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Western Copper and Gold Corp T.WRN

Alternate Symbol(s):  WRN

Western Copper and Gold Corporation is a Canada-based mining company. The Company is engaged in developing the Casino Project. The Casino Project is a copper-gold mining project in Yukon, Canada. The Casino porphyry copper-gold-molybdenum deposit is located in west central Yukon, in the northwest trending Dawson Range mountains, approximately 300 kilometers (km) northwest of the territorial capital of Whitehorse. The Casino project is located on Crown land administered by the Yukon Government and is within the Selkirk First Nation traditional territory and the Tr’ondek Hwechin traditional territory lies to the north. The Casino Property lies within the Whitehorse Mining District and consists of approximately 1,136 full and partial Quartz Claims and 55 Placer Claims acquired in accordance with the Yukon Quartz Mining Act. The total area covered by Casino Quartz Claims is approximately 21,126.02 hectares (ha). The total area covered by Casino Placer Claims is 490.34 ha.


TSX:WRN - Post by User

Comment by Marine2on Jan 18, 2023 10:18pm
114 Views
Post# 35232207

RE:RE:RE:RE:Moly

RE:RE:RE:RE:Moly Moly could become the next Chinese controlled metal ?

Argus reports that European prices for moly are now at the highest levels since the company launched its in-warehouse Rotterdam assessment in 2019 as supply from China slows. China produces over 40% of the world’s moly. Chinese ferro-molybdenum hit 15-year highs recently. 

Uses of Molybdenum Alloys in the Steel Industry

Molybdenum has the largest consumption in the steel industry. It is mainly used for the production of alloy steel (approximately 43% of the total consumption of molybdenum in steel), stainless steel (approximately 23%), tool steel and high-speed steel (approximately 8%), cast iron, and rolls (approximately 6%). Most of the molybdenum is directly used for steelmaking or cast iron after industrial molybdenum oxide briquetting, and a small part is first smelted into ferromolybdenum and then used for steelmaking.

 

Global molybdenum consumption 

Global molybdenum consumption is expected to continue increasing over the next decade as demand for molybdenum-containing steels grows. But production has been squeezed by lower molybdenum content in mined ores seams and a lack of new molybdenum projects to meet demand,” according to Argus analysis.

M2

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