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July 2, 2018

#Lithium's Top Challenge Is Finding Funds

Lithium's Top Challenge Is Finding Funds, Not the Battery Metal - Bloomberg
Despite bullish forecasts - especially with accelerating production of #EV's electric vehicles -- lithium may have a funding problem. 
Banks are wary, citing everything from the industry's poor track record on delivering earlier projects to a lack of insight into a small, opaque market. 
Without more investment, supplies of the commodity could remain tight, sustaining a boom that already has seen prices triple since 2015.
Lithium companies will need to invest about $12 billion to increase output fivefold by 2025 and keep pace with the world's growing appetite for batteries, according to Galaxy Resources Ltd., an Australian producer seeking to build further operations in Argentina and Canada. 
Developers say that, so far, projects aren't getting financed fast enough to achieve that leap.


Lithium's Top Challenge Is Finding Funds, Not the Battery Metal


Altura Mining's lithium operation on May 2018. Source: Altura Mining."


Battery producers and automakers "have absolutely no clue on how long it takes to be able to put a mining project into operation," said Guy Bourassa, chief executive officer of Nemaska Lithium Inc., which spent about 18 months piecing together a complex C$1.1 billion ($830 million) funding program for a mine and processing plant in Quebec. "There will be a big problem -- it's going to be an impediment" to raising supply, he said.

June 21, 2018

3% #Nickel, about 2% #Copper and a little bit less than 1% of #Cobalt: #VoiseysBay 'exquisite,

"Most people don't find something as exquisite as this in their lifetime" 

Mineral deposits at Voisey's Bay 'exquisite,' says geology professor

Terry Roberts · CBC News · Posted: Jun 19, 2018 6:00 AM NT | Last Updated: June 19

Questions about the fate of mining operations at Voisey's Bay over the past year have been replaced by unbridled hope and enthusiasm.
A green light for a multibillion-dollar underground expansion, a lifespan extended by many years, a workforce that will nearly double, and an operation poised to capitalize on what many expect will be an explosion in the demand for electric vehicles in the coming years.

Every nickel explorer's dream

You only need to pick up a metallurgical core sample from Voisey's Bay to understand what all the hype is about, and you don't need to be a geologist to know you're holding something unique.
Many times heavier than a similar-sized rock, these samples were drilled to test the ore body, and the first people to cast their eyes on them were likely very impressed.
Red areas indicate the location of confirmed mineral deposits at Voisey's Bay in Labrador. Underground mining operations are being established at Reid Brook and Eastern Deeps. The famous 'Ovoid' surface mine is expected to be exhausted in four or five years. (Wheaton Precious Metals)
"They probably went out and bought a lot of shares," Wilton joked.
The sample is rich in pentlandite and chalcopyrite. In more simple terms, it's every nickel explorer's dream, and a jaw-dropper if you're looking for copper and cobalt.
"Most people don't find something as exquisite as this in their lifetime," Wilton added.
Voisey's Bay was discovered by prospectors Al Chislett and Chris Verbiski in 1993. They were exploring for a company called Diamond Field Resources. 
Three years later, the discovery was sold to Inco, a Canadian mining company, for $4.3 billion. 
The mine opened in 2005, and a year later Inco was swallowed up in a massive $18.2-billion takeover by Vale, a Brazilian company.
A core sample from Voisey's Bay that was drilled to test the ore body of the Labrador discovery is described by Memorial University earth sciences professor Derek Wilton as 'exquisite.' (Terry Roberts/CBC)
Since mining began, some $15 billion in minerals has been hauled out of the famous Ovoid in northern Labrador, at very low cost.
"Usually in the Canadian context with mining operations it takes 10 years, maybe a little bit more, to pay back the amount of money that you put in there to start the mining operation," said Wilton.
"So apparently they paid this back within two or three years, which is just phenomenal. [That will] give you an idea how rich the ore was."

Going underground

But the surface mine will be exhausted in about four years.
So Vale is going underground, where ore bodies about the same size as the Ovoid have been found. And there's significant upside on the exploration front, with the potential for more expansion in the future.

June 11, 2018

#Cobalt27 Acquires US$300MM #Cobalt Stream on #Vale’s #VoiseysBay $KBLT

Cobalt 27 and $WPM will provide Vale an aggregate of US$690 million in upfront proceeds for a combined purchase of finished cobalt equal to 75% of Voisey's Bay cobalt production commencing January 1, 2021.

Cobalt 27 ($KBLT) Acquires US$300MM Cobalt Stream on Vale’s Voisey’s Bay Mine Expansion and Announces C$300MM Bought Deal Offering of Common Shares To Fund Stream Acquisition

  • Vale will deliver to Cobalt 27, an amount of finished cobalt equal
    to 32.6% of the cobalt production from Voisey’s Bay commencing January
    1, 2021.
  • Once an aggregate of approximately 10.8kt (23.8mmlb) of cobalt has
    been delivered to Cobalt 27, which would occur once Voisey's Bay cobalt
    production after January 1, 2021 reaches approximately 33.1kt
    (73.0mmlb), the proportion of cobalt production delivered to Cobalt 27
    will reduce to 16.3%. 
  • Cobalt 27 will pay Vale cash consideration of US$300 million upon closing.
  • Cobalt 27 will make ongoing payments (the "Ongoing Payments") equal
    to 18% of the Cobalt Reference Price for each pound of cobalt delivered
    under the Cobalt Stream, until Cobalt 27 has recovered the full value
    of the Advance Amount through Vale's deliveries of finished cobalt under
    the Cobalt Stream. After this time, the Ongoing Payments will increase
    to 22% of the Cobalt Reference Price.
See the whole press release here: Cobalt27 Capital Corp. - News Releases



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