keen on understanding this asset, just longer term, how we should be thinking about it.
Thanks, Tanya. Maybe I'll pick that one up again, Rob, and build on it. CC&V moving to focus on open pit mining and heap leach only. We will be working to have CC&V running as simply as it possibly can, as efficiently as it possibly can because it's got a single-minded focus on mining efficiently and stacking on the heap leach efficiently. With that focus, we expect that we'll have a mine that's very long life because of that simplicity and that efficiency. Rob, did you wanna.
No, I think that's the key. For me, Tanya, it's about how do we strip as much cost out of that operation. In particular, you know, the operating support networks, how do we leverage off that, the proximity to Denver, and obviously the technology that we're working on with Caterpillar. The key to this is the simple mining, leaching operation and which we are really expecting to give us significantly longer life. A long life asset that's an important part of the Newmont portfolio.
Is this gonna be a 100,000 oz producer? Is that how I should think about it?
No, more than that, Tanya. I think it'd be pushing to get to 200,000 oz but between 150,000- 200,000 oz run as efficiently as it can, leaning into, as Rob said, that proximity to Denver is how we're approaching it. As opposed to trying to have something that's maybe creeping between 200,0000 and 250,000 oz with all of the complexity of trying to produce a concentrate and all the bandwidth that gets taken from running a mill for a relatively small part of it, of the value of the operation.
Okay. I'll thank you so much. I'll pass it on to someone else.
Thanks, Tanya.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Anita Soni from CIBC. Anita, your line is open.
Thanks, everyone, and thanks for taking my call. I'm just gonna ask one more question about the dividend and then move again to Yanacocha Sulfides. On the dividend, Nancy, you mentioned 40% of the. You're using a 40% and being conservative currently. I'm calculating it nearly like 80%- 90% of your free cash flow for the past few quarters. I just wanna understand when you're, like, are we talking about the same basis of where you guys are using, you're calculating your free cash flow for the dividend?
Yeah. Thanks, Anita. How we think about it is we look at our plan period and our forecasting, and we calibrate over the cash we believe we will generate during our, for us, it's a, it's a five-year planning period and certainly over the much longer term. We, yes, in terms of our forecasting and our modeling, our view is that we are around still the 40% payout calibration at the $1,800 gold price.
Okay. You're factoring in perhaps, you know, better outlook rather than what's near term and happening currently?
Well, I think you're seeing that. We're investing in our business and investing in our future, and those are the indicated returns from these capital projects and the cash flow they will generate when complete.
Okay. The second question was Yanacocha Sulfides. Just to be clear, how much do you plan on spending this year, and that would not be included in the $2.5 billion, current $2.5 billion estimate, correct?
We're thinking, we're looking at about $300 million-$400 million this year, Tanya, on the project building up to full funds approval. There's money we're spending on key critical path items that we're procuring. There's money that we're spending on using local contractors to do some of the early earthworks, which is a critically important part of ensuring that there is meaningful work for the communities in and around Cajamarca and Yanacocha. We are building the camp, the construction camp, 4,000 beds, and you saw that in the photo, how advanced that was. My experience in these mega projects is that they often fall behind in the very early days because they don't have the camp accommodation for your workforce. De-risking the project with the construction of that camp this year.
The fourth key area for that spend is the engineering work that we're doing with Bechtel and Hatch that enables us to de-risk the project because of the level of engineering that we have that allows us to then be comprehensive with our definitive estimate and our definitive schedule as we move towards full funds. Those are the four key areas that $300 million-$400 million is being directed to. Just as if you'd picked it up, we actually, as we thought, as we've looked through our Development Capital spend, we have adjusted our overall dev cap for this year down to $1.1 billion.
Okay. My last question is with the outlook in 2024. I appreciate, you know, you guys giving us this 2023 similar numbers, so I assume that to mean the 6 million at about $900 cash costs. If we look into 2024, I mean, I think the original with Yanacocha, start with that, Ahafo North and to be, the Tanami expansion, that's where you would have seen perhaps an uptick in production. Would you expect at this stage, 2024 to be similar to 2023 and 2022? Or are there any other areas where you could potentially see improvement into 2024 outside of the two projects?
Yeah. Thanks, Anita. Yes. As inevitably these projects are impacted and affected by the experiences of the last couple of years and that timing's pushing out. We'll start to see those ounces come on in 2025 rather than 2024. If you look beyond 2023 to 2024, you're going to see a relatively flat production profile year-over-year as those ounces then kick in in 2025 and into 2026. Then you've got Yanacocha Sulfides coming beyond that. 2024 looking pretty consistent through that six GEOs. It's gonna be 7 million - 7.5 million ounces gold at around about the six.
That's really what we're aiming to do, is to be a steady producer of gold at or around the 6 million -6.5 million ounces of gold, 7.5 million -8 million ounces of gold equivalents all up, and 2024 being pretty stable. 2025, we'll start to get a kick up from Tanami Expansion two and Ahafo North.
Okay. Thank you. I'll leave it there and let other people ask questions. Thanks.
Thanks, Anita.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Brian MacArthur from Raymond James. Brian, your line is open.
Good morning, and thanks for taking my questions. Most of them asked, but I just wanna follow up a little bit on the provisional pricing. I guess where I'd come out on this, the realized price for zinc, say, for per dollar eight. You know, given where it closed, it seems awfully low. Did you have a lot of open pounds quarter recorded, or just. You said 46% were settled in June, but even the June price was a lot higher than that. There seems to be a big back half weighting. Can you just go through how that works again, specifically at Peñasquito?
The second part of the question then is Peñasquito open now, and where I'm going with this is how much of this is cash versus accounting because, you know, all these questions regarding about cash flow over the last couple of quarters, there seems to be a pretty big base metal influence here that's sort of varying quarter to quarter.
Yeah. Thanks, Brian. I think it's important area to unpack in terms of how the quarter played out, but I'll pass across to Nancy. I've got sitting alongside me, I've also got Daniel Horton, who leads our commercial team and does a lot of those sales. Let me tee it up with you, Nancy, and then Daniel's available if there are any specific details.
Yeah. I'll start. It'd be great to have Daniel chime in, too. We did have a big change from March to June, and so that's one way to think about it. Really our concentrate sales take three to six months to finalize, so that had a pretty significant impact. Also our ounces outstanding at the end of Q2. Our mark-to-market adjustments were about $40 million for zinc and $23 million for copper. Gold was about $21 million, and silver at $15 million. That was the largest component, but that's really what drove some of those provisional pricing adjustments. Daniel, anything else you'd add?
Yeah, that's right. Brian, maybe the only thing else I'd add is the average price in June was around $1,830 per oz It was significantly lower than what you saw for the average for the quarter. Then the other point I'd make, too, is with where gold price is trending right now, obviously we could expect another similar adjustment if prices continue to decline in the third quarter.
Sure. What? You know, I mean, you got a lot of sites, but I mean, some of those aren't delaying three to six months or what do you, what's your general timing lag on that normally for the gold side? Like, the base metal side I can see can be, you know, it can be t hree to six months, but what's the general gold rule, too?
Yeah, Brian, the majority of our gold production comes in the form of Doré, and that really settles in the near term. That's not where we're seeing the biggest impact.
Right.
The biggest impact is at Peñasquito and Boddington. Pe ñ asquito on the concentrate shipments are about three to six months on settlement, and so they are a longer timeframe. On Boddington, it's more around that three month timeframe. You know, that's, call it 20%-30% of our total production of a concentrate. It does have a pretty significant impact on the realized price when prices are dropping like we've seen in the recent months.
Makes sense. Now the other thing then, all this discussion about how you set it. I know everybody focuses on the gold price for your gold dividend, and you are a gold company, but how do you start to think about this? I mean, just this quarter, as you said, you had, like, $90 million in adjustments on byproducts or whatever. How's that generally thought into your long term thinking for setting that dividend as well? Over time, you might grow other parts of the business as well.
Yeah. Thanks, Brian. We do look at the longer term as we consider and as we put the framework in place two years ago. We certainly think about all those puts and takes, and we have our long-term economic guidelines that we use, and we do quite a lot of work on a regular basis to look at that forward curve, where consensus is headed, and then the impact on our plan. All of that is baked in, and we do see some pretty significant disconnects from time to time. I would say over the long term, the trend lines stay very much in alignment with our economic guidelines. This is, I would say, a bit of an unusual quarter in terms of just the way the timing and the pricing aligned.
Over the long term, we do sort of see those peaks and valleys flatten out.
Great. Thanks. Yeah, I'd agree with that. There were some unusual things this quarter. Thanks. Thanks very much. That's very helpful.
Thanks, Brian.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Greg Barnes from TD Securities. Greg, your line is open.
Yes. Thank you. Just a question around the inflationary pressures that you're seeing. Are they peaking now, or do you sense that what we've seen the first half of this year is gonna continue in the second half of the year?
Thanks, Greg. Good morning. Good question to ask. Everything we're seeing is that at a commodity level, they have peaked and are flattening out. As we look forward, we're seeing you know that $20 an oz that builds into that increased royalty and sustaining cost, but that's pretty flat. Labor, I'd say is the difficult one, particularly that specialized labor. I think there is...
I think globally, the world's been shifted on its axis in terms of availability to labor and decisions people are making about things. There's, you know, if I give you by way of example in the Australian context, there's something like $200 billion-$250 billion of infrastructure projects that are on the slate in Australia, typically around major cities. Look at that specialized labor. Am I going to fly in, fly out to a mine site to work on a shutdown or to work on a project, or am I gonna go and work on this bridge or this freeway extension? I think you're seeing that play out across the world in different places.
I think there's still a question mark over labor. We've got $20 an oz built in. I think we've as best we can predict a year going forward, it's a pretty good estimate. Fuel and energy, obviously, you've got the global impacts on fuel and in particular diesel price. In some instances, I'd say probably commodities best predicted. There's still some volatility and that's where we're going to be leaning into controlling those things that we can control. The work we're putting into, as I've described before, our operational support networks to ensure that we are leaning into our global supply chain, that we are ensuring that we've got inventories where they need to be, that we're maintaining those inventories.
We've moved more to local or regional supply than trying to navigate a global supply network. There are a number of things we're doing to mitigate the work we've done with suppliers, leaning into the relationships you've spent years building to ensure that we've got one, supply and two, price protection. I'm focusing on those things that we can control in sort of a volatile world. Sorry, it's probably not the most satisfactory answer, but there are some levels of stability, but still some levels of volatility.
Okay. Maybe this is just a technical question for Nancy, but you're not alone in this. Why do gold sales always get heavily weighted toward the end of the quarter?
I think it's that way with most of the miners, but typically we will have a gold pour scheduled for the last week of the quarter, and we ensure that those get shipped and sold at market. I think that's very common. We do the same thing at the end of every month, and so that's a very normal cycle for us. The gold pours are scheduled to really align with closing everything out at the end of the month and ensuring we have time to ship, get sales accomplished and those kinds of things. That's a very common cycle for us in terms of sales.
Yeah. Everybody else, just seems 46% in June alone does seem like a lot.
That's quite normal. Also sometimes it has to do with transportation contracts, and there have been disruptions in those as well. Simply just getting the Doré to market can be a challenge from time to time. In this particular quarter, I do also think that had an impact on a bit of the back portion weighting.
Okay. Thank you.
Thanks, Greg.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Adam Josephson from KeyBank. Adam, your line is open.
Thanks, Tom and Nancy. Good morning. Tom, forgive me if you've addressed this in various parts of the call, but you talked about your expectation that gold costs will be flattish next year. On the one hand, I think you said you've entered into some contracts that embed some degree of inflation next year. On the other, you have the one-time costs in 2Q that at Peñasquito that won't repeat. I think others have referenced the fact that many global commodity prices have fallen quite considerably in recent weeks because of expectations about an imminent global recession. How are all those factors weighing into your preliminary thinking that gold costs will be flattish? How much upside or downside risks, Tom, do you think there is to that flattish cost next year?
Yeah. Thanks, Adam. Good morning. I think the starting point for us is how we see, I mean, production is a key driver of our costs, and seeing that production level year-on-year being at or about the same, maybe a tad better as we see some improvement come through. That becomes the number one driver in terms of our costs that we see that pretty consistent production.
We're right in the middle of our business planning process at the moment, where we're then looking and debating and discussing what we're seeing in terms of our input costs and how we're seeing the various contracts that we've got playing out in terms of whether it be contracted services labor, whether it be our own workforce, whether it be the assumptions we make around diesel into next year, the assumptions we make around spare parts, the assumptions we make around you know explosives and cyanide and the contracts that we've got in place with those suppliers. We've got what's happening in the world in terms of inflation, and then we've got what are the things that go to our cost base?
What have we got? What are we seeing in terms of those costs in those locations based upon the contracts that we have? We put all that into our melting pot and start to do our planning work, and we're seeing unit costs for next year on a very similar production profile come out at or around the same levels that we're seeing for this year. In terms of trying to give you some indication as to how 2023 is looking compared to 2022, where we sit here in July, early on in our planning process with that melting pot, it's looking at or around the same number.
Yes.
Nancy, do you wanna build on that?
Yeah. We also have in the past continued to and will continue to do so, provide great sensitivity around some of our most critical input costs. When you think about the free cash flow generated from our operations, you'll be able to really indicate in there if we have another $10 change in diesel price, what impact is that gonna have on free cash flow as well as other inputs. We will continue to provide that transparency, and all of that will be a part of our guidance in December once that's updated for 2023. To Tom's point, at this point, it looks quite similar, but we haven't finished all of that work.
No, thanks, Nancy. Just one follow-up to that, Tom, before I ask one other question, which is, on the labor piece, how sticky do you think that inflation is likely to be? I know you mentioned, Tom, there's some global infrastructure project happening, which is taking some labor away from you, arguably. On the other, there's this school of thought that if the global economy goes into recession, some of those folks who had, you know, stopped flying in and out to mines will perhaps have little choice but to go back to their previous jobs.
Yeah, thanks. It's. I think we see it most pronounced across United States, Canada, and Australia. If I look at Canada and Australia, there's some big projects and demand for labor, and a diminishing pool for labor into the mining industry. I would predict that would be reasonably sticky at least into 2023 when I look at the markets in which we're operating in those countries. Rob, and I've got Dean sitting alongside me who runs our supply chain. Rob or Dean, anything you'd add to that?
I'd just echo what you said, Tom. I think in those countries in particular, you know, the skills coming into mining are not flowing as much as in the past, that we are relying on the established skill base. With that increased competition, it would be highly unlikely that those wages, et cetera, would go down. I completely agree.
I think what we'll start seeing is.
Thanks, Adam. Keep going.
Yeah, okay. Sorry to interrupt, Tom. It's just on the production, you're expecting flattish gold production this year and next year, and sounds like into 2024 as well, and obviously, your peers are experiencing similar bottlenecks in terms of their ability to grow production, just myriad supply chain, labor, COVID difficulties. What do you think? It's as if no matter how high the gold price is, and it's still relatively high by historical standards, the industry just doesn't have the ability to increase production, and that doesn't seem like it's gonna change anytime soon. Agree, disagree? Any thoughts along those lines?
Yeah. Thanks, Adam. Certainly from a Newmont perspective, as we transformed our business three years ago, the strategy is to be able to maintain 6-6.5 million ounces of gold each and every year, and another 1.5 million -2 million Gold Equivalent Ounces from copper, silver, lead, and zinc. Although we might have some years where you move to the upper end of that band and other years you're the lower end of that band, our strategy is around that consistent delivery of metal over the long term. Our focus on reinvesting back in the business is to bring on lower cost gold ounces and the other metals, but to extend mine life.
When we think about growth, it is as much about growth in margins as it is about growth in mine life, as opposed to focusing on trying to have growth in ounces. It's margin and mine life. These projects, Tanami, Ahafo North, Sulfides will bring on lower cost ounces that will help strengthen our cost base, but they more importantly extend our mine life. Our narrative of being a very reliable long life producer of gold at those levels is maintained.
Tom, just one last one from me, Tom, along those lines. In terms of the jurisdictional risks that you and others are dealing with, I mean, there's growing social unrest throughout the world, not just in mining-heavy countries. How is that affecting your thinking about just long-term production planning and your ability to grow production in the future, given the specter of higher taxes, increasing disruptions, et cetera?
Yeah. Thanks, Adam. I mean, a very important part of our strategy is, as I talked about, it's scale, it's cost base, it's mine life, and the other key component is where we choose to operate matters. We pay a lot of time and attention in terms of understanding the jurisdictions that we're in, maintaining and developing relationships with the jurisdictions that we're in. We've been in all of those jurisdictions for a very long period of time. If we were to choose to go into a new jurisdiction, we would spend a lot of time and attention on that to ensure that we could operate in those locations for the long term.
We're very comfortable with the relationships that we have and the relationships that we can maintain to support our business going forward. We believe it is a differentiator for Newmont in the gold industry today. Our very clear focus on where we choose to operate matters.
Thanks so much, Tom.
Thanks, Adam.
Thank you, Adam. Our next question comes from Mike Parkin from National Bank Financial. Mike, your line is open.
Hi, guys. You kinda answered my question there on where you're seeing the contractor service labor competition. That seems to be largely kinda government-related infrastructure builds. My other question was, in terms of concentrate processing, are you seeing any pressures there in terms of that group's ability, any smelters group's ability to process con or, the cost to process con escalating due to, as you've kind of, you know, alluded to, input commodity costs rising? Are you seeing anything on your smelter relationships showing pressures in terms of processing the con?
Yeah, thanks, Mike. Just before I pass across, Daniel's probably best placed to give you some color on that question. On your comment on the first one, certainly there's government-related infrastructure, which I think we'll continue to see in some of those jurisdictions, even in a recessionary environment. Some of those jurisdictions also have pretty significant demand for mining projects, mining work and mining projects. I think that's the. There's a couple of dynamics playing out there. Daniel, do you wanna talk about the concentrate?
Yeah, definitely. Thanks, Mike, for the question. You know, I think the strategy we use in terms of our customers is long-term in nature. While, you know, we may see periodic disruptions in our smelting, in the smelting costs, the relationships there are very strong and very long term. Many of these partners have been with us for decades at our different sites. Not seeing anything that we would flag at this point. And our concentrates, especially from Peñasquito, are pretty unique material that the smelters are in high demand for. Nothing notable at this point.
Okay. Thanks very much, guys.
Thanks, Mike.
Thank you. The next question comes from Bob Brackett from Bernstein Research. Bob, your line is open.
Thank you. In terms of the Ahafo North, delayed land access, do you have a sense of where those local stakeholder concerns are and how intractable or tractable they are and how maybe slow or how quick they will be to address?
Yeah. Good morning, Bob. We've very robust relationships with all of the key stakeholders in that process. The government plays a key role and all of the various important arms of the government, whether it be the regional minister, the EPA, the mining minister. It's very good relationships with those key stakeholders. The traditional leaders, the Asantahene, the king of the Ashanti, is a very important stakeholder in that process. Very good relationships with the Asantahene. The communities in and around Ahafo North, there are five.
five communities, five chiefs of those communities, and we are working very closely with them to work through to a resolution of all of outstanding matters so that we can clear crops and structures and start work. This process is one of ensuring, and I think it's one of the hallmarks of Newmont and our ESG practices. It's ensuring that we work together with all stakeholders and ensure that we are always aligned and together before we move forward. We don't want to barrel in and start building a mine if we haven't got everybody working together on this project because, you know, with 100 years of experience, we know if you don't do that well, you will pay the piper for that in the years ahead.
We don't want to start work until we've got everyone aligned. I think the work we're doing is progressing very well. Very pleased with how it's coming together, but we wanna make sure that every one of those stakeholders is supportive of this project as we start to break ground. Robert, do you wanna build upon that?
I think the only other thing I'd add, Bob, is that, you know, in Ghana, this type of development is critical for economically sustaining the area, providing jobs and training, as well as the other benefits that come to the community. Certainly the vast majority of people absolutely see that, absolutely want it. The key thing for us is just making sure we've got that full alignment for this last part of gaining access before we actually turn the first sod on the ground. You know, the support for the economic development is very, very strong in Ghana as well.
Great. Thanks for that.
Thanks, Bob.
Thank you. Our next question comes from John Tumazos from Very Independent Research. John, your line is open.
Thanks to the Newmont team for the service and keeping the results this good in a tough time. Is it right to sort of interpret that in terms of the background macros, you're not reacting to July 25th conditions specifically, but your expectation of the long run, likely normal. That since the balance sheet is so great, that if you borrow a little bit for CapEx or to fund the dividend or share buybacks, that's okay with a 0.3 debt to EBITDA ratio. I'm specifically thinking about how difficult it is right now with the gold price falling and the costs having risen 12%, and the spot gold market having a bad climate for jewelry demand with disposable incomes and central bank purchases are less, and the ETFs are selling.
For all we know, the Euro goes to 50% because a lot of these European governments are broke and the dollar is inadvertently strong. You're looking through these things because who knows, maybe the Ukraine war ends. By the way, the dividend is tagged to price, but costs are going the wrong way. I'm not sure that there's a natural ceiling or floor in the gold market because we don't know what the natural ceiling or floor is for inflation, interest rates, the Euro exchange rates, all that stuff. Please.
Yes. Thank you, John. I think you characterized how we think about our business over the long term very nicely. It's one reason why we put a lot of time and attention into maintaining a very strong balance sheet that gives us the strength when there's some volatility. But we do take a long-term view. The long-term view, our view on gold price is still robust over the long term. But you characterized our approach quite nicely. Nancy, do you want to build on that?
Yeah. Thanks, Tom. I would also add, we know that the gold price is cyclical over time, and so our goal is to ensure we're preserving margins at times of high gold price and adding cash to our balance sheet, which is exactly what we've done during this last cycle of rising gold prices. Who knows where it's headed today, but that's why we wanted to be in the position that we're in. Very strong production profile for decades to come, as well as a lot of cash on hand. We'll continue to evaluate all those factors, but we truly have engineered the business to navigate through all parts of the cycle.
Following up, the various capital projects to strengthen the company for five, 10, 20 years from now are paramount.
Exactly, John. I think the strength of our company over the last several years has been a result of the capital investments that we made over the previous five years through the cycle. I mean, we were investing in Merian and Suriname at the bottom of the cycle back in 2014, 2015. It's taking the long-term view, working through the cycle, ensuring you've always got a robust base and reinvestment in the business so that you can be strong for a very long period of time.
Thank you. Congratulations on weathering things as well as you have.
Thanks, John, I think, operator, is that it in terms of people?
Yes, that is correct. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the questions and answers session. I would like to turn the conference call back over to Tom Palmer for any closing remarks. Tom, please go ahead.
Thank you, operator. Thank you everyone for your questions today and for taking the time to sit through our summary of the second quarter, a discussion on where we sit for the remainder of this year. Please enjoy the rest of your week. Thank you, everyone.
Ladies and gentlemen, the conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may disconnect your lines now.