Diggers & Dealers 2019 Awards

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: A highlight of the Diggers & Dealers Mining Forum each year is the presentation of the annual awards at the Gala Dinner.

2019 DIGGER OF THE YEAR

The Digger of the Year Award recognises a company who has achieved exceptional results from its operating projects over the past 12 months.

The 2019 Digger of the Year Award was presented to Roy Hill, for the performance of the Roy Hill iron ore project, situated 340 kilometres southeast of Port Hedland, over the past year.

The big shovels commenced mining in May 2014 at Roy Hill, since which time it has become one of Australia’s single largest iron ore mines.

The company has also built a 344 kilometre train set and a dedicated two berth port facility.

It provides employment to over 2,000 people.

The company ramped-up to full production during the 2018 financial year, and by February 2019, Roy Hill trains had delivered more than 126 million tonnes to port.

Production for the 2019 financial year is expected to be at the company’s 55 million tonne production capacity, placing it in the healthy position to be able to capitalise on the booming iron ore price.

Roy Hill has continued to focus on sustained, low cost production, as well as increasing shipments to key markets in Japan, Korea, China & Taiwan.

2019 DEALER OF THE YEAR

The Dealer of the Year Award recognises a company whose strategic decisions have added substantial value for shareholders over the past 12 months.

This year the 2019 Dealer of the Year gong was presented to Northern Star Resources in recognition of the company’s acquisition of the Pogo underground gold mine in the Tintina Mineral Belt in Alaska.

Pogo is the eighth largest gold mine in the United States and was purchased by Northern Star in September 2018 for US$260 million.

The mine has 4.1 million ounces in resource, which equates to US$63 per resource ounce.

Northern Star has exported good old Aussie know-how to make mining methods at Pogo more efficient.

The company is investing heavily in exploration and new technology to extend the life of the mine.

The acquisition has transformed Northern Star into a 900,000 ounce per annum producer, with a market capitalisation of $8.6 billion.

GJ STOKES MEMORIAL AWARD

The GJ Stokes Memorial Award recognises someone who has made a significant and lasting contribution to the mining industry.

This year’s winner, Mark Creasy, has dedicated many years of his life to pegging ground and searching for minerals, which has resulted in him making some of the most significant gold and nickel discoveries in Western Australia.

Creasy graduated from the Royal School of Mines in London before moving to Australia in 1964.

He began his career as a mining engineer in Broken Hill, before moving to Western Australia in the late 1960s.

His first big prospecting success came in the shape of a 46 ounce gold nugget near Mount Magnet in the 1970s.

Later, in 1979, he went looking for Skylab debris near Norseman, however, while studying maps of the area, he formed the opinion that the Fraser Range would be prospective for economic nickel
mineralisation.

Mark’s foresight in pegging this ground eventually led to the discovery of the Nova nickel-copper deposit, via a joint venture with Sirius Resources to undertake the exploration program.

The announcement of the Nova discovery sent Sirius shares soaring 10,000 per cent within a matter of months.

In the 1980’s, Mark pegged the ground that would one day lead to two major gold discoveries in Western Australia, Jundee and Bronzewing, after he identified gold bearing outcrops in the area.

To date, these mines have collectively produced more than 11 million ounces of gold.

Mark Creasy has played a part in some of WA’s biggest resource finds, and in doing so has become Australia’s most famous modern gold prospector.

After 55 years in the industry, he remains one of the biggest holders of exploration ground in the state and continues to lend his support to many junior exploration and mining companies.

2019 MEDIA AWARD

The Diggers and Dealers Media Award recognises one outstanding journalist who reports primarily on the resources sector.

Voting for the award is conducted by fellow journalists, as well as mining company representatives.

The winner of the 2019 Media Award is freelance journalist Barry FitzGerald.

This is Barry’s second time at winning the award, having taken home the inaugural gong in 2003.

Barry has covered the resources industry for more than 30 years, writing for The Australian Financial Review and The Age and has been Resources Editor at the Australian.

He is currently a contributor to Mining News and Stockhead.
His articles on the resources industry are of the highest calibre, well researched and insightful.

They cover the spectrum of small and mid-cap miners, as well as the majors.

The consistent quality of Barry’s articles and opinion pieces make him a worthy second-time winner of this year’s Media Award

 

 

How Will Lithium Supplies Meet Forecast Demands?

GUEST COMMENTARY: Many equity market and lithium industry analysts have seized on recent statistics for lithium supply and demand as indicative of long-term market trends. By Adrian Griffin managing director of Lithium Australia.

They see the rapid increase in hard-rock production, combined with a slower-than-anticipated uptake of electric vehicles (EVs), as a sure sign that the sky is about to fall in on the lithium price.

This position has led to forecasts of a glut in supply that will send the value of lithium, and the chemicals produced from it, tumbling fast.

Closer examination, however, reveals this to be far from the truth.

If global demand for lithium-ion batteries grows beyond the pundits’ wildest expectations, which it seems it may, then conventional sources of lithium supply simply will not cope with demand.

How then might ‘infinite’ lithium supply be achieved?

Unconventional sources will have to fill the gap.

But how, and when, such sources will be exploited are the fundamental questions.

The answers to those questions are not yet clear, as the sector remains captive to misinformation, misinterpretation and misunderstanding.

Culpable are corporates and governments – large and small – jockeying for a larger slice of what is anticipated to be a very large pie, the next global industry.

For example, while ‘experts’ debate the rate of uptake of lithium-powered vehicles, China fiddles with its EV subsidies.

Already, converters of spodumene – a common mineral rich in lithium – struggle to cope with adding capacity or planning future expansions. Yet we are told there is an oversupply of spodumene concentrates.

These are short-term aberrations, but as legislative changes pre-empt the banning of internal combustion engines around the world, it is apparent that any perceived oversupply of lithium may actually be short-lived.

Taking a longer-term view, some 3.5 million tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent (a common measure of value employed in the lithium industry) will be required annually just to power the EVs needed to meet the legislative requirements in place from 2030 or thereabouts.

Factor in growing demand for lithium for energy storage and electronic goods and it becomes harder and harder to realistically envisage current and planned lithium operations meeting that demand.
So, where will the ‘new’ lithium come from?

Current mining expansion will not meet lithium demand longer term.

As mines mature, production will dwindle.

New mines targeting lower grades can fill demand gaps, but alternative sources of lithium may prove more attractive as genuine supply shortages put pressure on conventional production.

As Earth’s ‘throwaway society’ matures and (hopefully) develops a culture of custodianship for the planet, recycling will replace new materials as the preferred source of supply.

When the market matures to the point of product saturation, with continual expansion no longer required, demand for – and the recycling of – lithium will synchronise.

If that does occur, newly mined material will only be necessary to top up that regained through recycling.

Unfortunately, such a scenario seems a long way off, and if global population continues to increase by around 1.07 per cent a year (82 million people) it may never be realised.

In the meantime, an exponentially increasing demand for lithium will have the industry scratching its collective head about new sources of supply.

So, what might some of those sources be? Options include the following.

Seawater;
Geothermal and oilfield brines;
Spent lithium-ion batteries;
Lithium clays;
Spodumene tailings; and
Lithium micas found in pegmatites and greisen.

Let us explore each option.

Seawater contains lithium in very low concentrations (approx. 0.17 parts per million).

Due to the large volumes of water that would be required, evaporation ponds will not work commercially.

Also, seawater contains many other dissolved minerals, so traditional separation technologies would involve not only huge energy consumption but also fouling of the filtration media or regenerants.

If the recovery issues for seawater can be resolved, its commercial advantages will centre on location and its ubiquity.

In fact, exploiting seawater as a source of lithium could resolve much in the way of political uncertainty and security risks and in so doing enhance sustainability.

Geothermal and oilfield brines have been much studied, but their low lithium concentrations present processing challenges and, with oilfield brines, the expense of pumping from great depths. Japan and NZ have achieved geothermal brine success, but key US efforts have not.

In the UK, hot springs in old mine workings have been found to contain lithium and this potential source is being investigated.

Spent lithium-ion batteries – worldwide, enthusiastic adoption of lithium-ion batteries in huge quantities is causing great environmental concern, since once depleted most end up in landfill.

Presently, only nine per cent are recycled.

In Australia, the figure is less than three per cent.

Right now, smelting is the main means of recovering the metals these batteries contain, but the lithium is usually lost in flux or off-gas.

Research into lithium recovery through condensation of the off-gas from such smelting is currently underway, as is the development of more efficient recovery processes that will make recycling of lithium-ion batteries a potentially significant new source of lithium (as well as other energy metals).

Lithium clays, while low-grade compared to conventional hard-rock lithium deposits, are garnering attention.

Mexican deposits have been metallurgically assessed and future production from the region is anticipated.

Other lithium clay deposits – including in Nevada – contain both lithium and boron, but recovery from such deposits remains very energy-intensive.

Spodumene tailings – given the ways in which spodumene mineral separation circuits perform, and how commercial concentrates are produced, most pegmatite orebodies offer a relatively low lithium yield in terms of tonnes of ore mined.

Conventional conversion processes are energy-intensive and feed rates dependent on relatively coarse particle size, so much of the fine spodumene is discharged to tailings.

Emerging processing technologies, however, can improve recovery rates for both coarse and finer particles, thereby limiting waste and utilising material previously considered unsuitable for conventional lithium processing.

This represents a great industry opportunity.

Lithium micas are the world’s most abundant lithium minerals.

Lepidolite in particular is commonly associated with tin, tantalum and tungsten mineralisation.

When those elements are mined, vast quantities of lithium micas are currently discharged as waste.

Given that extraction and some processing costs are already covered, lithium mica waste streams become an obvious target for lithium production, but further processing innovation is required.

Adrian Griffin is managing director of Perth-based, ASX-listed lithium disruptor, Lithium Australia NL (ASX: LIT), which is building a business that integrates all aspects of the lithium supply chain, the aim being to ‘close the loop’ on the energy-metal cycle.

Adrian is available on 0418 927 658.

 

Saturn Metals Drilling Encouraging Results at Apollo Hill

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Saturn Metals (ASX: STN) has had a stellar 12 months since we last caught up with the company at last year’s Diggers & Dealers Conference.

Saturn Metals recently announced it had encountered additional strong drill results from a RC drilling campaign currently underway at the company’s 100 per cent-owned Apollo Hill gold project near Leonora in the Western Australian goldfields.

The company’s interpretation of the drilling has shown geology and assays outlining several hanging-wall splays defined over 800 metres of strike length.

The system is open at depth, down plunge and along strike.

Saturn Metals managing director Ian Bamborough sat down with the Resources Roadhouse at the 2019 Diggers & Dealers Mining Forum in Kalgooorlie to expand on the recent drilling and to provide some insight into what’s next.

 

 

Email: info@saturnmetals.com.au

Web: www.saturnmetals.com.au

 

Anitpa Minerals and JV Partner Rio Moving Ahead with Citadel Project Exploration

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Antipa Minerals (ASX: AZY) is in the midst of an exploration program for the company’s Citadel project Farm-in and Joint Venture with Rio Tinto Exploration in Western Australia’s Paterson Province.

Antipa Minerals and Rio have a budget of $3.4 million allocated to the 2019 calendar year exploration program at Citadel, to cover the JV’s planned activities.

The exploration program is fully funded by Rio Tinto while Antipa resumed operatorship of the Citadel Farm-in, including the execution of the Exploration Program in March 2019.

Antipa stated Paterson Province dual exploration strategy strives to deliver both greenfield discoveries and increase brownfield gold and/or copper resources during 2019.

The company believes its exploration activities within the Citadel project are complementary to this strategy.

The Resources Roadhouse caught up with Antipa Minerals executive chairman Stephen Power at the 2019 Diggers & Dealers Mining Forum in Kalgoorlie for a quick chat.

 


Web: www.antipaminerals.com.au

 

Musgrave Minerals Progressing Drilling at Lena Deposit

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Musgrave Minerals (ASX: MGV) is currently busy carrying out reverse circulation (RC) drilling on the Lena deposit at the company’s Cue project in Western Australia’s Murchison district.

The Lena deposit has an existing JORC 2012 resource of 2,682,000 tonnes at 1.77 grams per tonne gold for 153,000 ounces estimated at Lena Main to a maximum vertical depth of 160 metres.

The Lena deposit consists of several gold lodes, with Musgrave considering some to hold high-grade potential at depth.

Interpretation of historical drill data has identified a high-grade southerly plunging shoot on the main lode that remains open at depth below the current JORC resource.

The current drilling program will use a combination of RC (pre-collars) and diamond drilling to better define and infill this high-grade gold shoot below the existing resource.

The aim of the program is to improve the geological confidence in the continuity of the mineralisation by reducing the drill spacing to enable an upgrade of the Lena resource estimate.

Musgrave Minerals managing director Rob Waugh sat down with The Resources Roadhouse at the 2019 Diggers & Dealer Mining Forum in Kalgoorlie to provide an update on how the drilling was progressing.

 


Email: info@musgraveminerals.com.au

Web: www.musgraveminerals.com.au

 

Emu NL Chases Chilean Success

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Emu NL (ASX: EMU) secured a three-year extension to its option to purchase the Vidalita concessions in Chile.

These comprise six of Emu’s 51 concessions (granted and applications) and cover 1,580 hectares or approximately 12 per cent total area of 136 square kilometres held by Emu at its Elevado project.

The Vidalita concessions cover the discovery hole the company announced earlier this year and the area that has been the main focus of Emu’s prospecting and exploration effort.

The Elevado project is located within the Maricunga gold belt in the Atacama Region, northern Chile that hosts numerous world-class gold and silver projects.

EMU non-executive director Gavin Rutherford spoke with Wally Graham of The Resources Roadhouse at the 2019 Diggers & Dealers Mining Forum in Kalgoorlie.

 


Email: info@emunl.com.au

Web: www.emunl.com.au

 

 

Moho Resources Gets on The Go Go Go

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Moho Resources (ASX: MOH) listed on the Australian Securities Exchange in November 2018 on the back of an IPO that raised $5.3 million.

The company has endeavoured to spend this money on exploration activities on its portfolio of projects in both Western Australia and Queensland, two well-known Australian mining jurisdictions that include three highly prospective projects at Empress Springs, Silver Swan North and Burracoppin.

Moho’s Board is chaired by mining industry identity Terry Streeter, a well-known and highly successful West Australian businessman with extensive experience in funding and overseeing exploration and mining companies, including Jubilee Mines NL, Western Areas NL and Midas Resources Ltd.

Moho has a strong and experienced Board lead by geoscientist Shane Sadleir as managing director, commercial director Ralph Winter and Adrian Larking, lawyer and geologist, as non-executive director.

Ralph Winter sat down with The Resources Roadhouse at the 2019 Diggers & Dealers Mining Forum in Kalgoorlie to discuss how the company’s drilling programs are progressing.

 

 

Email: admin@mohoresources.com.au

Web: www.mohoresources.com.au

 

Trigg Mining IPO Hopes to unlock Domestic Potash Market

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: Trigg Mining is currently in the closing stages of an IPO to list on the ASX centred around the company’s two Sulphate of Potash (SOP) projects located near Laverton in the Goldfields of Western Australia.

The projects: Lake Rason and Lake Throssell potash projects cover approximately 2,640 square kilometres of granted tenure and are close to established transport and energy infrastructure and are nearby the Tropicana and Gruyere gold mines.

The projects contain more than 400sqkm of playa lakes and 300 km of interpreted palaeochannels, all prospective for brine hosted SOP mineralisation.

Trigg is looking at creating a local-domestic supply chain of Sulphate of Potash, which Australia currently imports from as far away as Canada and Germany.

The company has stamped a footprint across its two SOP projects in the WA Goldfields with an eye of catering to Australian and International markets.

The Resources Roadhouse sat down with Trigg Mining managing director Keren Paterson at the Diggers & Dealers 2019 Mining Forum in Kalgoorlie.

 


Email: admin@triggmining.com.au

Web: www.triggmining.com.au

 

Share Collective Aims to Take Mystery Out of Resources Investment

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: At the 2019 Gold Coast Investment Showcase, The Roadhouse met Tyson Keen CEO of Share Collective.

A quick squiz of the Share Collective website tells you it provides punters with a, “unique opportunity to view any mining project in the world with transparency”.

“It brings critical data to your fingertips, enabling you to compare and contrast any mining project in the world.

“This catalysis intelligent discussion and understanding for the entire industry.”

We asked Keen to fill us in on what that all means and what Share Collective has to offer to assist investors to part with their money in a more informed way.

 

 

Email: customercare@sharecollective.co

Web: www.sharecollective.co

 

 

Last Look at Resources Companies Presenting at Gold Coast Investment Showcase

THE CONFERENCE CALLER: The 2019 Gold Coast Investment Showcase kicks off next week and The Resources Roadhouse continues its look at companies that will be in attendance.

 

Venture Minerals (ASX: VMS) has upgraded the Resources at the company’s Riley iron ore project in Tasmania.

Venture Minerals announced the upgrade as part of the ongoing iron ore mining study underway at the Riley project that has updated the JORC Code 2004 maiden resource statement of 2 million tonnes at 57 per cent iron to meet the guidelines of the JORC Code 2012.

The company indicated the upgrade coincides with release of the tender documents to be released this coming week to contractors for the mining, processing and haulage components of the Riley DSO project, from which the resultant prices will be used in the updating of the mining study.

Venture said that as part of the mining study update, the Riley ore reserves will also be upgraded to JORC Code 2012 so that a decision to recommence mining can be made at the earliest opportunity by the Board.

Following a favourable study outcome and a decision to mine, Venture’s goal is to commence iron ore production in Q4 2019.

“The resource upgrade and the imminent release of the tender documents for the three main contracts of the Riley Mine are significant steps towards completing the updated mining study,” Venture Minerals managing director Andrew Radonjic said.

Venture Minerals’ Resource upgrade follows firm commitments under a Share Placement to sophisticated and professional investors.

Venture Minerals is raising just over $1.5 million through the issue of around 78 million Ordinary Shares at an issue price of two cents per share.

The company explained the raised funds will provide certainty that it will be funded to progress the development of the Riley iron ore project in Tasmania should a positive decision to mine be reached by the Board.

“The Placement and the fully underwritten Entitlement Offer secures key funding capacity for Venture to progress the updated feasibility study on the Riley iron ore project during a time of significant strength for global iron ore markets,” Radonjic said.

“The recently executed off-take agreement for the Riley project provides strong market validation that the Riley product will be highly sought after.

“The Fully Underwritten Entitlement Offer provides all shareholders the opportunity to participate in the future of the company as we enter an exciting phase of working towards potentially bringing Australia’s next iron ore mine into development.

“With the iron ore price recently breaking through US$100 a tonne, the outlook for the iron ore sector is positive and the Riley project will benefit from a quick-to-market development status by leveraging circa 90 per cent of the required equipment that was previously purchased in 2014 being still on hand.

“The Board looks forward to completing the updated feasibility study on the Riley iron ore project and updating the market on its outcome in the near term.”

Venture has also invited eligible institutional shareholders to participate in a Fully Underwritten Institutional Entitlement Offer.

 

Meteoric Resources (ASX: MEI) recently completed the acquisition of the highly prospective Juruena and Novo Astro gold projects in Brazil from Crusader Resources (ASX: CAS).

The Juruena and Novo Astro projects cover an area of approximately 770 square kilometres, comprising 24 tenements, located on the western end of the highly prospective Alta Floresta Belt, which is host to major miners including Anglo American and Vale.

Geologically, the Alta Floresta belt is a Paleoproterozoic, east west trending, continental magmatic arc, estimated to have produced over seven million ounces of gold to date.

The Alta Floresta Belt is arguably the most desirable gold exploration destination in Brazil.

The Juruena project hosts a JORC (2012) Compliant Resource Estimate of 1.3 million tonnes for 261,000 ounces of gold at 6.3 grams per tonne.

“The formal completion of the Acquisition of Juruena and Novo Astro marks the commencement of the next exciting stage of development for Meteoric as we move to commence exploration,” Meteoric Resources managing director Dr Andrew Tunks said.

Tunks advised that he was travelling to site to join Meteoric operations manager Peter Sheehan and the company’s Brazilian team to finalise the initial drilling plan for the Dona Maria and Querosene prospects, the two most advanced targets on Juruena.

“These prospects already contain a combined high-grade JORC 2012 Mineral Resource Estimate of 436,000 tonnes at 14.7 grams per tonne for 205,000 ounces it is our intention to complete further drilling at these bonanza grade prospects,” Tunks continued.

“This is truly an exciting time for the company and its shareholders as we move into gold exploration in what we believe is one of the most prospective regions in the world, the Alta Floresta Belt in Brazil, which is home to majors including Anglo American and Vale.

“Since the announcement of the Acquisition back in April, the Meteoric team – myself included – have been itching to get on the ground and start exploration and I am simply thrilled that we are now mobilising.”