Jun 2 2015
Paladin Energy Ltd ("Paladin" or "the Company") is pleased to announce the acquisition of strategically important tenements in Western Australia.
HIGHLIGHTS
- Acquisition of the Carley Bore uranium deposit in Western Australia consolidates control of an emerging uranium province around Paladin's Manyingee Uranium Project in the Carnarvon Basin where preparation work for an In Situ Recovery (ISR) field leach trial (FLT) is being advanced.
- Logical and strategic acquisition expected to deliver operational synergies and lower capital costs for combined future development.
- Immediate focus for the new tenement areas will be on resource expansion work at Carley Bore and targeted regional exploration for new deposits.
Paladin announces the acquisition of strategically important tenements containing the Carley Bore uranium deposit from Energia Minerals Limited (EMX) for consideration of Paladin shares and A$1.6 million in cash.
Paladin will issue EMX 40 million Paladin fully paid shares and make a cash payment of A$1.6 million for the purchase of EMX's EL 08/1645 and EL 08/1646, a 685km2 land package covering a rich sedimentary basin which hosts the Carley Bore uranium deposit (Carley Bore), in the north west region of Western Australia.
Paladin will then issue EMX a further 5 million Paladin fully paid shares for the purchase of the adjacent northern EMX tenement, EL 08/1644, should EMX's application for expenditure exemption on EL 08/1644 be approved. This share payment is capped at a ceiling value of A$0.45/share and, should the Paladin share price be above this level at the time of settlement, the number of shares will be reduced accordingly. The acquisition also provides Paladin with a right of first refusal over the disposal of any interest in any future tenements granted to Energia that share a boundary with the existing Carley Bore tenements and certain specific tenements in the vicinity.
Voluntary escrow restrictions will apply to 16 million shares for 12 months from the date of issue. Further, control mechanisms have been agreed to ensure an orderly sale of Paladin shares if and when EMX decides to do so.
This acquisition is subject to Australian Foreign Investment Review Board approval as Paladin is deemed to be a foreign corporation under Australia's foreign investment laws. In addition, EMX shareholder approval may be required and in the event this is the case, must be obtained within 45 business days of the date of this announcement.
Consisting of three contiguous exploration licences, this new project area is located 100km south of Paladin's Manyingee Uranium Project (Manyingee) as shown in the location map. The Carley Bore deposit, as estimated by EMX, contains an Indicated Mineral Resource of 5.0Mlb U3O8 grading 420ppm and an Inferred Mineral Resource of 10.6Mlb U3O8 grading 280ppm (JORC (2012)) at a cut-off grade of 150ppm U3O8.
This acquisition will increase the Company's JORC (2012) Indicated Mineral Resources within the area by more than 30% to 20.7Mlb U3O8 at a grade of 680ppm, and the Inferred Mineral Resources by more than 100% to 20.9Mlb at a grade of 415ppm. Carley Bore remains open to the north and south and Paladin believes there is excellent potential within this land package to increase this resource base by at least a further 15Mlb to 25Mlb.
This tenement package is a highly strategic acquisition for Paladin, which substantially increases the Company's foothold in a new and emerging uranium province along the southern margin of the Carnarvon Basin. This acquisition provides the opportunity to generate enhanced development economics and project life of the potential ISR operation currently under consideration at nearby Manyingee.
Paladin believes Carley Bore has the potential to become a complementary "satellite" operation with Manyingee as the main processing hub. The ability of ISR projects to operate with a central plant supported by numerous satellite deposits typically results in a lower capital cost and highly cost effective development approach. For decades, a similar satellite and central processing hub and spoke strategy has been successful at a number of operations in the United States and is currently used at Heathgate Resources' Beverley ISR uranium project in South Australia with the Four Mile, Panniken and Pepegoona deposits.
Paladin's Managing Director/CEO John Borshoff said: "The current low uranium price and sustained sector weakness have created an opportunity to consolidate our portfolio in strategically important regions for the Company. We remain focussed on recapitalising our balance sheet, but can now pursue opportunities to enhance our development pipeline in a balanced and cost effective manner. This acquisition is certainly a game changer for us in terms of our Australian projects. With this land package, we have cornered a significant portion of the emerging Carnarvon Basin uranium province. This acquisition has the clear potential to improve the economics of a key development project by delivering valuable synergies in regional infrastructure."
The large tenement package contains geology similar to that which hosts the Carley Bore and Manyingee deposits as well as numerous identified regional drill anomalies which offer additional targets warranting follow-up investigation. The established resource inventory and potential upside of the combined tenement portfolio will ensure that a single ISR facility in the region is able to operate with a long processing life.
Studies are currently underway at Manyingee in order to obtain approval for a FLT as a precursor to mining. Scoping studies indicate an ISR operation producing 2Mlb U3O8 pa over a 10-year period is technically and financially viable at current uranium term prices. However, Paladin maintains its stated position that it will not develop any new projects before it is confident of a sustainable uranium price of at least US$70/lb.
The potential to develop a significant mining operation with a long mine life extending well beyond 20 years within a new uranium district is compelling. In-house studies indicate the acquisition of Carley Bore will be value accretive independent of the significant resource upside Paladin considers exploration may deliver.
Exploration work in FY16 will focus on resource extensions to Carley Bore and regional exploration to test potential for additional uranium deposits.
In the above announcement, for information that is reported as conforming to the Joint Ore Reserves Committee (JORC) 2012 code guidelines ("JORC (2012)"), the terms Inferred Mineral Resources, Indicated Mineral Resources, Measured Mineral Resources, Ore Reserves, Proved Reserves, Probable Reserves are equivalent to the terms used in Canadian National Instrument 43-101 - Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101") Inferred Mineral Resource, Indicated Mineral Resource, Measured Mineral Resource, Mineral Reserves, Proven Mineral Reserve and Probable Mineral Reserve, respectively.