Taxes, Salaries, and Sectors

Mining and Natural Resources Accounting (IFRS 6): Exploration and Evaluation Costs

Illustration for Mining Accounting
Skip to content
Costing & Sectors Keyword: Mining Accounting

Mining and Natural Resources Accounting (IFRS 6): Exploration and Evaluation

Mining accounting is one of the most complex sectors because it involves spending millions on exploration and evaluation before knowing if the site will even be profitable. Standard IFRS 6 provides the framework for handling these initial costs, while concepts like Depletion help distribute the resource cost over its productive life. In this guide, we explore the lifecycle of a mining project and the key accounting treatments required.

Mining Accounting illustration showing an open-pit mine and resource extraction.
The core challenge: Deciding when to capitalize exploration costs and how to measure the “Depletion” of the resource.
What will you achieve after this article?
  • Understand the scope and application of IFRS 6 in mining.
  • Differentiate between Exploration, Development, and Production phases.
  • Master the Units of Production (UOP) method for calculating Depletion.
  • Handle Environmental Restoration provisions and site reclamation costs.
  • Practical knowledge of Impairment testing for mining assets.

1) What is Mining and Natural Resources Accounting?

Unlike traditional manufacturing, mining accounting deals with “Wasting Assets”—resources that are consumed and cannot be replaced. The main goal is to capture all costs of finding, extracting, and eventually closing the site, and matching them with the revenue from sold minerals.

Key Foundation: Fixed Asset Accounting Guide

Mining assets are a specialized form of property, plant, and equipment (PPE) but with a focus on depletion.

2) IFRS 6: Exploration and Evaluation of Mineral Resources

IFRS 6 is unique because it allows companies to keep their existing accounting policies for exploration and evaluation (E&E) costs.

  • Capitalization: Companies can choose whether to expense or capitalize costs like topographical studies, exploratory drilling, and sampling.
  • Materiality: The standard requires consistency; once a policy is chosen, it must be applied uniformly to all similar projects.
  • Technical Feasibility: Once technical feasibility and commercial viability are proven, the project moves out of IFRS 6 and into general PPE or Intangible standards.
Audit Point: Make sure to clearly document the “Transition Point”—the exact moment when you reclassify E&E assets to Development Assets.

3) The 5 Phases of a Mining Project

Each phase has a different accounting treatment.

Recommended for you

Practical IFRS Applications - PDF File

Practical Applications of IFRS: A comprehensive guide to understanding and applying IFRS through act...

Mining Project Financial Lifecycle Flowchart showing: Acquisition, Exploration (IFRS 6), Development, Production, and Reclamation. The 5 Stages of Mining Accounting 1) Pre-Exploration Acquisition of rights 2) Exploration (IFRS 6) Drilling & Sampling 3) Development Infrastructure & Access 4) Production Extraction & Depletion 5) Reclamation Site Closure & Restoration
The path from finding a rock to restoring the land.

4) Depletion: The Depreciation of Natural Resources

Depletion is how we allocate the cost of the natural resource as it is extracted. The most common method is the Units of Production (UOP) method.

The Formula:
Depletion per Unit = (Total Cost of Resource − Salvage Value) ÷ Estimated Total Recoverable Units.
Example: Gold Mine Depletion
Item Value Calculation Note
Total Capitalized Cost 10,000,000 Acquisition + Development.
Estimated Reserves 500,000 oz Based on geological survey.
Cost per Ounce 20 / oz 10M ÷ 500k.
Production this Year 50,000 oz Actual ounces extracted.
Annual Depletion Expense 1,000,000 50k × 20.

5) Environmental and Restoration Liabilities

Mining companies are legally or constructively obligated to restore the site after operations end. According to IAS 37, this liability must be recognized as soon as it is incurred (usually at the start of production).

  • Provision: Recognize the present value of estimated future restoration costs.
  • Asset Link: The debit goes to the related mining asset (PPE), increasing its cost.
  • Unwinding: The interest expense on the provision is recognized annually (Unwinding of discount).

6) Impairment of Mining Assets

In mining accounting, we must test for impairment if facts suggest the carrying amount of an E&E asset exceeds its recoverable amount. Indicators include:

  • Expiry of the right to explore.
  • Decision to stop further exploration in a specific area.
  • Proof that the resource is not commercially viable.

7) Brief Chart of Accounts (COA) for Mining

Specialized Accounts in Mining
Account Group Typical Accounts Key Analytical Dimension
Non-Current Assets Exploration & Evaluation Assets, Mineral Reserves, Mine Infrastructure. Project / Site ID
Inventory Extracted Ore, Concentrates, Consumables. Material Type
Liabilities Provision for Site Restoration, Royalties Payable. Jurisdiction
Expenses Depletion Expense, Exploration Write-offs, Production Salaries. Cost Center

8) Required Disclosures under IFRS 6

Because of the significant estimation involved, IFRS 6 requires:

  • Accounting policies for exploration and evaluation expenditures.
  • The amounts of assets, liabilities, income, and expense arising from E&E.
  • Specific details on impairment testing and the cash-generating units (CGUs) used.

9) Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Depletion and Depreciation?

Depreciation is for man-made assets (buildings, machinery), while Depletion is for natural resources (coal, oil, timber) that are physically consumed.

Can exploration costs be expensed immediately?

Yes, IFRS 6 allows an entity to choose its policy: capitalization or expensing. Once chosen, it must be applied consistently.

How often should reserves be re-estimated?

Reserves should be reviewed annually. Changes in estimates are handled prospectively, affecting future depletion rates.

10) Conclusion

Successful mining accounting depends on clear stage-gating. By mastering IFRS 6 for exploration, applying Depletion via the UOP method, and accurately providing for Environmental Restoration, a mining company can provide a transparent view of its long-term viability and risk profile. Always remember: the mine is a finite resource; accounting must reflect its journey from discovery to restoration.

© Digital Salla Articles — General educational content. Mining laws and specialized standards (like JORC for reserves) vary by country. Consult a specialized industry auditor for implementation.