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Mason Res Corp MSSNF

"Mason Resources Corp is a mining company. It is engaged in the copper exploration and development in the U.S.A. Its key project is the Ann Mason Project located in the Yerington District of Nevada."


OTCPK:MSSNF - Post by User

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Comment by humblebayon Jun 11, 2013 8:45am
239 Views
Post# 21510106

RE: Northern Miner

RE: Northern Miner

another good one from northern miner.

Northern Miner

Trish Saywell

Mediterranean Resources is bullish on antimony
 

Mediterranean Resources (MNR-T) is best known for advancing gold deposits in northeastern Turkey but the junior has its eye on the antimony market too. This week it picked up two past-producing deposits of the metal in Spain and has plans to buy even more around the Mediterranean.
 
Chief Executive, Christopher Ecclestone, says he isn’t interested in turning Mediterranean Resources into an antimony company and eventually plans to spin-off these and other antimony deposits his team collects in Europe, creating value for his shareholders.
 
Ecclestone, who is also a principal and mining strategist at New York-based Hallgarten & Co. and spent the 1990s in Argentina where he founded Buenos Aires Trust Company, an equity research firm, believes all the stars seem to have aligned in favor of the industrial metal.
 
In a telephone interview from London he emphasized that he has no interest in exploration and only wants to acquire past-producing deposits that he can turn into producing mines. 
 
“We have zero interest in exploration because cash is king and the only reason we bought these assets in Spain is that they were past-producers,” he explains. “The market has no tolerance for drilling at the moment and won’t fund it. So what we want to do is get this venture funded not by the market, but by off-takers. It’s a product where traders have been over the barrel for years and they have been desperate to get alternative supplies.” 
 
Like the now familiar tungsten story, he explains, China dominated the antimony market for decades, driving down prices and elbowing the majority of non-Chinese producers out of the market. 
As a result, he says, “it’s not difficult to find past-producing antimony projects, frankly, because in the early 1980s the Chinese slammed the price and everyone shut down.”
 
What’s happened in more recent years, he says, is that prices have risen “because the Chinese have squandered their resources.” And it’s a good time to get into the sector because no one has done much work on developing alternative sources of supply.  
 
In terms of the antimony supply currently available outside of China, he says, there are really only two major producers.  Mandalay Resources (MND-T) produces antimony at its Costerfield gold-antimony mine in Victoria, Australia and Village Main Reef (JIL-J), produces antimony at its Central Murchison mine in South Africa.
 
“About 7,000 tonnes a year comes from South Africa and another 5,000 tonnes a year from Australia and that’s pretty much it in the Western world, although a bit comes out of Russia,” he continues.  “There’s obviously a space here for a pure play antimony company.” 
 
Interestingly Spain used to be the biggest producer of antimony in Europe, he says, adding that one of his goals is to “reactive the Spanish antimony industry.”
 
On June 4 Mediterranean Resources announced that it had acquired the Mina Pilar and the Mina Susana antimony deposits in Extremadura, a province in southeastern Spain bordering Portugal. They were un-staked and he acquired them directly from the government for a few thousand dollars.   
 
The Pilar mine, about 6.5 km east of Herrera del Duque on the western slope of the Sierra de la Dehesa, was an open-pit mine that last operated between 1970 and 1977. Mina Susana is a small showing that was exploited in the past by underground mining but little is known about its history. Ecclestone believes records may have been destroyed during the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s. 
 
Currently the pit at the Pilar mine is flooded and the immediate plan is to dewater it and get it up and running again. The company also wants to explore around the pit to see if there is any gold there.
 

As far as processing antimony is concerned, Ecclestone says, it is a fairly straightforward process. 
 
“Antimony is beautiful in the sense that, unlike rare earth elements, you just roast it after you concentrate it,” he explains. “Concentrating it is really easy too, so it’s a pretty elementary process. You build a small concentrator then you send it to Turkey for roasting. For a quarter of a million dollars you can buy/set up a 200-tonne-per day concentration-flotation system.”
 
If it turns out there is gold there as well, he says, “you do a deal with a smelter to get the gold credits back.”
 
When asked if it’s all that simple why no one else has thought of doing the same thing, Ecclestone retorts that it’s because “they have to wrap their minds around it” and because “there is not a lot of skill set” for it because with the exception of Mandalay Resources and Village Main Reef, very little of it has been mined outside of China for decades. Moreover, until fairly recently, prices did not offer much incentive. “A few years ago it was US$4,000 per tonne, then it went up to US$17,000 per tonne, and now it’s about US$10,000 per tonne,” he says.
 
What’s more, he says, demand is climbing for the metal because it is increasingly being used as a flame retardant, most notably in plastics used in the auto industry and to coat wires. “For a long time antimony was moribund because it was only used to harden lead,” he says, “but what’s happened in recent years is that its big use is as a flame retardant.”
 
And as authorities in China­ where one mine in Hunan province alone accounted for about 30% of the global supply of the metal­ continues to crack down on small-scale antimony producers and backyard smelters, demand has only one way to go and that’s up.  
 
“It’s the wonder metal,” he adds, noting that typically grades at most antimony deposits run between 10%-20%.
 

“A tonne of material grading 10% antimony would be the same as having a gold project with a grade of 21 grams gold equivalent per tonne,” he says. “That is unheard of these days.”    

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