Horizonte Minerals Plc, (AIM/TSX: HZM)
('Horizonte' or 'the Company') the nickel development company
focused in Brazil, is pleased to publish the results of the
Pre-Feasibility Study ('PFS' or the ‘Study’) for the 100% owned
Vermelho Nickel-Cobalt Project (‘Vermelho, or ‘the Project’) in
Brazil’s Pará State.
Highlights:
- The Study confirms Vermelho as a large, high-grade resource,
with a long mine life and low-cost source of nickel sulphate for
the battery industry;
- The compelling economic and technical results from the study
support further development of the project towards a full
Feasibility Study;
- A 38-year mine life estimated to generate total cash flows
after taxation of US$7.3billion1;
- An estimated Base Case post-tax Net Present Value1 (‘NPV’) of
US$1.7 billion2 and Internal Rate of Return (‘IRR’) of 26%;
- At full production capacity the Project is expected to produce
an average of 25,000 tonnes of nickel and 1,250 tonnes of cobalt
per annum utilising the High-Pressure Acid Leach
process;
- The base case PFS economics assume a flat nickel price of
US$16,400 per tonne (‘/t’) for the 38-year mine life;
- C1 (Brook Hunt) cash cost of US$8,020/t Ni (US$3.64/lb Ni),
defines Vermelho as a low-cost producer;
- Initial Capital Cost estimate is US$652 million (AACE class 4),
including US$97.7 million of contingencies (equating to
approximately 18% of capital); and
- Vermelho is set to deliver significant socio-economic benefits
for communities in the Pará state, including over 1,800 direct jobs
in the construction phase, and over 600 jobs during operation, as
well as additional economic and social development programs.
1USD/BRL 1/3.8 exchange rate applied for life-of-mine
2 NPV calculated using 8% discount rate
Horizonte CEO, Jeremy Martin,
commented;
“I am delighted to deliver the Pre-Feasibility
Study for the Vermelho nickel-cobalt project which represents
another significant milestone delivered by the Company this year.
The Study now positions Horizonte as a multi-asset nickel developer
with a combined NPV in excess of US$2.5 billion at current nickel
prices across the Araguaia and Vermelho projects.
The PFS demonstrates that Vermelho can be a
significant low-cost supplier of nickel in the form of battery
grade nickel-sulphate. Over the 38-year mine life using the Base
Case nickel price of $16,400, the operation is expected to generate
cash flows after taxation of US$7.3 billion, an IRR of over 26%,
and sits on the lower half of the global cost curve. If we apply
the long-term Wood Mackenzie nickel price of US$19,800, the project
IRR increases to 31% and the NPV to approximately $2.3 billion.
Importantly, the Vermelho project will also
produce battery grade cobalt sulphate, another key component for
the electric vehicle (‘EV’) battery industry with 60% of global
supply currently sourced from a single country. The consumer driven
EV market is trending towards both sustainability and ethically
sourced materials, including nickel and cobalt, and we see both of
the Company’s projects in Brazil as being attractive to end users
who are focused on traceable, ethically sourced materials.
With the PFS now successfully completed, the
priority now is to identify partners, secure funding and advance
the project by undertaking a full feasibility study on Vermelho. We
will look to the replicate the success achieved by the Coral Bay
Nickel Corporation where the company is currently producing around
20,000 tonnes per year of nickel utilising a twin line HPAL plant.
This was a low capex plant which has been operating successfully
for the last 15 years.
With a combined contained nickel inventory of
over 4 million tonnes and the obvious synergies that come with
having two world-class projects within 85 kilometres of each other
in a stable and mining friendly jurisdiction, we have further
cemented the Company as having one of the largest undeveloped
nickel portfolios in the world. With financing discussions underway
to commence the construction of Araguaia and Vermelho demonstrating
significant economic potential, Horizonte is well positioned,
owning two high-quality projects at an advanced stage.
The nickel market fundamentals continue to be
positive for the short to long term, driven by robust demand from
stainless steel growth and anticipated increase in EV penetration
rates. Physical LME metal inventories continue to be drawn down to
levels not seen in the last five years. This, combined with a lack
of new major projects scheduled to come online in the short term,
means that this is an opportune time to develop Vermelho.”
Analyst conference call and
presentation
Horizonte will host an analyst conference call
and presentation today, 17 October 2019, at 11:00 BST. Participants
can access the call by dialling one of the following numbers below
approximately 10 minutes prior to the start of the call.
UK Toll-Free Number: 0800 358 9473
PIN: 91815157#
UK Toll Number: +44 3333 000 804
PIN: 91815157#
The presentation will be available for download
from the Company’s website www.horizonteminerals.com or by clicking
on the link below:
https://www.anywhereconference.com?Conference=301302216&PIN=91815157&UserAudioMode=DATA
A recording of the conference call will subsequently be
available on the Company’s website.
Vermelho Pre-Feasibility Study Detailed
Information
Project Summary
The Project is located in the north-western
Brazilian state of Pará in the Carajás Mining District,
approximately 85 kilometres (‘km’) north-west of the Company’s 100%
owned Araguaia North Project.
The Project comprises a planned 38 year
operation with an open pit nickel laterite mining operation that
mines a 141.3 million tonne (Mt) Probable Mineral Reserve (at
a cut-off of 0.7% Ni) to produce 924,000 tonnes of nickel contained
in nickel sulphate, 36,000 tonnes of cobalt contained in
cobalt sulphate and a saleable by-product, kieserite (a form of
fertiliser) of which 4.48 Mt are produced. The project will
utilise a hydro-metallurgical process comprised of a beneficiation
plant where ore is upgraded prior to being fed to a High-Pressure
Acid Leach (HPAL) and refining Plant which produces the sulphates.
The plant will be constructed in two phases, with an initial
capacity of 1 Mt per annum (Mt/a) autoclave feed (Stage 1),
then after three years of production, a second process train (Stage
2 Expansion) will be constructed effectively doubling the autoclave
feed rate to 2 Mt/a. The Stage 1 plant and project
infrastructure will be constructed over a 31-month period. The
nickel and cobalt sulphate products will be transported by road to
the port of Vila do Conde (the same facility planned for Araguaia)
for sale to overseas customers. The kieserite will be transported
to consumers within Pará state.
The engineering has been developed for the
process plant, mining, infrastructure and utilities to support
capital (‘capex’) and operating expenditure (‘opex’) estimates to
an Association for the Advancement of Cost Engineering (AACE) class
4 standard. This means that capex and opex estimates have a
combined accuracy of between -25% and +20% at a confidence level of
50%. The capex and opex are dated Q2 2019 and are exclusive of
future escalation.
The results of the PFS demonstrate that Vermelho
shows positive economics (Table 1, below).
Table 1: Key Feasibility Study Project Economic
Indicators (post taxation)
Item |
Unit |
Nickel price basis (US$/t Ni)** |
Base Case 16,400 |
Long Term 19,800 |
Net cash flow |
US$ M |
7,304 |
|
9,546 |
|
NPV8 |
US$ M |
1,722 |
|
2,373 |
|
IRR |
% |
26.3 |
% |
31.5 |
% |
Breakeven (NPV8) nickel price |
US$/t |
7,483 |
|
7,483 |
|
C1 cost (Brook Hunt) |
US$/t Ni |
8,029 |
|
8,029 |
|
C1 cost (Brook Hunt) years 1–10 |
US$/t Ni |
7,286 |
|
7,286 |
|
Production year payback |
years |
4.2 |
|
3.6 |
|
LOM nickel recovered |
kt |
924.0 |
|
924.0 |
|
LOM cobalt recovered |
kt |
46.61 |
|
46.61 |
|
LOM kieserite produced |
kt |
4,482 |
|
4,482 |
|
LOM Total revenue |
US$ M |
19,034 |
|
22,175 |
|
LOM Total costs |
US$ M |
11,729 |
|
12,629 |
|
Operating cash flow |
US$ M |
8,451 |
|
10,693 |
|
Capital intensity – initial capex/t Ni |
US$/t Ni |
635 |
|
635 |
|
Note: ** US$2,000/t premium for battery sulphate
production has been added to Nickel revenue, US$34,000/t for the
cobalt produced as cobalt sulphate, and a net revenue of US$100/t
of the by-product, kieserite.
The economic model assumes 100% equity,
providing the opportunity for increased returns leveraging
commercial or other debt. The base case was developed using a flat
nickel price of US$16,400/t Ni. An alternate case using the
Wood Mackenzie long term Nickel price of US$19,800/t Ni was also
developed.
As shown in Table 1 (above), for the base case
the project has a 4.2-year payback period with cumulative gross
revenues of US$19,034 million. The economic analysis indicates a
post-tax NPV8 of US$1,722 million and an IRR of 26.3% using the
base case forecast of US$16,400/t Ni, this increases to US$2,373
million and 31.5% when using the Wood Mackenzie long term price of
US$19,800/t Ni.
Resources / Reserves and
Mining
The Vermelho nickel deposits consist of two
hills named V1 and V2 (after Vermelho 1 and Vermelho 2), aligned on
a northeast-southwest trend, overlying ultramafic bodies. A third
ultramafic body, named V3, also located in the same trend lies on
flat terrain, southwest of V2. The ultramafic bodies have had an
extensive history of tropical weathering, which has produced a
thick profile of nickel-enriched lateritic saprolite at V1 and
V2.
The Vermelho area was explored in various stages
by Companhia Vale do Rio Doce (‘Vale’) from 1974 to 2004 involving
approximately 152,000 m of combined drilling and pitting. The
drilling density was substantially enhanced in 2002 to 2004, with
the majority of the resource upgraded to the Measured category as
defined in JORC (2004) and CIM Definition Standards (2014). Pilot
plant metallurgical studies were conducted in Australia focused on
the HPAL processing method. A PFS was prepared in 2003, and a
Feasibility Study (‘FS’) was completed in August 2004 by
GRD-Minproc (2005). This study confirmed the positive economics
supporting the outcomes obtained in previous studies and showed
production capacity of 46,000 tonnes per annum (t/a) of metallic
nickel, and 2,500 t/a of metallic cobalt. The project was given
construction approval in 2005 however later that year Vale elected
to place the Project on hold after Vale acquired Canadian nickel
producer Inco.
Mineral Resources
Snowden Mining and Industry Consultants
(‘Snowden’) were commissioned by Horizonte to produce the Geology
and Mineral Resources sections of the PFS for the Project.
Within the mining licence, at a cut-off grade of
0.7% Ni, a total of 140.8 Mt at a grade of 1.05% Ni and 0.05% Co is
defined as a Measured Mineral Resource and a total of 5.0 Mt at a
grade of 0.99% Ni and 0.06% Co is defined as an Indicated Mineral
Resource. This gives a combined tonnage of 145.7 Mt at a grade of
1.05% Ni and 0.05% Co for Measured and Indicated Mineral Resources.
A further 3.1 Mt at a grade of 0.96% Ni and 0.04% Co is defined as
an Inferred Mineral Resource at a cut-off grade of 0.7% Ni.
The Mineral Resource is summarised in Table
2.
Table
2
V1 + V2 – combined classified Mineral Resource report for Vermelho
above 0.7% Ni cut-off within the mining licence
Classification |
Tonnage (Mt) |
Ni % |
Ni metal (kt) |
Co % |
Co metal (kt) |
Fe2O3
% |
MgO2 % |
SiO2 % |
Measured |
140.8 |
1.05 |
1,477 |
0.05 |
74.6 |
31.1 |
11.3 |
41.0 |
Indicated |
5.0 |
0.99 |
49 |
0.06 |
2.8 |
26.3 |
8.6 |
49.0 |
Measured + Indicated |
145.7 |
1.05 |
1,526 |
0.05 |
77.3 |
30.9 |
11.2 |
41.3 |
Inferred |
3.1 |
0.96 |
29 |
0.04 |
1.4 |
24.0 |
15.5 |
42.2 |
Notes
- Mineral Resources are not Mineral Reserves and do not have
demonstrated economic viability. All figures are rounded to reflect
the relative accuracy of the estimate and have been used to derive
subtotals, totals and weighted averages. Such calculations
inherently involve a degree of rounding and consequently introduce
a margin of error. Where these occur, Snowden does not consider
them to be material.
- Mineral Resources are reported inclusive of Mineral
Reserves.
- The reporting standard adopted for the reporting of the Mineral
Resource estimate uses the terminology, definitions and guidelines
given in the CIM Standards on Mineral Resources and Mineral
Reserves (May 2014) as required by NI 43-101.
- Mineral Resources are reported on 100% basis for all Project
areas.
- Snowden completed a site inspection of the deposit by Mr Andy
Ross FAusIMM, an appropriate "independent qualified person" as such
term is defined in NI 43-101.
- kt = thousand tonnes (metric).
Mineral Reserves
Mineral Reserves were prepared for the Project
as part of the PFS, using the CIM Definition Standards (2014).
In accordance with the CIM Definition Standards
on Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves (as adopted and amended),
Mineral Reserves are classified as either “Probable” or “Proven”
Mineral Reserves and are based on Indicated and Measured Mineral
Resources only in conjunction “estimation of Mineral Resource and
Mineral Reserve best practice guidelines” as provided by the CIM.
No Mineral Reserves have been estimated using Inferred Mineral
Resources.
All economic Measured and Indicated Resources within the pit
designs were classified as Probable Reserves. A summary of the
Mineral Reserves is provided in Table 3.
Table 3 Open pit Mineral Reserves
reported as of October 2018
Value |
Probable |
Ore (Mt) |
141.3 |
Ni (%) |
0.91 |
Co (%) |
0.052 |
Fe (%) |
23.1 |
Mg (%) |
3.81 |
Al (%) |
0.79 |
Notes
- Cut-off varies by resource model block depending on individual
block geochemistry, however, as a guide the cut-off is
approximately 0.5% Ni.
- A site inspection on was completed four occasions between March
2017 and September 2019 by Mr Anthony Finch P. Eng. MAusIMM (CP
Min.), an appropriate “independent qualified person” as such term
is defined in NI 43-101.
Mining
Snowden were commissioned by Horizonte to
produce the mining plans of the PFS.
Mining at Vermelho is planned to be undertaken
with conventional open pit truck and excavator mining methods.
Blasting will be necessary for the upper parts of the deposit.
Waste overburden will be stripped on 4 m benches, and ore on 2 m
benches for additional selectivity.
Reverse circulation (‘RC’) grade control
drilling will be completed at 12.5 m x 12.5 m spacing to define the
waste/ore/ore type boundary ahead of mining.
Waste will be stored in dumps adjacent to the
pits. Ore will be transported to the run of mine (‘ROM’) stockpile
near the processing plant or the low-grade stockpiles for later
processing.
Due to the wet season, mining (including
stockpile rehandling) will be reduced between October and March (as
is standard practice in the region). It was assumed that a fleet of
Scania G500 8x4 22 m3 heavy tippers will be used as part of the
fleet and coarse beneficiation rejects will be used as sheeting, to
mitigate trafficability issues.
The mine production schedule targeted a
processing rate of 1 Mt/a HPAL feed for the first three years and a
doubling in capacity thereafter to 2 Mt/a. To facilitate this, ROM
feed of approximately 2.25 Mt/a to 4.5 Mt/a is required as well as
an acid production capacity of 350 kt/a to 700 kt/a.
The annual mining rate starts at 8 Mt/a and
peaks at 12 Mt/a between production years 5 and 11. Strip ratios
for the deposit are extremely low (0.14 Waste:Ore) consequently
waste dumps are relatively small.
The mine supplies higher grade ore in the early
mine life to the HPAL circuit, reaching up to 2% Ni and 0.1% Co in
the first four production years. The HPAL feed grade (after
beneficiation) is above 1.5% Ni and 0.08% Co for the majority of
the first 17 years of production and decreases over the remaining
LOM as feed is sourced from large lower grade stockpiles that are
to be developed in the early years and are processed in the later
years.
Processing
The process plant design, along with capital and
operating cost estimates were completed by Simulus (Engineers) Pty
Ltd, Perth Australia (‘Simulus’). Simulus is a specialist in nickel
and cobalt laterite project metallurgical testwork, piloting and
process design.
The process selected for the Project is the
production of a nickel and cobalt sulphate product via HPAL, mixed
sulphide precipitation (‘MSP’), pressure oxidation leaching
(‘POX’), cobalt solvent extraction (‘CoSX’) and crystallization.
Prior to the HPAL process, barren free silica is removed from the
ore via a beneficiation process which involves crushing, scrubbing,
washing and separation by screening and hydrocyclones. To avoid
accumulation of magnesium sulphate in the recycled process water, a
portion is sent to the Kieserite (magnesium sulphate monohydrate,
MgSO4•H2O) crystallization area where Kieserite is recovered and
crystallised for potential sale as fertiliser.
The process plant has been designed to process
4.34 Mt/a of ROM ore at 1.07% Ni. Of this total feed,
2.34 Mt/a is rejected as coarse, low grade siliceous waste
from the beneficiation plant. The 2 Mt/a beneficiated product
at 1.85% Ni grade is then fed to the HPAL processing plant as
upgraded feed (1 Mt/a per train). A common refining circuit
treats the MSP produced from each train via POX, CoSX and
crystallization.
The proposed process plant has been designed to
recover 94.4% and 94.9% of the nickel and cobalt from the HPAL feed
at an acid consumption of 347 kg/t. The nickel and cobalt
sulphate products are of high purity suitable for sale directly
into the battery market. The Kieserite by-product is of
appropriate quality to be sold to the local fertiliser market.
Extensive metallurgical testwork and process
design was undertaken on the Project by the former owner, Vale, at
scoping, prefeasibility and feasibility stages, included drilling
and pitting programs totalling 152,000 m, variability batch
testwork, full-scale pilot testwork and detailed engineering
studies. A five-year, exhaustive, metallurgical testwork and pilot
plant program demonstrated that a high degree of mined ore
upgradeable using a simple beneficiation processes was possible.
The resultant feed delivered 96% average leach extraction for
nickel and cobalt via HPAL technology.
Additional testwork has been completed by the
current Project owner, HZM, during 2018 and 2019. This testwork on
selected samples from Vermelho validated the potential to produce
high-grade sulphate products using the HPAL process.
The 6,000 plus samples totalling over 160t used
for PFS and Final Feasibility Study (FFS) piloting were large
diameter drill core and were representative (geographically, of
depth, ore type and by lithology). Additionally, 10% of the samples
(1 m from every 10 m) was used for variability testing so
piloting and variability were related.
The processing plant consists of the following
main process unit operations:
- Beneficiation
- HPAL
- Slurry neutralization and residue filtration
- MSP
- POX
- Impurity removal
- CoSX
- Nickel sulphate crystallization
- Cobalt sulphate crystallization
- Acid liquor neutralization
- Kieserite crystallization
- Sulphuric acid plant
- Reagents and utilities.
Financial Evaluation
Capital Cost
The estimate is based on the AACE class 4
standard, with an estimated accuracy range between -25% and +20% of
the final project cost (excluding contingency).
The largest capital item is the HPAL plant. In
order to manage initial capital, this is constructed in two phases.
The first phase (Stage 1) has a capacity of 1 Mt/a autoclave feed.
Stage 2 is brought online in year 3 of production and effectively
doubles the HPAL feed rate to 2 Mt/a.
The capex estimate includes all the direct and
indirect costs, local taxes and duties and appropriate
contingencies for the facilities required to bring the Project into
production, including the process plant, power line, water
pipelines and associated infrastructure as defined by the PFS. The
estimate is based on an Engineering Procurement and Construction
Management (‘EPCM’) implementation approach and the is the
contracting strategy expected to be utilised for the Project.
The total estimated initial (pre-production)
capex for the project is US$652.2 million (after tax, including
contingency, excluding growth and escalation). A summary of the
capex is shown in Table 4.
Table 4: Summary of capex
Capital cost component |
Initial (US$ M) |
Train 2 (year 3) (US$ M) |
Remainder (US$ M) |
LOM (US$ M) |
Process plant |
575.06 |
446.68 |
|
1,022 |
Mining pre-production |
10.78 |
- |
|
10.78 |
Tailings and sediment |
24.12 |
- |
|
24.12 |
Pumping |
2.34 |
- |
|
2.34 |
Powerline |
14.16 |
- |
|
14.16 |
Road |
2.59 |
- |
|
2.59 |
Permitting and land acquisition |
23.19 |
- |
|
23.19 |
Mining sustaining |
- |
- |
21.58 |
21.58 |
Other sustaining (including land permitting and land) |
- |
- |
1.33 |
1.33 |
Closure |
- |
- |
29.37 |
29.37 |
TOTAL |
652.24 |
446.68 |
52.28 |
1,151 |
The costs in Table 4 include all direct and
indirect costs including owner costs, supply, shipping and site
installation. The total contingency carried in the capex is US$97.7
million, this represents 18% of the initial capex (excluding
contingency) and 25% of the plant direct costs.
Operational costs
The operating costs shown in Table 5 (below)
represent the average over the LOM; actual costs for these vary
from year-to-year depending on the fixed and variable costs as well
as sustaining capital requirement for the given year. The operating
costs cover the mine, process plant, ore preparation, social and
environmental, royalties and general and administrative costs. The
main contributors of the overall operating costs are power,
sulphur, (for acid and power production) labour and mining costs,
with additional consumables and other indirect costs, including
G&A.
Table 5: Summary of opex
Area |
LOM total (US$ M) |
US$/t nickel** |
US$/t ore |
Average annual (US$ M) |
Mining |
981 |
1,062 |
6.94 |
25.81 |
Rejects and tails handling |
414 |
448 |
2.93 |
10.89 |
Processing costs |
5,785 |
6,261 |
40.93 |
152.23 |
Royalties (CFEM) |
23 |
25 |
0.16 |
0.60 |
Royalty (Vale) |
66 |
72 |
0.47 |
1.74 |
G&A and other costs |
215 |
233 |
1.52 |
5.67 |
SHE |
24 |
26 |
0.17 |
0.63 |
TOTAL |
7,508 |
8,126 |
53.13 |
197.57 |
Note: ** US$2,000/t premium for battery sulphate
production has been added to Nickel revenue, US$34,000/t for the
cobalt produced as cobalt sulphate, and a net revenue of US$100/t
of the by-product, kieserite.
Summary EconomicsThe financial
model based on 100% equity. The Base Case was developed using a
flat nickel price of US$16,400/t Ni for LOM. The second case
was prepared; using the Wood Mackenzie long term price of
US$19,800/t Ni.
The revenue breakdown by product is shown in
Table 1.
Table 1 LOM Revenue by
product
Revenue by product |
LOM Revenue (US $M)** |
% of total |
Ni Sulphate |
17,001 |
89 |
% |
Co Sulphate |
1,585 |
8 |
% |
Kieserite |
448 |
2 |
% |
|
19,034 |
100 |
% |
Note: ** A US$2,000/t Ni premium for battery
sulphate production has been added to Nickel revenue, US$34,000/t
for the cobalt produced as cobalt sulphate, and a net revenue of
US$100/t of the by-product, kieserite
As shown in Table 1, the post taxation model for
the Base Case has a 4.6-year payback period with cumulative gross
revenues of US$19,034 million. The economic analysis indicates a
post-tax NPV of US$1,722million and an IRR of 26.3% using the Base
Case of US$16,400/t Ni. These figures increase to US$2,373 million
and 31.5% when using the Wood Mackenzie long term price of
US$19,800/t Ni. Table 7 shows the pre-taxation results.
Table 7: Project economic performance (pre-taxation)
Item |
Unit |
Nickel price basis (US$/t Ni)** |
|
|
Base Case (consensus) 16,400 |
WM Long Term 19,800 |
Net cash flow |
US$ million |
10,379 |
|
13,509 |
|
NPV8 |
US$ million |
2,342 |
|
3,185 |
|
IRR |
% |
28.8 |
% |
34.5 |
% |
Breakeven (NPV8) Ni
price |
US$/t |
6,946 |
|
6,946 |
|
C1 Cost (Brooke
Hunt) |
US$/t |
8,029 |
|
8,029 |
|
Production year
payback |
Years |
4.0 |
|
3.5 |
|
Cash costs |
US$ million |
7,508 |
|
7,520 |
|
Operating cash flow |
US$ million |
11,526 |
|
14,655 |
|
Note: ** US$2,000/t premium for battery sulphate
production has been added to Nickel revenue, US$34,000/t for the
cobalt produced as cobalt sulphate, and a net revenue of US$100/t
of the by-product, kieserite.
Sensitivity AnalysisThe
sensitivity analysis demonstrates how the NPV8 is affected by
changes to one variable while holding the other variables constant.
The results of the sensitivity analysis are presented in Table 8
and Figure 1.
Table 8: Sensitivity table for the Base Case (US$16,400/t) NPV8,
after taxation
Sensitivity parameter |
-30 |
% |
-20 |
% |
-10 |
% |
0 |
% |
10 |
% |
20 |
% |
30 |
% |
Price/Grade/Recovery of Ni |
661 |
|
1,016 |
|
1,369 |
|
1,722 |
|
2,074 |
|
2,427 |
|
2,779 |
|
Price/Grade/Recovery of Co |
1,617 |
|
1,652 |
|
1,687 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,757 |
|
1,792 |
|
1,827 |
|
Net revenue from Kieserite |
1,693 |
|
1,703 |
|
1,712 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,731 |
|
1,741 |
|
1,751 |
|
Pre-Production Capital |
1,873 |
|
1,823 |
|
1,772 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,671 |
|
1,621 |
|
1,570 |
|
Stage 2 Capital |
1,802 |
|
1,775 |
|
1,749 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,695 |
|
1,668 |
|
1,642 |
|
Mining Cost |
1,799 |
|
1,773 |
|
1,748 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,696 |
|
1,670 |
|
1,645 |
|
Fx rate |
1,535 |
|
1,613 |
|
1,674 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,761 |
|
1,794 |
|
1,821 |
|
Sulphur Price |
1,911 |
|
1,848 |
|
1,785 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,659 |
|
1,596 |
|
1,532 |
|
Power cost |
1,735 |
|
1,730 |
|
1,726 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,718 |
|
1,713 |
|
1,709 |
|
Discount rate |
2,523 |
|
2,217 |
|
1,952 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,521 |
|
1,345 |
|
1,189 |
|
Beneficiation efficacy |
1,298 |
|
1,439 |
|
1,581 |
|
1,722 |
|
1,863 |
|
2,004 |
|
2,146 |
|
A photo accompanying this announcement is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f43a4e14-2ddf-4fce-bf92-99c07be12258
The sensitivity analysis shows that the Project
is more sensitive to nickel price, nickel recovery and grade than
it is to either opex or capex.
Section 5 – Market Review and Nickel
Pricing
In June 2019, HZM commissioned Wood Mackenzie to
develop a report on the market for nickel sulphate. As consequence
of that report the following assumptions with respect to commodity
pricing were used in the PFS.
- The consensus nickel price of US$16,400/t (US$7.44/lb) was used
in the Base Case for the PFS along with a US$2,000/t (US$0.91/lb)
nickel sulphate product premium. The nickel sulphate premium is
driven by the battery market (where nickel sulphate is valued
higher than class 1 nickel) and is supported by very strong growth
in the EV car market. The US$2,000/t (US$0.91/lb) sulphate premium
is the average value realised in the market over the last 12
months. The Wood Mackenzie long-term price currently stands at
approximately US$19,800/t (US$8.98/lb); this was used as an
alternative case for the PFS. A fixed price for nickel was applied
over the LOM. The Qualified Person has reviewed the above and
consider that the results support the assumptions in this Technical
Report.
- The cobalt price assumption of US$34,000/t (US$15.43/lb) used
in this study is significantly below the long-term consensus
bank/broker forecasts which stand at US$55,000/t (US$25/lb).
Kieserite
In July 2019, HZM commissioned a report on the
market for kieserite in Brazil from Dr Fabio Vale (Director
Técnico/Technical Manager) of Adubai Consultoria Agronômica
(Adubai).
The study concludes that:
The fertilizer market in Brazil is large. In
2018, 35.6 Mt of fertilizer was sold, of this 77.5% was
imported and 22.5% was manufactured locally. The most likely
consumers of the kieserite produced at the Project are the palm oil
growers in Pará state, as palm oil trees have a very high demand
for both magnesium and sulphur, although it has been demonstrated
that coffee and cotton would also benefit from kieserite. The
location of the Vermelho plant in the centre of the Pará state
gives its distribution a competitive advantage over the imported
product. The Project will produce approximately 150,000 t of
kieserite a year, which is 10 times the current market for imported
kieserite. This means there would be oversupply which would be
expected to dictate a lower realised price then the current market,
and substitution of other agro-products would be required for all
Project kieserite to be consumed in the local market. This suggest
that it would be unlikely for current prices (approximately
US$380/t FOB Barcarena) to be realised. For the study, HZM has
assumed a kieserite price of US$180/t (delivered) – about half of
the current price in Barcarena. The study assumes a cost of US$80/t
for delivery and marketing of Keiserite.
Community, Environment and
Permitting
The Project is located 3km from the town of
Canaã dos Carajás, founded in 1994, which forms the southern limit
of the Carajás Mining District (CMD) Pará state, north of Brazil.
The CMD is host to a number of tier 1 iron, nickel and copper mines
operated by Vale.
Mining and related industries in the CMD play a
vital role in the socio-economic fabric of the region, with the
municipality presenting considerable per capita income, the second
highest of the Pará state.
In 2004, Vale started to operate the Sossego
Copper Mine after several infrastructure municipality improvements,
and most recently (2017) ramped-up the S11D project, one of the
largest standalone iron operations in the world. As a result of the
advances of mining in the region, there has been a significant
influx of people and investment, which has in turn promoted changes
and improvements in the areas of economic growth, cultural
diversity and a more developed economy than nearby towns, heavily
centered around mining related activities.
Key environmental studies for the advancement of
project licensing stages were completed by Vale. HZM will utilize
the studies and baseline data collected by previous owners to
inform and expedite new EIA RIMA studies.
The following mining and environmental permits
were granted to Vale by the end of 2016:
- EIA/RIMA studies (Environmental Impact Study (‘EIS’) and
Environmental Impact Report (‘EIR’)) issued
- Award of Preliminary Licence (‘LP’)
- Environmental Controls Plan issued
- Application for Installation Licence (‘LI’)
- Final Exploration Report approved
- Mine Plan (Plano de Aproveitamento Economico – PAE)
approved
Whilst a new permit pathway is proposed, the
previously awarded permits for Vermelho provide a solid basis from
which to progress the project permitting.
HZM will utilize the Vale studies and baseline
data collected to inform and expedite new EIA RIMA studies. As HZM
will recommence the licensing for Vermelho, the Company will both
update studies and undertake new studies to accurately characterize
the current physical environment, biological environment and social
settings.
Next Steps
The PFS demonstrates that the Project is
technically, economically viable, and is expected to obtain all the
regulatory and permitting requirements. Consequently, the Project
should progress to a Feasibility Stage.
Report Filing
A technical report on this PFS, prepared in
accordance with the NI 43-101 reporting requirements, will be
filed on SEDAR at www.sedar.com and at www.horizonteminerals.com
within forty-five (45) days of the date of this news release.
Qualified Persons
Mr Anthony Finch, P Eng. (APEGBC), B.Eng, B Econ, MAusIMM (CP
Mining), Independent Consultant;
Mr Andrew Ross, BSc (Hons), MSc, FAusIMM, Principal Consultant,
Snowden Mining Industry Consultants Pty Ltd;
Simon Walsh, BSc (Extractive Metallurgy and Chemistry), MBA,
MAusIMM (CP), GAICD, Principal Metallurgist, Simulus (Engineers
& Laboratories) Pty ltd;
are the Qualified Persons under NI 43-101, and
have reviewed, approved and verified the technical content of this
press release, related to their area of expertise.
For further information visit
www.horizonteminerals.com or contact:
Horizonte Minerals plc |
|
Jeremy Martin (CEO) |
+44 (0) 203 356 2901 |
|
|
Numis Securities Ltd (NOMAD & Joint
Broker) |
John Prior Paul Gillam |
+44 (0) 207 260 1000 |
|
|
Shard Capital (Joint Broker) |
|
Damon Heath Erik Woolgar |
+44 (0) 20 186 9952 |
|
|
Tavistock (Financial PR) |
|
Gareth TredwayAnnabel de Morgan |
+44 (0) 207 920 3150 |
About Horizonte Minerals:
Horizonte Minerals plc is an AIM and TSX-listed
nickel development company focused in Brazil. The Company is
developing the Araguaia project, as the next major ferronickel mine
in Brazil, and the Vermelho nickel-cobalt project, with the aim of
being able to supply nickel and cobalt to the EV battery market.
Both projects are 100% owned.
Horizonte shareholders include: Teck Resources
Limited, Canaccord Genuity Group, JP Morgan, Lombard Odier Asset
Management (Europe) Limited, City Financial, Richard Griffiths and
Glencore.
Glossary of technical
terms
AACE |
Association for the Advancement of Cost Engineering |
AACE Class 4 |
+-20% +25% accuracy |
C1 |
C1 cash cost as defined by Brook Hunt |
Capex |
Capital cost |
Co |
Cobalt |
Cut-off grade |
Lowest grade of mineralisation material considered economic, used
in the calculation of ore resources |
Dilution |
Waste or low-grade material accidentally mined with the ore |
EPC |
Engineering Procurement and Construction |
EPCM |
Engineering Procurement and Construction Management |
EV |
Electric Vehicles |
Fe |
Iron |
FeNi30 |
Ferronickel with 30% Nickel and 70% Iron |
Ferronickel or FeNi |
An alloy that contains approximately 30% nickel and 70% iron and is
the produced by the project as an ingot |
HZM, Horizonte or the Company |
Horizonte Minerals plc |
IFC |
International Finance Corporation |
IRR |
Internal Rate of Return |
Kt |
Thousand Tonnes (metric) |
LME |
London Metal Exchange |
LOM |
Life of mine |
Loss |
Ore that is unintentionally left behind or mined as waste |
MgO |
Magnesium Oxide |
MT |
Million Tonnes (metric) |
Ni |
Nickel |
NPV8 |
Net present value at an 8% discount rate |
Opex |
Operating cost |
Ore |
A naturally occurring solid material from which a metal or valuable
mineral can be extracted profitably |
PEA |
Preliminary Economic Assessment |
Reverse Circulation Drilling |
A rock drilling system that circulates drill cuttings through the
centre of the drill rod so that they can be collected and assayed
without contamination |
RKEF |
Rotating Kiln Electric Furnace is the process by which nickel
laterite ore is reduced and then melted in so that metal is
separated from the slag to produce ferronickel |
ROM |
Run of mine stockpile |
Shotted |
Formation of small pellets from molten material |
SiO2 |
Silicon Dioxide |
Tpa |
Tonnes (metric) per annum |
US$ |
United States Dollar |
WM |
Wood Mackenzie |
Mineral Reserves |
Mineral Reserves are sub-divided into 2 categories. The highest
level of Reserves or the level with the most confidence is the
`Proven' category and the lower level of confidence of the Reserves
is the `Probable' category. Reserves are distinguished from
resources as all of the technical and economic parameters have been
applied and the estimated grade and tonnage of the resources should
closely approximate the actual results of mining. The guidelines
state "Mineral Reserves are inclusive of the diluting material that
will be mined in conjunction with the Mineral Reserve and delivered
to the treatment plant or equivalent facility." The guidelines also
state that, "The term `Mineral Reserve' need not necessarily
signify that extraction facilities are in place or operative or
that all government approvals have been received. It does signify
that there are reasonable expectations of such approvals. |
Proven Mineral Reserves |
A `Proven Mineral Reserve' is the economically mineable part of a
Measured Mineral Resource demonstrated by at least a Preliminary
Feasibility Study. This study must include adequate information on
mining, processing, metallurgical, economic, and other relevant
factors that demonstrate, at the time of reporting, that economic
extraction is justified. |
Probable Mineral Reserves |
A `Probable Mineral Reserve' is the economically mineable part of
an Indicated and in some circumstances a Measured Mineral Resource
demonstrated by a least a Preliminary Feasibility Study. This study
must include adequate information on mining, processing,
metallurgical, economic, and other relevant factors that
demonstrate, at the time of reporting, that economic extraction can
be justified. |
Mineral Resources |
Mineral Resources are sub-divided into 3 categories depending on
the geological confidence. The highest level with the most
confidence is the `Measured' category. The next level of confidence
is the `Indicated' category and the lowest level, or the resource
with the leastconfidence, is the `Inferred' category. |
Indicated Mineral Resource |
An `Indicated Mineral Resource' is that part of a Mineral Resource
for which quantity, grade or quality, densities, shape and physical
characteristics, can be estimated with a level of confidence
sufficient to allow the appropriate application of technical and
economic parameters, to support mine planning and evaluation of the
economic viability of the deposit. The estimate is based on
detailed and reliable exploration and testing information gathered
through appropriate techniques from locations such as outcrops,
trenches, pits, workings and drill holes that are spaced closely
enough for geological and grade continuity to be reasonably
assumed. |
Measured Mineral Resource |
A `Measured Mineral Resource' is that part of a Mineral resource
for which quantity, grade or quality, densities, shape and physical
characteristics are so well established that they can be estimated
with confidence sufficient to allow the appropriate application of
technical and economic parameters, to support production planning
and evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit. The
estimate is based on detailed and reliable exploration, sampling
and testing information gathered through appropriate techniques
from locations such as outcrops, trenches, pits, workings and drill
holes that are spaced closely enough to confirm both geological and
grade continuity. |
Inferred Mineral Resource |
An `Inferred Mineral Resource' is that part of a Mineral Resource
for which quantity and grade or quality can be estimated on the
basis of geological evidence and limited sampling and reasonably
assumed, but not verified, geological and grade continuity. The
estimate is based on limited information and sampling, gathered
through appropriate techniques fromlocations such as outcrops,
trenches, pits, workings and drill holes. |
CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD LOOKING
INFORMATION
Except for statements of historical fact
relating to the Company, certain information contained in this
press release constitutes "forward-looking information" under
Canadian securities legislation. Forward-looking information
includes, but is not limited to, statements with respect to the
potential of the Company's current or future property mineral
projects; the success of exploration and mining activities; cost
and timing of future exploration, production and development; the
estimation of mineral resources and reserves and the ability of the
Company to achieve its goals in respect of growing its mineral
resources; the ability of the Company to obtain the required
capital to construct and operated the Company’s projects and
the realization of mineral resource and reserve estimates.
Generally, forward-looking information can be identified by the use
of forward-looking terminology such as "plans", "expects" or "does
not expect", "is expected", "budget", "scheduled", "estimates",
"forecasts", "intends", "anticipates" or "does not anticipate", or
"believes", or variations of such words and phrases or statements
that certain actions, events or results "may", "could", "would",
"might" or "will be taken", "occur" or "be achieved".
Forward-looking information is based on the reasonable assumptions,
estimates, analysis and opinions of management made in light of its
experience and its perception of trends, current conditions and
expected developments, as well as other factors that management
believes to be relevant and reasonable in the circumstances at the
date that such statements are made, and are inherently subject to
known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may
cause the actual results, level of activity, performance or
achievements of the Company to be materially different from those
expressed or implied by such forward-looking information, including
but not limited to risks related to: exploration and mining risks,
competition from competitors with greater capital; the Company's
lack of experience with respect to development-stage mining
operations; fluctuations in metal prices; uninsured risks;
environmental and other regulatory requirements; exploration,
mining and other licences; the Company's future payment
obligations; potential disputes with respect to the Company's title
to, and the area of, its mining concessions; the Company's
dependence on its ability to obtain sufficient financing in the
future; the Company's dependence on its relationships with third
parties; the Company's joint ventures; the potential of currency
fluctuations and political or economic instability in countries in
which the Company operates; currency exchange fluctuations; the
Company's ability to manage its growth effectively; the trading
market for the ordinary shares of the Company; uncertainty with
respect to the Company's plans to continue to develop its
operations and new projects; the Company's dependence on key
personnel; possible conflicts of interest of directors and officers
of the Company and various risks associated with the legal and
regulatory framework within which the Company operates. Although
management of the Company has attempted to identify important
factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from
those contained in forward-looking information, there may be other
factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or
intended. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove
to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ
materially from those anticipated in such statements.
Horizonte Minerals (TSX:HZM)
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