Northern Miner
Northern Miner: Zenyatta hits PEA milestone at Albany
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DAILY NEWSJun 3, 2015 5:50 PM- 0 comments
Zenyatta hits PEA milestone at Albany
A positive preliminary economic assessment (PEA) on Zenyatta Ventures’ (TSXV: ZEN) Albany hydrothermal graphite project in northern Ontario shows the deposit
could be a viable long-life, low-cost producer of graphite.
Given graphite’s ability to resist chemical corrosion and stay intact under temperatures of above 3,000 degrees Celsius, its many uses include making components
of energy storage devices for electric vehicles, computers and smart phones.
The study demonstrates Albany has the ability to produce 30,000 tonnes of high purity graphite, exceeding 99.9%, annually for 22 years, based on less than half of
the deposit’s indicated and inferred resources.
The project, envisaged as an open-pit operation, has 977,000 indicated tonnes of graphite from 25.1 million tonnes grading 3.89% graphitic carbon, and 441,000
inferred tonnes of graphite from 20.1 million tonnes at 2.20% graphitic carbon.
Initial costs to build the proposed mine are US$411.5 million, a hefty sum for any junior to raise. But, what stands out about the Albany project is its potentially
large returns.
Assuming a long-term price for purified graphite of US$7,500 per tonne, Zenyatta estimates operating costs at the Albany project of US$2,046 per tonne, giving
it a 73% margin or US$5,454 per tonne.
The project also generates strong gross revenues of US$4.8 billion over the life of mine, and an after-tax cash flow of US$110 million a year.
Albany’s economics are appealing. Using a 10% discount rate, it has an after-tax net present value of US$438 million and an after-tax internal rate of return of
24%. Payback should occur within 4 years.
Given the robust PEA results, Zenyatta’s CEO Aubrey Eveleigh says the junior will push Albany to a prefeasibility stage, where it will further define and optimize
the project to a higher level of certainty, including the resources, which need to be upgraded to demonstrate economic viability.
He adds the firm will use the PEA to support its discussions with potential partners and financers.
The outlook for the high purity graphite market “is very promising with demand growing rapidly from new applications,” the company says. It projects the demand in
2017 will total 426,000 tonnes. If Albany comes online and produces 30,000 tonnes a year, it could satisfy 7% of that demand.
Zenyatta currently anticipates the graphite produced from Albany will go towards different market application segments, including 25-30% for lithium-ion batteries,
25-30% for high purity graphite in powder metallurgy, 20-25% for fuel cell products, and the rest in other applications.
The Albany project is about 30 km north of the Trans-Canada Highway and near the communities of Constance Lake and Hearst. Along with being near a major
highway, it is 20 km from an all-season logging road and 70 km from a rail line.