Here is something else for you Mac and doubters to read about:
Plans to triple south africa’s uraniumProduction by 2010 eal Froneman, CEO of Aflease, which is soon to be reverse listed into Canadian junior Southern Cross and to be renamed sxrUraniumOne, has been expressing his confidence in this commodity for over a year and he says that, if anything, the fundamentals for the metal are even clearer than they were before. “Demand is constantly outstripping supply and this situation will not ease for the next five to ten years,” he says.
At the moment the Nuclear Fuel Corporation of South Africa (Nufcor) calcining facility in the West Wits area produces some two million pounds a year of uranium oxide. The facility’s input comes from AngloGold Ashanti operations, that company being South Africa’s only producer of uranium. Aflease/ Southern Cross is looking to increase the country’s profile as a major uranium producer by adding four million pounds of U3O8 a year by 2010. Other uranium producers in Africa are Namibia’s Rossing mine and Cogema in Niger. French company Cogema is the world’s largest producer of uranium and it is projected to produce 22% of the world’s total mined uranium in 2010.
Froneman’s projections for 2010 see Canadian company Cameco holding on to number two spot at 19% followed by ERA at 12% and a trio of Russian and former USSR producers with a combined 24%. WMC of Australia is projected to produce 8% of the world total from its Olympic Dam mine, and Rossing will produce 7% of the world total. sxrUraniumOne will produce a projected 5% of the world total, eclipsing AngloGold Ashanti which will produce 3% of the world’s mined uranium in 2010 as a by-product of its gold mining operations in South Africa.
Froneman says that sxrUraniumOne will have assets in South Africa, Australia and Canada. Its Dominion project in South Africa is the most advanced and this comes from Aflease, while the Southern Cross Resources uranium properties in North America and Australia provide geographic diversification and a pipeline of projects. The project in Canada is the Pitchstone joint venture located in the prolific Athabasca basin of Saskatchewan.
That region hosts some of the largest and highest grade uranium deposits in the world. In Australia the Honeymoon deposit has been permitted, which is significant as that country has an ‘only three mine’ rule whereby it only allows production of uranium from three sites at any one time. Honeymoon can produce 880,000 pounds of U3O8 a year and with a construction capex of US$24.6 million would have a start up time of less than 18 months after go-ahead is given. sxrUraniumOne will have a market capitalisation of about US$500 million and code compliant uranium resources in South Africa of 120 million pounds, and another 20 million pounds on its offshore properties. The company also has resources of 7 million ounces of gold, of which some 1.4 million ounces are in the reserve category. “Aflease specialises in shallow low risk low cost mines. We did an exercise that identified three projects which could be developed,” Froneman says. One of those is the Bonanza South project, a gold project that will produce 30,000 ounces of gold a year and has poured its first gold. The other is the company’s Modder East property where Froneman sees the potential for consolidation of gold production on the East Neil Froneman. View of the Aflease Bonzana South plant, which is adjacent to the Dominion project. SOUTH AFRICA MINING REVIEW AFRICA – ISSUE 6 2005 39 Rand. The third is the Dominion uranium project where construction is underway concurrently with capital raising. “It is important to establish a position in the upcoming uranium market early,” Froneman says. “For that reason delivering uranium to the market by early 2007 is critical. The traditional project approaches will not meet these strategic objects, and that is why we are undertaking a parallel stream of work including a mine plan of sufficient accuracy to warrant funding and an implementation plan complete with sufficient detail to allow procurement and construction the moment permitting allows.” From an exploration viewpoint Dominion’s main aim is now to upgrade resources to reserves for mining. An 11,000 metre drilling programme is underway to delineate reserves for production and Dominion is expected to have a life of mine of over 30 years. “Dominion has the advantage that it is not a greenfields project and the orebody is well understood. It was studied by Anglo prior to 2003. A lot of testwork has been done,” Froneman says. That helps place sxrUraniumOne in a position to bid for market leadership as a global uranium producer. Another advantage it has over other groups is that South Africa has a responsible though friendly mining and environmental code, compared with other parts of the world where attempts to mine uranium can be a sticking point. For the phase 1 of the Dominion mine it will focus on reserves no deeper than 500 metres. The orebody features multiple reefs, the channel width will be 30 cm and the mining will be done using 1 metre high stopes. Site clearing work is underway and earthworks and civils will start in due course. It has also ordered the longer lead time items, while the process engineering is being done by Bateman. The shaft sinking and development work will be done in-house and decline development was scheduled to start in November 2005. The current production plan is for some 2 million pounds of U3O8 production in 2007, with this increasing to 2.8 million pounds in 2008 and 3.5 million pounds in 2009 and 4 million pounds in 2010. The project has a low capital cost of US$112 million. Aflease will strive for a 60/40 debt equity funding ratio and of the equity the first US$20 million has been raised. The company will go to the market to raise the remainder of its equity funding in about February 2006. The US$75 million debt finance will be raised in the first half of 2006 following the completion of a detailed feasibility study in April 2006. Froneman says that 60% of the capex requirement will be for the metallurgical plant. The plant will comprise crushing and milling, followed by an acid pressure leach in an autoclave. The solids are neutralised and report to a cyanide gold extraction circuit. Solvent extraction using pulse columns is then used on the uranium. The gold circuit is the same plant as that being used by the adjacent Bonanza South operation. With gold credits of about 90,000 ounces a year, and potentially rare earth credits Dominion will produce U3O8 at cash costs of below US$16/ pound. Bonanza South, which has come on stream on schedule, is in effect a pilot project for the larger Dominion project. “The orebody is the same, the MRA method for accessing it is the same, so in Bonanza South we have a good test case,” Froneman says. “Interestingly Bonanza South has uranium by-product credits, the reverse of Dominion which has gold by-product credits.” Bonanza South will have a life of mine of some four to five years. Froneman says that while the gold market is hard to read, he is much more confident about the uranium market, and hence believes developing a project in this area is a lower risk. Aflease will merge its gold assets into Sub Nigel, these assets being worth an estimated R450 million (US$69 million). The company plans to increase its dominance in uranium in South Africa through the acquisition of additional uranium assets. It also will take the Honeymoon project in Australia to detailed feasibility level, while completing its reverse listing into Southern Cross.
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