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Pacific Booker Minerals Inc V.BKM

Alternate Symbol(s):  PBMLF

Pacific Booker Minerals Inc. is a Canada-based natural resource exploration company. The Company's principal business activity is the exploration of its mineral property interests, with its principal mineral property interests located in Canada. The Company is in the advanced stage of exploration of the Morrison deposit, a porphyry copper/gold/molybdenum ore body, located approximately 35 kilometers (km) north of Granisle, British Columbia and situated within the Babine Lake Porphyry Copper Belt. It has a 100% interest in certain mineral claims located contiguous to the Morrison claims. The Company is proposing an open-pit mining and milling operation for the production of copper/gold/silver concentrate and molybdenum concentrate. It is located within 29 km of two former producing copper mines, Bell and Granisle. The Company also holds a 100% interest in certain mineral claims located in the Omineca District of the Province of British Columbia.


TSXV:BKM - Post by User

Comment by $500,000Salmonon Dec 30, 2021 8:18pm
449 Views
Post# 34272654

RE:RE:RE:NPV value v Mine value

RE:RE:RE:NPV value v Mine value

Here is where I got the $7.5 Billion USD number


https://www.axios.com/climate-disasters-cost-world-billions-2021-study-6bdb1eb0-faf4-4e05-8915-b2a7374270cf.html

British Columbia floods — $7.5 billion.

Study: 10 biggest climate disasters of 2021 cost $170 billion in damages
 
 
Rebecca Falconer
Sun, December 26, 2021, 9:12 PM
 
 

Ten of 2021's most extreme weather events in the world were driven by climate change and caused a total of $170.3 billion in damage — with the deadly Hurricane Ida that struck the U.S. the most costly, per a new study.

Why it matters: Each of the 10 most destructive weather events caused at least $1.5 billion in damage, and Ida cost $65 billion, according to the study by U.K. charity Christian Aid.

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  • "Most of these estimates are based only on insured losses, meaning the true financial costs are likely to be even higher," per a statement accompanying the study, published Monday.

  • Christian Aid notes that insurer Aon has warned that 2021 is set to be the sixth time global natural catastrophes have cost more than $100 billion — with all six occurring since 2011.

What they're saying: "The costs of climate change have been grave this year, both in terms of eyewatering financial losses but also in the death and displacement of people around the world," said report author Kat Kramer, Christian Aid's climate policy lead, in a statement.

  • "Be it storms and floods in some of the world's richest countries or droughts and heatwaves in some of the poorest, the climate crisis hit hard in 2021."

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By the numbers: 2021's most costly weather events, according to Christian Aid:

  1. Hurricane Ida — $65 billion.

  2. European floods — $43 billion.

  3. Texas winter storm —$23 billion.

  4. Henan floods (China) — $17.6 billion.

  5. British Columbia floods — $7.5 billion.

  6. France's "cold wave" — $5.6 billion.

  7. Cyclone Yaas (India, Bangladesh) — $3 billion

  8. Australian floods — $2.1 billion.

  9. Typhoon In-fa (China, Philippines, Japan) — $2 billion.

  10. Cyclone Tauktae (India, Sri Lanka, Maldives) — $1.5 billion.

What else they found: Financial costs are usually higher in richer countries because they have higher property values and can afford insurance, according to the report. But some of the most devastating extreme weather events in 2021 hit poorer nations.

  • These extreme weather events have caused severe human suffering from food insecurity, drought and other related events causing mass displacements and loss of life, the report notes.

  • The study also examines the impact of slow-developing crises, such as the drought in Central Africa's Chad Basin. There, Lake Chad has shrunk 90% since the 1970s, threatening the lives and livelihoods of millions of the world's poorest who live in the region.

The big picture: Extreme weather events are the clearest way we're feeling climate change in our daily lives — and this year's ones are a preview of even more turbulent times, Axios' Andrew Freedman and Kia Kokalitcheva note.


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