Middle Island Resources (ASX: MDI)

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Middle Island Resources (ASX: MDI) has outlined a schedule of exploration and corporate activities focused on its stated intentions of recommissioning its 100 per cent-owned Sandstone gold processing plant at the earliest opportunity.

The Resources Roadhouse had a brief chat with Middle Island Resources managing director at the recent RIU Resources Investor Roadshow in Melbourne to hear the company’s latest strategy.

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Middle Island’s exploration to date at the Sandstone project has been largely focussed on assessing brownfields targets, such as the Two Mile Hill deposit.

This has left the majority of greenfields targets untested or inadequately tested.

Advancing the Two Mile Hill deposit will remain a priority, but while that carries on, further exploration will hone in on identifying and quantifying additional open pit deposits of sufficient gold grade to facilitate a recommissioning decision.

“A recommissioning decision for the Sandstone gold operation is predicated on defining adequate gold resources, at an acceptable grade, to justify the modest recommissioning costs and ensure sustainable production,” Middle Island Resources managing director Rick Yeates said in a previous announcement.

“This is being progressively achieved via a dual approach; systematic exploration on Middle Island’s own tenure and engagement with neighbouring companies to consolidate adjacent deposits.”

Middle Island recently reached out to neighbour Alto Metals (ASX: AME), offering an all scrip off‐market take‐over offer for all that company’s issued ordinary shares.

Middle Island considers combining of the assets of the two companies would create a company with near-term cash flow potential and considerable production and exploration upside.
The company believes access to the Sandstone processing plant would provide Alto with an immediate, proximal and cost-effective processing solution for its gold resources that is not otherwise available.

“The collective Middle Island‐Alto gold assets offer a substantial growth opportunity for current and future shareholders of the Combined Group, via low capital intensity and a near-term production profile,” Yeates said.

“The further potential is to significantly extend this production profile via Middle Island’s Two Mile Hill underground deposits, consolidate further proximal deposits within a 100 kilometre radius, and amalgamate an entire greenstone belt offering significant resource and exploration upside.”

 

Email: info@middleisland.com.au

Web: www.middleisland.com.au

 

Ardiden Limited (ASX: ADV)

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Ardiden Limited (ASX: ADV) recently reported a Maiden Mineral Resource estimate for the Kasagiminnis deposit within the company’s Pickle Lake gold project in Ontario, Canada.

Ardiden declared the Inferred Resource estimate of 790,000 tonnes at 4.3 grams per tonne gold for 110,000 ounces to represent the first building block of planned gold resource upgrades as drilling re-commences and exploration activities ramp up on site.

The Resources Roadhouse managed a quick chat with Ardiden CEO Rob Longley at the RIU Resources Investor Roadshow in Melbourne.

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Ardiden has commenced planning for additional drilling, including negotiations with First Nations groups and approvals aimed at extending the Resource along strike and at depth at Kasagiminnis.

The company is also planning geophysical surveys, compiling historical data and evaluating drill targets with the aim of also building Project Mineral Resources at the South Limb, West Pickle and Dorothy-Dobie prospects at the Pickle Lake gold project.

“The Pickle Lake Greenstone area has been overlooked and under-loved since the 1980s, but now there is renewed interest from numerous mining and exploration companies in both the dormant underground mines and adjacent extensions of mineralised areas,” Longley said when releasing the announcement.

“A higher gold price and much improved exploration techniques has made this Gold Camp ripe for re-evaluation.

“Kasagiminnis is only a small part of our Pickle Lake gold project and following a recent site visit, I am encouraged by the prospectivity of the district in terms of mineralisation, opportunity and stakeholder willingness to advance these projects.”

 

Email: info@ardiden.com.au

Web: www.ardiden.com.au

 

Moho Resources (ASX: MOH)

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Moho Resources (ASX: MOH) recently completed a maiden auger drilling program at the Crossroads prospect within the company’s Burracoppin gold project in Western Australia.

Moho Resources’ auger exploration program consisted 814 shallow auger holes to test aeromagnetic and gravity targets plus gold in soil anomalies within E70/4688.

The program focused on a number of exploration targets which the company had previously identified within the Tampia Structural Corridor of the Southwestern Terrane and located approximately 22 kilometres from Ramelius’ Edna May gold mine near Westonia.

The Roadhouse caught up with the company’s executive director Ralph Winter at the RIU Resources Investor Roadshow in Melbourne.

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Moho received results from the first 380 samples at the Crossroads prospect, demonstrating >25ppb gold anomalies and a number of >100ppb gold anomalies within E70/4688.

A broader gold anomaly was also identified at the >8ppb level measuring approximately 1.4 kilometres east to west by 0.7km north to south that remains open to the north, west and east.

A partly coincident, high contrast arsenic anomaly peaks between 16 to 61ppm arsenic over a grid background level of 1-4ppm arsenic at the west, east and northern ends of the >25ppb gold anomaly.

Moho indicated it is proposing to undertake follow up auger sampling to the north, east and west of the currently defined >8ppb gold anomaly.

“Identification of such a strong gold in soil anomaly in first pass auger drilling is a great result for Moho and our exploration team and confirms the company’s initial assessment of the gold prospectivity of the Burracoppin project, Moho Resources managing director Shane Sadlier said.

“Coincidence of arsenic with the gold anomalism is very encouraging.”

 

Email: admin@mohoresources.com.au

Web: www.mohoresources.com.au

 

Pioneer Resources (ASX: PIO)

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Wally Graham caught up with Pioneer Resources managing director David Crook who was awaiting the results of recent drilling at the company’s Cade spodumene deposit.

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Pioneer Resources (ASX: PIO) reported receiving assay results from a recently completed drilling program on the Cade spodumene deposit, within the company’s 100 per cent-owned Pioneer Dome lithium-caesium-tantalum project in Western Australia.

Pioneer Resources conducted the drilling in order to test two lithium-caesium-tantalum (LCT) pegmatite targets beneath the previously reported discovery outcrops.

In July this year the company reported that spodumene-bearing LCT pegmatites had been discovered by its geologists at two locations within the Dome North Area.

The company has claimed to have confirmed the discovery of dominantly spodumene-rich deposits.

Assays have been received for drill holes PDRC263 to PDRC277, while those for holes PDRC278PDRC288 are still awaited.

PDRC263 was the discovery drill hole for the Cade spodumene deposit, intersecting:

113 metres at 1.04 per cent lithium dioxide (Li2O).

The company explained this drilling intersected the mineralised pegmatite at an angle near-parallel to the plunge orientation, so while the 113 meters is not truly representative of width, the company considers this hole does give an indication of mineralisation continuity with depth.

Results from further holes drilled at right angles to the Cade spodumene deposit, meaning that the reported intersections are close to ‘true width’, included:

PDRC265
25 metres at 1.61 per cent Li2O;

PDRC267
33m at 1.63 per cent Li2O;

PDRC268
18m at 1.47 per cent Li2O;

PDRC270
23m at 1.36 per cent Li2O; and

PDRC277
10m at 1.60 per cent Li2O.

Results from drilling at the Spodumene 1 Target included:

PDRC275
10m at 1.08 per cent Li2O and 129ppm tantalum pentoxide (Ta2O5).

Pioneer indicated it anticipates receiving the remaining assays before the end of September 2019.

“Having successfully completed its first mining operation at the Sinclair caesium mine, and now well-funded through the sale of pollucite, Pioneer returns to being an active explorer focused on key global demand-driven commodities, looking for its next mining opportunity,” Pioneer Resources said in its ASX announcement.

 

Web: www.pioresources.com.au

 

 

Meteoric Resources (ASX: MEI)

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Meteoric Resources managing director Andrew Tunks filled us in about the company’s recent Brazilian drilling success at the RIU Resources Investor Roadshow in Melbourne.

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Meteoric Resources (ASX: MEI) received assays from from its maiden drilling program currently underway at the company’s 100 per cent- owned Juruena gold project in Brazil.

Meteoric Resources said the assays related to the first two diamond drill holes of its current campaign, JUDD001 and JUD002, both of which intersected visible gold at the Dona Maria rospect.

DDH JUDD001 intercepted a thick zone of strongly altered granite and assays confirm a broad zone of bonanza grades, including:

20.6 metres at 94.9 grams per tonne gold from 96.8m, including 3.65m at 508.4g/t gold from 107.5m.

DDH JUDD002 intercepted two separate zones of alteration and gold mineralisation returning assays of:

1.1m at 22.68g/t gold from 41.2m; and
4.5m at 6.2g/t gold from 46.6m.

“We were expecting something special from our first holes at Juruena after we intersected visible gold and intense alteration, however the results have exceeded even my expectation,” Meteoric Resources managing director Andrew Tunks said in the company’s announcement to the Australian Securities Exchange.

“In fact, this is the best drilling intercept I have ever been involved with in my career.

“While we were confident of the possibilities based on the historic drilling and the gold we observed, it is very reassuring to have assay numbers that support our interpretation.

“I am extremely proud of what the company and the exploration team has achieved since the acquisition in April.

“We have recruited and deployed excellent staff, contracted and mobilised two drill rigs and struck bonanza grades.

“All done in remarkably quick time.

“We have now completed eight holes and are testing some deeper targets beneath Dona Maria that are very exciting.

“The geological logging, sample dispatch and assay procedures are flowing well ensuring a steady flow of drill results over the coming months.

“Furthermore, we have recognised the untapped potential at the Novo Astro project and moved quickly to execute an exploration and drilling program in tandem with Juruena.”

 

Web: www.meteoric.com.au

 

 

Venture Minerals (ASX: VMS)

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Wally Graham caught up with Venture Minerals Managing director Andrew Radonjic at the recent RIU Resources Investor Roadshow in Melbourne.

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Venture Minerals (ASX: VMS) recently committed to the recommencement of mining activities at the company’s Riley iron ore mine in Tasmania.

Venture Minerals made the announcement following completion of an updated Riley Iron Ore Mining Study with the associated Pre-Feasibility Study (PFS) delivering strong returns from a low capex two-year project, that the company believes to be well positioned to capture the current higher iron ore price environment.

In addition to completing the study the company, having previously signed a Binding Terms Sheet for the Riley Iron Ore Mine off-take with Prosperity Steel, has now signed a full off-take agreement for the Riley product for 100 per cent of the first two years of iron ore production.

First shipment of ore from the Riley Mine is currently planned for the fourth quarter of 2019, however the company indicated it was continuing to work on additional strategies to further reduce operating costs on the project before the first ore shipment.

These cost optimisation programs will focus on enhancing ore transport solutions.

“This is an exciting phase for the company as it moves from explorer to producer,” Venture Minerals managing director Andrew Radonjic said in the company’s announcement to the Australian Securities Exchange.

“The Riley Iron Ore Mining Study demonstrates the delivery of an exceptional Internal Rate of Return in excess of 300 per cent is possible by leveraging the relatively small capex required to commence production.

“Venture has brought together an experienced team with a blend of local knowledge that has built, managed and operated iron ore and other similar sized projects, thereby de-risking the execution phase of the Riley project.

“The Riley Iron Ore Mine will create 80 to 100 jobs and will be a boost for the economy of the West Coast of Tasmania.

“We look forward to commencing production shortly.”

 

 

Robust performance merely scratches surface

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Despite enjoying a high discovery success rate going back decades, Australia’s Cooper Basin is still not regarded as a mature exploration destination by some ASX-listed energy players. By Mark Fraser

Two of these companies – Oilex (ASX: OEX) and Real Energy Corporation (ASX: RLE) – made their feelings regarding the basin’s untapped potential clear at the RIU Good Oil Conference held in Perth recently.

During his presentation to the conference, Oilex managing director Joe Salomon said proven technologies like 3D had hugely impacted exploration in the Cooper Basin and suggested new technologies targeting depth would now see similar advancements.

It was also, “enormously rich in terms of the data that is available,” he said.

Earlier this year the company entered into an agreement with Holloman Energy Corporation to acquire a 48.5003 per cent interest in the PEL 112 and 444 licenses, which sit in the South Australian section of the basin.

Both blocks are located on extensions of the Western Flank oil fairway that hosts over 30 per cent of the Cooper Basin’s oil reserves. PEL 112 covers 1,086 square kilometres, while PEL 444 extends across 1,166 square kilometres.

“It’s under-explored, it’s underdeveloped, there’s an opportunity to build a big business in the Cooper Basin,” Salomon said.

“It’s proven, it’s a liquid rich gas basin, it has a world class source rock, and that’s the defining thing for all of our activities – we want to be next to world class source rocks.

“You have to understand the migration pathways. We are moving from structural plays to structural stratigraphic, and in fact pure stratigraphic, and that is a key part of our plan going forward.”

When it came the turn of Real Energy Corporation (REC) chief executive and executive director Scott Brown to present, he took the opportunity to compare the Cooper Basin with Texas, where around a million wells had been drilled as opposed to just 3,100 within the onshore Australian jurisdiction.

The company’s initial focus is on the exploration and development of unconventional gas resources and conventional oil and resources in both the Cooper and Eromanga basins.

“It (the Cooper Basin) is pretty similar size (to Texas), so there is a hell of a lot potential here for both oil and gas, and that’s why we are very bullish about it,” Brown said.

“Both Santos and Beach have announced pretty major programs to get after oil and gas in this basin.

“Santos is talking about a program of 100 wells over the next period of time.

“Obviously they are investing substantially.”

As with Oilex, REC was also looking to implement new technologies and methodologies as it further developed its permits.

This included incorporating updated well designs as well as finding ways to increase productivity and flow rates.

 

 

Todd Energy Limited Focused on Taranaki Basin Hydrocarbons

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Todd Energy has been a leading New Zealand oil and natural gas explorer for over 70 years, with an exploration program focussed on searching for new hydrocarbon resources for the security of New Zealand’s energy future.

Todd’s exploration strategy is focused within the Taranaki Basin.

This geological province underlies the Taranaki Peninsula and extends offshore from the top of the South Island, to just south of Auckland.

The basin holds all New Zealand’s commercial hydrocarbon resources, which are supported by well-developed production, processing and transport infrastructure.

In the Taranaki Basin, Todd is involved in four onshore and offshore producing fields – 100 per cent owner operator of onshore fields, McKee, Mangahewa and Kapuni, and a 26 per cent Joint Venture partner with OMV in the onshore/offshore Pohokura field.

The company purchased the McKee and Mangahewa fields in 2001, taking over as operator in 2006.

To date, the total Todd investment for the Mangahewa development is over $1 billion and consists of the Mangahewa Expansion Train 2, full field compression project and drilling of 20+ development wells across the field from several different sites.

Over the next 10 years further drilling campaigns are expected to add 450 PJ of natural gas into the market, including Todd Energy’s current Mangahewa G drilling program.

Todd has been a JV partner in the Kapuni field since its discovery in 1959.

In 2017 Todd acquired Shell’s 50 per cent to become 100 per cent owner operator.

The Kapuni focus is appraising reservoirs at 3500m depth for potential future development.

The 2016 Kapuni 3D seismic survey covering 450 square metres was an important milestone in helping extend the field life into its sixth decade of production and beyond.

Current field activity includes the construction of Kapuni J development wellsite.

With the offshore JV, Todd is a major New Zealand hydrocarbon producer with working interests in over 50 per cent of the country’s hydrocarbon energy production.

In addition to actively managing current developments, Todd Energy is continually re-evaluating and assessing new opportunities to ensure secure energy supplies for New Zealanders into the future.

 

Polemical Leader Both a Plus and Minus for Energy Sector

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: It seems some ASX-listed junior hydrocarbon players with North American projects are – like the rest of the world – a little polarised when it comes to controversial US President Donald Trump. By Mark Fraser

During the recent RIU Good Oil Conference in Perth, Trump was both highly praised and slightly berated by separate presenters with onshore assets.

Coming to the Republican president’s defence was Eon NRG’s Jerry McGann, whose company is currently focusing on its Powder River Basin play in Wyoming, where earlier this year it picked up some “juicy acreage” involving land which had been “tied up with government ownership effectively for sometimes 30, 40 or more years”.

“You might have various views as you sit down there about president Trump and some of the things he does, but one of the things that he has done is mobilise some of his government agencies, and one of those is the Bureau of Land Management – the BLM,” he said.

“And they had tens of thousands, probably hundreds of thousands, of acres that were tied up – sometimes for 30 or 40 years … and this was just fallow ground that was never available for hydrocarbon exploration.

“Trump has really got those chaps off their chairs, and ladies, and they had a lease sale here last July in the Powder River. This particular sale in the Powder River raised US$220 million.

“And what happens in these lease sales – it’s a lot of fun.

“A new lease package comes up every eight minutes, you bid online, and we have basically two technical guys in the office in Denver, and they are competing with big groups – sometimes 20 or 30 people – in other places on their computers bidding against us.”

McGann told RIU delegates under the terms of the Powder River deal Eon ERG had ended up paying just US$12/acre, was required to pay a 12.5 per cent royalty, and now held the land for 10 years with “no obligation for drilling or anything else”.

During the closing moments of his presentation, however, Samson Oil & Gas chief executive Terry Barr wasn’t so complimentary of the US president, suggesting Trump had to take some of the blame for the oil price’s volatility while commenting on his company’s hedge book.

Samson currently has an 87 per cent operated average working interest in the Foreman Butte project in North Dakota.

“Our hedges, and I guess this is an unfortunate part of the oil business, everyone likes to have a high oil price,” Barr said.

“But basically, our lender wanted to be hedged, and so our hedge book is currently valued at $2.7 million.

“It goes up and down, obviously, with the oil price every day – it was, I think, $2.1 million yesterday, so it’s all over the place.

“And I’ve never seen volatility like we have experienced … it’s quite disheartening, I think, to see (when) our beloved president comes out with some statement and the price goes down five dollars, and he comes out with another one and it goes up five dollars.

“So, it’s fairly hard to predict that in your planning.”

 

 

Unconventional Resources to Restore Balance

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Australia’s south-eastern energy market is facing a gas shortage which is almost at crisis point – and liquefied natural gas (LNG) producers will not be able to meet long term demand at attractive prices post-2020. By Mark Fraser

This grim prediction was made by RISC’s Joe Collins during the recent RIU Good Oil Conference in Perth, where he said energy uncertainty – particularly in Victoria and New South Wales – was partly being driven by electricity transition and government failure to adjust policy settings that would “allow more supply to come into the market”.

However, it was not all bad news according to Collins, who maintained there was not a shortage of gas on the east coast, but rather a shortfall of developed gas.

In fact, he noted, there was a “massive amount” of gas available to the markets in the form of unconventional resources.

“We’ve seen what happened in Queensland with the CSG (coal seam gas) boom – the massive amount of gas that they are now producing from a very modest total previously,” Collins said.

“The potential exists for them to do that in other basins across eastern Australia. They just need to prioritise the investment, prioritise the exploration and get after that gas.

“I wouldn’t over-invest on LNG import capacity given what we know of what happened in the United States, where they over-invested in LNG import capacity, and the high prices that were in place there just stimulated a supply-side response from the unconventional gas guys.

“The same thing could happen in eastern Australia. I’m not saying that it will happen, but it could happen.”

In Western Australia, however, it was a different story as oversupply and a lack of new demand were keeping gas prices down.

Collins said the reservation policy of the state’s DomGas Alliance – a member-driven industry body representing natural gas users, infrastructure investors and producers – was also impacting the supply side.

Furthermore, recent exploration success in WA, such as the Waitsia gas discovery in the Perth Basin, was contributing to this situation.

“So really, we’re waiting for some new projects to come to the market on the demand side in Western Australia, whether they be petrochemical-type projects or new gas-to-power projects for big mines or things of that nature,” he said.

“We really think that the picture is of continued oversupply going forward – it’s highly unlikely that the market will swing to undersupply … probably as long as five to 10 years, almost, and that should keep prices low for the foreseeable future as well.”