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Calico Announces Preliminary Economic Assessment on the Grassy Mountain Project

(via Thenewswire.ca)


Study Predicts 10 Year Operation Averaging 53,000 Ozs of Gold

and 82,000 Ozs of Silver Produced Annually

Estimated Pre-Tax 5% NPV of US$144.2 Million

and IRR of 32.6% at $1,300 Gold and $17.50 Silver

Vancouver, B.C. / TNW-ACCESSWIRE / January 13, 2015 / Calico Resources Corp. (TSX-V: CKB) ("Calico" or the "Company") announced today the results of a Preliminary Economic Assessment ("PEA") for its 100%-owned Grassy Mountain gold and silver project in Oregon (the "Grassy Mountain Project"). The PEA demonstrates that the Grassy Mountain Project represents an excellent economic opportunity in the current gold price environment.

The PEA was prepared by Metal Mining Consultants Inc. ("MMC") using resource and geologic information developed by Hardrock Consulting, LLC ("HRC"). A National Instrument 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("National Instrument 43-101") technical report summarizing the PEA (the "Technical Report") has been completed by MMC, and will be filed on SEDAR within 45 days of this news release. The Technical Report will also be available on the Calico website.

Paul Parisotto, President and CEO of Calico stated: "We now have an important input required to move forward with our strategy for Calico. We believe that this PEA demonstrates that the Grassy Mountain Project represents an attractive development option for gold producers in part due to moderate estimated start-up capital requirements and low operating costs. Unlike most other PEAs, this study is based on measured and indicated resources only, which we think makes it more reliable than studies which depend on inferred resources. Furthermore, MMC has confirmed that the exploration potential at the Grassy Mountain Project is highly favorable for expanding the resources available to the underground operation envisioned in the PEA."

Mr. Parisotto noted that the MMC team assigned to the PEA is highly experienced in the design of similar, smaller greenfield projects such as the recently-completed PEA for Paramount Gold and Silver Corp's San Miguel Project in Mexico, which is being acquired by Coeur Mining Inc. "We are confident that this study significantly de-risks the Grassy Mountain Project and that it will satisfy the needs of a sales process at the appropriate time," he said.

MMC has concluded that the most attractive development scenario for the Grassy Mountain Project consists of an underground mining operation with a processing plant handling mineralized material, producing a gold-silver dore. A milling base case scenario was developed for the Grassy Mountain Project with production of 365,000 tons per year, resulting in a projected nine year operation with estimated average annual production of 53,000 ounces of gold and 82,000 ounces of silver. Projected life of mine average cash operating costs are US$578 per ounce of gold recovered, net of silver byproduct credits. Start-up capital costs for this project scenario are projected to be US$119.6 million plus sustaining capital of $24.1 million. The total cost of gold production (including cash operating costs and total capital and contingency costs over the life of the mine) is estimated at US$880 per ounce.

At a gold price of US$1,300 per ounce and a silver price of $17.50 per ounce, the base case has a US$202.9 million pre-tax net cash flow, a US$144.2 million net present value at a 5% discount rate and an internal rate of return of 32.6%. At US$1,500 gold and US$20 silver, the total pre-tax net cash flow increases by 47.5% over the base case to US$299.2 million, the net present value at 5% increases to US$221.9 million and the internal rate of return improves to 45.1%.

The PEA is considered preliminary in nature. Mineral resources are not mineral reserves and do not have demonstrated economic viability.

Base Case Assumptions

Gold Price (USD$)

$1,300

Silver Price (USD$)

$17.50

Mill Processing Rate (tons per day)

1,000

Average Annual Gold Production (ounces)

53,000

Average Annual Silver Production (ounces)

82,000

Peak Annual Gold Production (ounces )

69,000

Peak Annual Silver Production (ounces )

118,000

Pre-Production Capital Costs (USD$)

$119.6 M

LOM Sustaining Capital (USD$)

$24.1 M

Pre-Production Period (years)

1

Production Life (years)

9

Cash Cost per Au Ounce (USD$)

$578

Cash Costs and Sustaining Cost per Au Ounce (USD$)

$880

BEFORE-TAX ECONOMIC RESULTS

Life of Mine NPV at 5% Discount Rate (USD$)

$144.2 M

Internal Rate of Return

32.6%

Payback Period (years)

2.5

AFTER-TAX ECONOMIC RESULTS

Life of Mine NPV at 5% Discount Rate (USD$)

$107.7 M

Internal Rate of Return

27.1%

Payback Period (years)

2.7

PEA Overview

The PEA was prepared as an underground mining operation accessed by a production decline with a processing plant handling mineralized material. Mineralization will be accessed by LHDs and underground haulage trucks. The mining method employed will be underhand cut and fill, using fill material comprised of mined waste and cemented tailings. Material would then be transported to the milling facility, including three stage crushing to facilitate precious metals recovery. Treatment will by conventional gravity concentration followed by cyanide leaching (CIL) of the gravity tails. Metal would be recovered onsite and sold as gold-silver dore.

Mineral Resources

In October 2012, Calico disclosed a National Instrument 43-101-compliant undiluted global resource estimate (Gustavson, 2012) for the Grassy Mountain Project (see news release dated October 16, 2012, report dated November 29, 2012). In their analysis, Gustavson estimated mineral resources and reported these resources at various cut-off grades. The resource estimate, in the form of the resource block model, was used as the basis for determining potentially mineable mineralization in the PEA. National Instrument 43-101 compliant global mineral resources estimated by Gustavson at different cut-off grades are as follows:

Cutoff

Measured

Au
(g/t)

Au (opt)

Tonnes
(000s)

Au
(g/t)

Au
(opt)

Ounces Au
(000s)

Ag
(g/t)

Ag
(opt)

Ounces Ag
(000s)

0.4

0.012

33,820.8

1.30

0.038

1,416.7

3.84

0.112

4,172.6

2.7

0.079

2,341.4

9.48

0.276

713.4

13.01

0.379

979.5

Indicated

Tonnes
(000s)

Au
(g/t)

Au
(opt)

Ounces Au
(000s)

Ag
g/t

Ag
opt

Ounces Ag
(000s)

0.4

0.012

10,225.5

0.56

0.016

183.7

1.97

0.057

648.0

2.7

0.079

95.1

8.75

0.255

26.7

3.84

0.112

11.7

Measured plus Indicated

Tonnes
(000s)

Au
(g/t)

Au
(opt)

Ounces Au
(000s)

Ag
(g/t)

Ag
(opt)

Ounces Ag
(000s)

0.4

0.012

44,046.3

1.13

0.033

1,600.4

3.41

0.099

4,820.6

2.7

0.079

2,436.4

9.45

0.276

740.2

12.65

0.369

991.2

Inferred

Tonnes
(000s)

Au
(g/t)

Au
(opt)

Ounces Au
(000s)

Ag
(g/t)

Ag
(opt)

Ounces Ag
(000s)

0.4

0.012

4,376.5

0.50

0.015

69.8

1.83

0.053

258.0

2.7

0.079

14.7

8.75

0.255

4.1

4.57

0.133

2.2

Mine Planning

To facilitate the estimation of mineable material for the PEA, HRC re-blocked the model to incorporate a smaller block size suitable for underground mine planning and mining dilution appropriate for cut and fill operations. The resource estimate is based on a 3D geologic model constructed using geologic and assay data from 219 exploration drill holes by previous owners and 17 holes drilled by Calico. The model incorporates 17,440 composites used in the estimation of gold and 13,683 samples used in the estimation of silver. Block grades were estimated using an Ordinary Kriging ("OK") interpolation method in Micromine modeling software.

A PEA provides a basis to estimate project operating and capital costs and establish a projection of the potential mineable resource including measured, indicated and inferred categories as permitted under National Instrument 43-101. However, due to drilling density and metallurgical test work that has been conducted at Grassy Mountain, inferred resources were excluded from the PEA and all reported resources are in the measured and indicated categories. The underground design utilized estimates of operating costs typical of operating underground mines and mill processing facilities in northern Nevada. Estimates of metallurgical recovery are based on test work performed on samples from Grassy Mountain drill core. The ultimate mineralized envelope was determined using a gold price of $1,300 per ounce. Underground diluted resources used for production scheduling, at a 0.065 gold ounces per ton cut off grade (2.0 Au g/t) are as follows:

Classification

Mineralized

Material

(000 Tonnes)

Gold

Grade

(oz/t)

Gold

Grade

(g/t)

Gold

Ounces

(000s)

Silver

Grade

(oz/t)

Silver

Grade

(g/t)

Silver

Ounces

(000s)

Measured

Indicated

2,846

86

0.157

0.149

5.4

5.1

490

14

0.263

0.156

9.0

5.0

825

14

Measured & Indicated

2,932

0.155

5.3

504

0.256

9.0

839

Metallurgy

Resource Development Inc. (RDi) has completed positive bench-scale metallurgical testing for the Grassy Mountain Project. A technically sound and economically viable processing strategy has been developed by RDi for production of gold and silver based on representative samples of drill core from the Grassy Mountain Project. Tests indicate that recoveries of 97.0% gold and 84.6% silver are achievable utilizing a conventional gravity process followed by carbon-in-leach (CIL) cyanidation of the gravity tailings. For the purpose of this study recoveries of 95% gold and 84% silver were used.

Based on capital economic considerations, a mill is planned to process 1,000 tons per day. A small tailing pond is planned for early production.

Capital Costs

Capital costs were developed based on scaling costs from similar facilities for production rates and from design basis assumptions including an owner operated mining fleet. The estimated life of mine capital costs for the base case are summarized as follows:

Life of Mine Estimated Capital Costs

Description

US$(millions)

Underground Development

$18.2

Mill Construction

$48.2

EPCM

$7.8

Contingency

$14.2

Owner's Costs

$5.0

In-directs includes Sustaining EPCM

$24.3

Working Capital (2 months of Operating Costs)

$2.2

Continue to Develop Underground

$23.8

Total

$143.7

Operating Costs

Operating cost assumptions were based on the Cost Mine Indexes updated 2014 underground mining operations using conventional processing facilities in northern Nevada. Process cost estimates for key consumables are based on the available metallurgical test data, power consumption data and prevailing costs for key materials in similar Nevada mining operations. Operating cost assumptions per ton of material processed are summarized as follows:

Unit Operating Costs

Cost Category

US$'s

(Per Ton

Processed)

Mining Cost

$39.86

Mill Processing

$17.61

General and Administrative

$5.00

Reclamation

$1.54

Total

$64.01

Economic Analysis

MMC chose prices of US$1,300 for gold and US$17.50 for silver as the base case economic scenario as these prices approximate the trailing three year averages for gold and silver. The base case, lower price case and higher price case economic results for the metal price assumptions are as follows:

Projected Economic Results (US$)

Base Case

Lower Price Case

Higher Price Case

Gold Price per Ounce

Silver Price per Ounce

$1,300

$17.50

$1,100

$15.00

$1,500

$20.00

Pre-tax Net Cash Flow

$202.9 million

$106.5 million

$299.2 million

Pre-tax NPV @ 5% Discount Rate

$144.2 million

$66.5 million

$221.9 million

Pre-tax Internal Rate of Return

32.6%

19.0%

45.1%

Operating Costs per Ounce of Gold produced (Life-of-Mine)

$578

$580

$577

Total Costs per Ounce of Gold Produced (Includes all Capital)

$880

$882

$879

After-tax Net Cash Flow

$157.0 million

$89.6 million

$224.5 million

After-tax NPV @ 5% Discount Rate

$107.7 million

$52.8 million

$162.6 million

After-tax Internal Rate of Return

27.1%

16.4%

37.4%

Infrastructure

There are currently no facilities of any kind at the Grassy Mountain Project. The project is easily accessible from Vale, Oregon (22 miles) along the existing Twin Springs Road. As designed the project will operate using diesel generated power. An option for the transition to line-power is currently being studied. Sufficient processing water is available including vested water rights. Logistical support is available in the nearby communities of Vale, Nyssa and Ontario, Oregon. Mining personnel and other resources for operations at the Grassy Mountain Project are expected to be available from the local communities as well as Boise, Idaho and Northern Nevada.

Opportunities

MMC has recommended a geotechnical drilling program to allow better understanding of the rock mechanics for the project. It is expected that improved geotechnical information could suggest that roof and pillar strengths are higher than the test-work conducted 25 years ago by previous operators which could result in lower projected mining costs. Lower mining costs equate to lower cut-off grades which could increase the resources available for potential production and a higher NPV.

The Grassy Mountain Project also contains numerous exploration targets of a similar style of mineralization that should be further evaluated in order to determine economic viability.

Authors and Qualified Persons

The Technical Report was prepared by or under the supervision of Scott E. Wilson, CPG, of MMC, who is an independent "Qualified Person" (as defined under National Instrument 43-101). Mr. Wilson has read and confirmed that this news release fairly and accurately reflects the contents of the Technical Report.

Michael F. McGinnis, Calico's Project Manager/Exploration, is the Company's designated Qualified Person for this news release within the meaning of National Instrument 43-101 and has reviewed and validated that the information contained in this news release is consistent with that provided by the Qualified Persons responsible for the PEA.

About Calico

Calico owns a 100% interest in the advanced stage Grassy Mountain gold project in Oregon. Please see the Company's website at www.calicoresources.com for more information.

On behalf of the Board,

Paul A. Parisotto

President & CEO

For further details on the Grassy Mountain Project, please view the Technical Report which will be filed under Calico's Issuer Profile on SEDAR (www.sedar.com) and available at Calico's website (www.calicoresources.com). The author of the Technical Report is independent of Calico and is a "Qualified Person" as defined by National Instrument 43-101.

The mineral resource estimates referenced in this press release use the terms "Measured Mineral Resources", "Indicated Mineral Resources" and "Inferred Mineral Resources." While these terms are defined in and required by Canadian regulations (under National Instrument 43-101), these terms are not recognized by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"). "Inferred Mineral Resources" have a great amount of uncertainty as to their existence, and great uncertainty as to their economic and legal feasibility. The SEC normally only permits issuers to report mineralization that does not constitute SEC Industry Guide 7 compliant "reserves" as in-place tonnage and grade without reference to unit measures. U.S. investors are cautioned not to assume that any part or all of mineral deposits in these categories will ever be converted into reserves. Calico is not an SEC registered company.

The PEA is preliminary in nature and there is no certainty that the PEA will be realized. Mineral resources that are not mineral reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability. Mineral resource estimates do not account for mineability, selectivity, mining loss and dilution. These mineral resource estimates include inferred mineral resources that are normally considered too speculative geologically to have economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves. There is also no certainty that these inferred mineral resources will be converted to measured and indicated categories through further drilling, or into mineral reserves, once economic considerations are applied.

Except for the statements of historical fact contained herein, certain of the statements and information in this press release constitute "forward-looking statements" or "forward-looking information". Any statements or information that express or involve discussions with respect to predictions, expectations, beliefs, plans, projections, objectives, assumptions or future events or performance (often, but not always, using words or phrases such as "expects", "anticipates", "believes", "plans", "estimates", "intends", "targets", "goals", "forecasts", "objectives", "potential" or variations thereof or stating that certain actions, events or results "may", "could", "would", "might" or "will" be taken, occur or be achieved, or the negative of any of these terms and similar expressions) are not statements of historical fact and may be forward-looking statements or information.

Forward-looking statements or information relate to the Company's anticipated content and cost of exploration programs, anticipated timing and results of exploration programs, planned exploration and development programs, the potential for a production decision to be made, the potential commencement of any development of a mine at the Grassy Mountain Project following a production decision, and the potential for any mining or production at the Grassy Mountain Project. These statements relate to analysis and other information that are based on expectations of future performance as set out in the PEA, including gold and silver production and planned work programs. In addition, forward looking statements relate to, among other things: Calico's strategies and plans; the attractiveness of the Grassy Mountain Project as a development option for gold producers; the exploration potential at the Grassy Mountain Project; development scenarios at the Grassy Mountain Project; the Company's expectations with respect to a sales process; timing of receipt of permits and regulatory approvals; the sufficiency of the Company's capital to finance the Company's operations; geological interpretations and potential mineral recovery processes.

Forward-looking statements or information are subject to a variety of known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual events or results to differ from those reflected in the forward-looking statements or information, including, without limitation, risks relating to: uncertainty as to actual capital costs, operating costs, production and economic returns, and uncertainty that development activities will result in a profitable mining operation at the Grassy Mountain Project, fluctuations in the spot and forward price of gold or certain other commodities; changes in national and local government legislation, taxation, controls, regulations and political or economic developments in Canada, the United States or other countries in which the Company may carry on business in the future; the uncertainties involved in interpreting geological data; business opportunities that may be presented to, or pursued by, the Company; operating or technical difficulties in connection with mining activities; the speculative nature of gold exploration and development, including the risks of obtaining necessary licenses and permits; risks related to mineral resource estimates being based on interpretations and assumptions which may result in less mineral production under actual conditions than is currently estimated and to diminishing quantities or grades of mineral resources as the Grassy Mountain Project is mined; and contests over title to properties, particularly title to undeveloped properties. In addition, there are risks and hazards associated with the business of gold exploration, development and mining, including environmental hazards, industrial accidents, unusual or unexpected formations, pressures, cave-ins, flooding and gold bullion losses (and the risk of inadequate insurance, or the inability to obtain insurance, to cover these risks).

Should one or more of these risks and uncertainties materialize, or should underlying assumptions prove incorrect, actual results may vary materially from those described in the forward-looking statements or information. The Company's forward looking statements and information are based on beliefs, expectations, and opinions of management on the date the statements are made. For the reasons set forth above, investors should not place undue reliance on forward looking statements or information.

The information in this news release addresses the PEA, and is not intended to be an exhaustive review of all matters or developments that may affect the Company. It should be read in conjunction with all other disclosure documents of the Company.

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

For more information please contact: Paul A. Parisotto at 1 855-589-0400 or you can refer to the Company's website: www.calicoresources.com.

Copyright (c) 2015 TheNewswire - All rights reserved.



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