RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:The world is swimming in nickel
I don't think you understand what a feasibility report is Endzone2. A prefeasibility report and a feasibility report are two different types of studies that are conducted to evaluate the viability of a deposit. A prefeasibility report is usually conducted in the early stages, and it aims to provide a preliminary evaluation of the project's potential. This type of report includes an overview of the project, an assessment of its technical and financial feasibility, and an estimation of the costs and benefits associated with the project. The data used in a prefeasibility report is usually based on secondary sources of information, such as market research reports, industry data, and other publicly available sources.
However, and this is key! A feasibility report is a more detailed study that is conducted once a prefeasibility report has been completed and the project has been deemed potentially viable. A feasibility report provides a more in-depth analysis of the project, including a detailed assessment of its technical, financial, legal, and regulatory feasibility. The data used in a feasibility report is usually based on primary sources of information, such as site visits, surveys, interviews, and other direct data collection methods.
Both prefeasibility and feasibility reports are important in evaluating a project's viability, but they differ in terms of the level of detail and the sources of information used. A prefeasibility report provides a broad overview of the project's potential, while a feasibility report provides a more detailed analysis of the project's feasibility, risks, and potential benefits.
In other words my points 1-4 can be potentially addressed with a feasibility.
But this is the history of the feasibility reports. You and your crew were saying feasibility around the corner in 2020.
And 2021.
And 2022, remember by year end?
Then January 2023.
Now the narrative of this board changed to, "we have Texmont a higher grade deposit" so need to focus on that and delay the feasibility to include a mine that has been shuttered for decades.
Something doesn't smell right in Timmins. The more you delay the more dilution happens.
NoobTube wrote: Every mine is dependent on all those factors. If you have no answers it's because your ignoring everything. Drill results, PEA, Technical report for crawford answers all the above. PEA regressing? You seem confused. PEA for Texmont isnt regressing the BFS for crawford. As for the delay it was also explained why at the time. Mark Selby and team are extremely fast movers in the nickel space and running circles around other juniors. Drilled reasource and PEA for Texmont slated for this year, acquired December 19th last year. Put money on you complaining if it was released first week of January 2024.