The following is an extract from The Hedgeless Horseman’s latest article on Egina.
“Remember the following grades that came out of the large scale bulk samples:
Given the amount of orange or better MAK samples I could argue that the average indicate grade over the samples areas within the Egina Mining Lease could be around 0.8 g/m3 and that it approximately covers around 3 km2 of ground. Now what could the theoretical cash flow be from this “tiny” 3 km2 area of lag gravels which is just found within a subset of a subset of the Greater Terrace area?
- Within swale: 1.7 g/m3
- Swale margin: 0.6 g/m3
- Outside of swale: 0.3 g/m3
- Average: 0.83 g/m3
- Global average for such deposits: 0.2-0.3 g/m3
Example Assumptions:
… Which translates into a net operating profit of A$239 M on an undiluted basis. This should be doable by a single continuous miner in one field season I think. Sumitomo will of course get up to 40% of that assuming they keep earning into the Egina Project (which includes the Egina Mining Lease).”
- Area: 3 km2
- Thickness: 1.5 m
- Grade: 0.8 g/m3
- Operating Costs: A$15/m3 (Double Barron’s estimate)
The PIO Kangan tenements cover 268km2. If Novo only found 3km2 as per the above example the pre tax profit attributable to PIO would be $71.7m (30%) which is roughly 4 times the current PIO market cap. A 30km2 area would be $717m, 40 times the current market cap.
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