THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CONTAINS INSIDE INFORMATION FOR THE PURPOSES
OF THE MARKET ABUSE REGULATION (EU) NO. 596/2014 (INCLUDING AS IT
FORMS PART OF THE LAWS OF ENGLAND AND WALES BY VIRTUE OF THE
EUROPEAN UNION (WITHDRAWAL) ACT 2018 ("MAR").
1 February 2024
Ferro-Alloy Resources
Limited
("Ferro-Alloy" or the "Company")
Feasibility Study
Update and Launch of Third Tranche of Exempt Offer Bond
Programme
Ferro-Alloy Resources Limited
(LSE:FAR), the vanadium producer and
developer of the large high grade Balasausqandiq vanadium project
(the "Project") in Southern Kazakhstan, announces a comprehensive update on
the Project's current Feasibility Study. The Company has also
launched a third tranche of bonds with a nominal value of US$5
million under its existing exempt US$20 million exempt offer bond
programme (RNS 27 July 2023).
Project Feasibility Study Update
Summary
The following update summarises the
work completed to date, outlines the ongoing work to be completed
and sets out the associated timing for completion.
The main fieldwork for the study is
now complete and the publication of the study is expected in early
Q4 2024. The delay to the completion of the study is due to
unforeseen increased time scheduling imposed by a lead technical
consultant to the study with respect to the tailings facility
design, as well as capacity constraints at sample testing
laboratories, in particular those laboratories processing the
samples taken for the geotechnical elements of the tailings
facility and plant site investigation programme.
As previously announced, all drilling
for the study has been completed, and the new mineral resource
estimate for Ore-Body 1 ("OB1") showed a large increase in
Indicated Mineral Resource
to 32.9 million
tonnes.
Similarly, all metallurgical test work has
been completed with
a metallurgical recovery of 87.3% with the potential to increase
recovery to above 90% following optimisation post commissioning of
Phase 1.
Mineral Resource
Estimates
Ore-Body 1
(Phase
1)
Based on an additional 4,308 metres
of diamond drilling, the new mineral resource estimate ("MRE")
completed by SRK Consulting (Kazakhstan) Limited ("SRK") on OB1
represented a significant increase on the previous estimate
contained in the Company's 2018 Competent Person's
Report.
The new MRE, announced on 2 May
2023, was as follows:
Summary MRE Report for OB1 Resource. 30 April 2023. Cut off
grade applied = 0.4% V2O5
|
|
|
|
Average
Value
|
Material
Content
|
CLASSIFICATION
|
WEATHERING
|
Mass
Million
tonnes
|
V2O5
%
|
Mo
%
|
U
%
|
C
%
|
V2O5
tonnes
|
Mo
tonnes
|
U
tonnes
|
C
tonnes
|
INDICATED
RESOURCE
|
Oxide
|
1.56
|
0.67
|
0.0139
|
0.0047
|
7.16
|
10,560
|
216
|
73
|
112,151
|
Transitional
|
1.25
|
0.66
|
0.0138
|
0.0045
|
7.17
|
8,260
|
172
|
56
|
89,869
|
Fresh sulphide
|
30.08
|
0.61
|
0.0150
|
0.0052
|
8.82
|
184,814
|
4,523
|
1,554
|
2,655,454
|
Total
|
32.89
|
0.62
|
0.0149
|
0.0051
|
8.68
|
203,634
|
4,911
|
1,683
|
2,857,473
|
Differences may occur in tables due
to rounding.
Resource optimisation indicates that
the whole of this ore-body has the potential to be economically
exploited.
At the proposed Phase 1 mining rate
of just over 1 million tonnes per year, this is expected (subject
to finalisation of detailed mine planning) to be sufficient for
over 30 years of processing operations. It may, therefore, prove to
be sufficient a resource to justify the construction of an
additional processing module as part of Phase 1 of the Project once
the first module has been successfully commissioned and in advance
of the construction of Phase 2 of the Project.
Ore-Bodies 2, 3 and 4 (Phase
2)
Although not needed for the
feasibility study into Phase 1 of the Project, the Company has
already completed an additional drilling programme to determine a
resource estimate for Ore-Bodies 2, 3 and 4 ("OB2, 3 and 4"). The
purpose of this additional resource drilling was to enable
preliminary planning for Phase 2 of the Project. Phase 2 is
expected to lead to an additional three million tonnes of ore being
mined and treated per year with the aim of expanding total
production to more than 22,400 tonnes per annum of vanadium
pentoxide. As a result, an additional 60 million tonnes of ore are
targeted for definition, supporting a Phase 2 life of mine of 20
years. There remain a further three ore-bodies for future
exploration.
In total, 15,614 metres of drilling
has been completed, covering around 70% - 75% of the planned total
area for OB2, 3 and 4. This area is expected to yield sufficient
ore to support the targeted life of mine for Phase 2.
The samples from this expanded
drilling programme are scheduled for preparation by SGS Kazakhstan
in March 2024 for assay and will then be sent to Intertek Genalysis
in Australia for assaying. Semi-quantitative grade estimation
carried out by Company geologists using X-ray fluorescence has
indicated that (subject to confirmation by more accurate assaying
and resource estimation / mine planning) the drilling already
carried out could yield more than the required tonnage for the
planned Phase 2 of the Project. We plan to announce the results of
this resource definition work in conjunction with the Phase 1
feasibility study results.
Phase 1 Second
module
The mineral resource estimate for
OB1 of over 30 million tonnes together with the further tonnages
expected to be estimated in OB2, 3 and 4, allow for the early
consideration of an additional module identical to the currently
planned module for Phase 1, treating an additional 1.1 million
tonnes per year of ore, and the already envisaged Phase 2, treating
an additional three million tonnes per year.
Whilst there are certain aspects of
these downstream projects that cannot be studied to feasibility
study level in advance, the Company plans to incorporate these
projects into the Phase 1 study but at a lower level of confidence
than full feasibility study standard.
OB2, 3 and 4 represent a
continuation of the same mineralisation as OB1 so the metallurgical
treatment process is likely to be the same, subject to any natural
variations in the ore. The proximity of OB2 ,3 and 4 to OB1 makes
it likely that there will be some shared infrastructure. A great
deal of information will, therefore, be known about these projects,
sufficient to allow an estimation of their likely economic costs
and value.
Metallurgy
Vanadium
The Company successfully tested the
vanadium extraction potential and operating methods to separate a
saleable vanadium product from the deposit's black shale
mineralisation at the site pilot test plant in 2015. These
processes do not require the concentration and high-temperature
roasting commonly used in other vanadium deposits. Tetra Tech
Limited ("Tetra Tech") were subsequently appointed as consultants
to design a programme to independently validate this process while
SGS Canada Inc ("SGS") were contracted concurrently to complete the
required laboratory testing.
A bulk sample of black shale
mineralisation from OB1 was tested at SGS during 2022/23 as well as
additional samples from different sections of OB1 to understand the
variability across the ore-body.
The stages tested included crushing,
grinding, leaching, filtration, precipitation, ion exchange and
vanadium product recovery.
The SGS test work is now complete,
and the results were in line with expectations. Following
engineering estimates and scale up considerations by Tetra Tech
based on the SGS test work results, an overall metallurgical
recovery of 87.3% is expected from the ore with a good vanadium
pentoxide product quality. This recovery is significantly higher
than the 75% - 80% normally recovered from the more commonly
occurring vanadium-containing titaniferous magnetite ores. The
Company believes that, on commissioning, and with further
operational optimisation there is the potential to increase the
percentage of vanadium recovered to above 90%. Some additional test
work may also be commissioned to investigate the production of
higher quality niche vanadium products but these are not required
for completion of the feasibility study.
At the planned treatment rate of 1.1
million tonnes of ore, including dilution, per year, this is likely
to yield annual production of circa 5,600 tonnes of vanadium
pentoxide flake. This production volume is subject to detailed
calculation of mining dilution and scheduling as part of the mine
planning process. Additional mine modelling will be undertaken
which may lead to higher vanadium grades in the early years of
mining.
In addition to vanadium pentoxide,
saleable quantities of molybdenum and uranium will be recovered for
sale, and further treatment of the vanadium leach residue will
recover the carbon by-product as described below.
Equipment specification, costings
and plant layout optimisation are ongoing, with Tetra Tech
expecting to complete this work during Q2 2024.
Molybdenum and
uranium
The Company expects to sell uranium
and molybdenum recovered from its metallurgical process to the
Kazakhstan state monopoly uranium producer (KazAtomProm) but is
permitted to sell to other customers if more attractive commercial
terms can be obtained. Production volumes of molybdenum and uranium
are subject to final mine planning.
Carbon
The ore contains nearly 9% carbon,
with grades correlating quite strongly with the vanadium grade.
This carbon material passes through the leaching circuit, together
with a high silica content, to final tailings.
The Company has been testing two
main uses for this potentially valuable material: as the raw
material to be sold to smelters for the production of ferrosilicon,
or as an additive used in place of carbon black in the making of
rubber.
Ferrosilicon
briquettes
The Company has tested the creation
of briquettes from the whole tailings product (without
concentration), and the use of those briquettes in smelting to make
ferrosilicon. Ferrosilicon is usually made by smelting a mix
of silica, obtained from mining, and carbon in various forms. The
briquettes will substitute for the whole of the silica required,
and part of the carbon. Test work showed that good quality
ferrosilicon can be made from this material and study work is now
in process to determine the likely size of the market, logistics
requirements, product pricing and end use customers.
Carbon
black
Carbon black is a high-value form of
carbon, used in the making of rubber, particularly tyres. It is
usually made by burning hydrocarbons in a depleted oxygen
atmosphere. Early work determined that the tailings from the
Company's production of vanadium, after concentration to around 40%
carbon, has the potential to be used in partial substitution for
carbon black in the making of rubber generally, but particularly in
the making of tyre side walls, with the Company's product
substituting for a part of the commercial grade of carbon black
N660.
A test programme has demonstrated
that a simple flotation method can be used to concentrate the
carbon grade to the required 40%. Early test work on the use of the
concentrate in making rubber has been encouraging, and a further
comprehensive programme is being undertaken to determine the
characteristics and performance of the resulting rubber in various
formulations and at various rates of substitution, aiming to
provide sufficient information to allow marketing of the product to
begin.
The Company is working with the
National Engineering Academy of the Republic of Kazakhstan on a
technological project covering the industrial production and usage
of carbon-silica fillers in the making of rubber. The aim of the
project is to construct a pilot plant, substantially funded by
government grants, on the Company's existing processing site to
concentrate the Company's carbon tailings to provide over 10 tonnes
of carbon-silica concentrate per month for testing and
marketing. Although the exact timing is not currently known,
the expectation is that construction of the new pilot plant will be
completed around the end of 2024 or early 2025, allowing test
marketing and offtake negotiations for the product well in advance
of the commissioning of the first Phase 1 module.
Hydrogeological
study
A hydrogeological study to assess
water flows and water pressures inside the pit walls is well
underway and will be concluded in conjunction with the upcoming SRK
mine planning study.
Mine
planning
Resource level optimisation has so
far indicated that the whole of OB1 can be economically mined and
the next stage is detailed mine planning and scheduling.
Process
water
A site for the extraction of water
from underground has been located and extraction rights have been
secured. Although historic records show adequate supplies, a test
programme has been started to ensure that no changes of the aquifer
characteristics have occurred over time. The drilling of a
test-borehole has been completed and pump testing has
commenced.
Power
In 2021, the Company connected to a
nearby 110kV powerline and is currently able to take up to three
MW. Although subject to more exact estimation as the design work
progresses, the current expectation is for a requirement of up to
15 MW of electrical power for the mine plant. The current line and
connection can, with little modification, supply up to this level
and negotiations are ongoing with the line's owners to confirm this
availability.
The Company plans to install a
sulphuric acid plant at the mine site to guarantee supply of this
reagent to the plant. As a by-product of this operation, the
process will emit around 6 MW of power in the form of heat which
will be used in the metallurgical process. This power is produced
without significant CO2 emissions.
Tailings
facility
To the extent that the tailings may
be made into briquettes and sold for smelting to make ferrosilicon,
tailings storage may not be required. If the carbon-rich tailings
are concentrated, the carbon-depleted remainder will be stored in a
tailings storage facility.
Geotechnical drilling of 1,254
metres at the proposed site have been completed. The schedule for
completion of the design of the tailings storage facility has been
delayed by a lead technical consultant to the study, partly due to
their own scheduling requirements and partly due to capacity
constraints at the sample testing laboratories processing the
samples taken from the geotechnical drilling.
Feasibility Study
completion
The feasibility study is progressing
to plan from an engineering perspective, although there have been
significant impacts to the schedule. The study is expected to be
published in early Q4 2024 as a result of the delays noted above.
Exempt Offer bond programme
On 30 January 2024, the Company
listed a third tranche of bonds ("Third Tranche"), with a nominal
value of US$5 million under the Company's existing exempt offer
bond programme in Kazakhstan.
The proceeds from the sale of the
Third Tranche will be used to continue the development of the
Balasausqandiq project, including front-end engineering.
A summary of the terms and
conditions of the Third Tranche is as follows:
-
ISIN: KZX000001946
-
Specified currency: US Dollars
- Face
value: US$100 (one hundred US dollars)
-
Number of bonds: 50,000 (fifty thousand) units
-
Total nominal amount of the bonds: US$5,000,000 (five million US
dollars)
-
Issue date: 30 January 2024
- Last
date of the circulation period: 30 July 2026
-
Maturity date: 30 July 2026
-
Coupon rate: 11.0% fixed of the nominal value of the bonds
issued
-
Frequency of interest payments: quarterly, 30 April, 30 July,
30 October and 30 January of each year during the circulation
period, commencing on 30 April 2024
-
Coupon basis: 30/360
Trading of the Third Tranche
commenced on 31 January 2024.
For further
information, visit www.ferro-alloy.com or contact:
Ferro-Alloy Resources Limited
|
Nick Bridgen (CEO) / William
Callewaert (CFO)
|
info@ferro-alloy.com
|
Shore Capital
(Joint Corporate
Broker)
Liberum Capital Limited
(Joint Corporate Broker)
|
Toby Gibbs/Lucy Bowden
Scott Mathieson/John More
|
+44 207 408 4090
+44 20 3100 2000
|
St
Brides Partners Limited
(Financial PR & IR
Adviser)
|
Ana Ribeiro / Zoe Briggs
|
+44 207 236 1177
|
Freedom Finance Global PLC
(Bond Underwriter)
|
Renat Syzdykov
|
+7 701 766 4865 /
ib@ffin.kz
|
About Ferro-Alloy
Resources Limited:
The Company's operations
are all located at the Balasausqandiq deposit in Kyzylordinskoye
Oblast in the South of Kazakhstan. Currently the Company has two
main business activities:
a) the high grade Balasausqandiq
vanadium Project; and
b) an existing vanadium concentrate
processing operation (the "Existing
Operation")
Balasausqandiq is a very large
deposit, with vanadium as the principal product together with
several by-products. Owing to the nature of the ore, the capital
and operating costs of development are very much lower than for
other vanadium projects.
The most recent mineral resource
estimate for Ore-Body One (of seven) provided an Indicated Mineral
Resource of 32.9 million tonnes at a mean grade of 0.62%
V2O5 equating to 203,364 contained tonnes of
vanadium pentoxide. In the system of reserve estimation used in
Kazakhstan the reserves are estimated to be over 70m tonnes in
ore-bodies 1 to 5 but this does not include the full depth of
ore-bodies 2 to 5 or the remaining ore-bodies which remain
substantially unexplored.
The Project will be developed in two
stages, Stage 1 and Stage 2, treating 1m tonnes per year and an
additional 3m tonnes per year. Production will be some 5,600 tonnes
of V2O5 from Stage 1, rising to 22,400 tonnes
V2O5 after Stage 2 is
commissioned.
There is an existing concentrate
processing operation at the site of the Balasausqandiq deposit. The
production facilities were originally created from a 15,000 tonnes
per year pilot plant which was then expanded and adapted to recover
vanadium, molybdenum and nickel from purchased
concentrates.
The existing operation is located on
the same site and uses some of the same infrastructure as the
Project, but is a separate operation which will continue in
parallel with the development and operation of the
Project.