23 December 2009
London Mining Plc (LOND.NO)
("London Mining" or the "Company")
RESULTS OF BANKABLE FEASIBILITY STUDY, WADI SAWAWIN, SAUDI ARABIA
Highlights
* Study focussed on 5Mtpa direct reduction pellet operations
* Capex of USD1.6bn versus USD1.8bn for pre-feasibility study on a
like-for-like basis
* Opex of USD47.4/t direct reduction pellets FOB Red Sea
* CRU Strategies believes that the regional market could support a supply
increase of least 10Mtpa of direct reduction pellets
* Extended mine life to 20 years expected in February 2010 following
additional work on resources currently in the proposed mining area
* Resources identified to allow mine life extension and further capacity
increase
* Analysis demonstrated that both 5Mtpa and 10Mtpa operations are feasible
London Mining today announces the results of its bankable feasibility study
(“BFS”) for the Wadi Sawawin project. London Mining owns 50% of the Wadi
Sawawin project though its interest in the Saudi London Iron joint venture
(“SLI”) with the Saudi Arabian National Mining Company (“NMC”). The Chairman of
SLI is Prince Nawaf bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz al Saud, who is also the Chairman
of NMC. Under the terms of the joint venture, NMC has committed to provide the
exploitation licence comprising the Wadi Sawawin project and three exploration
licences and London Mining has conducted, funded and now completed a BFS. The
results of the BFS have been presented to the Ministry Of Petroleum and Mines in
Jeddah, who continue to be supportive of the project.
The Wadi Sawawin Project is of strategic and economic importance to Saudi
Arabia. Wadi Sawawin will provide Saudi Arabia with a domestic source of Direct
Reduction (“DR”) pellets for use in the DRI steel plants which account for 90%
of steel production in the Middle East and North African region. The location
of Wadi Sawawin will provide it with a competitive advantage over competing
Brazilian and European supply through reduced freight rates from its deep water
port in the Red Sea and access to low cost Saudi Arabian oil. In addition, the
project will assist in the programme of diversification of the economy which is
an important element of Saudi Arabian economic policy, and the government is
expected to provide low cost funding via the PIF and SIDF.
The BFS included an updated market study undertaken by CRU Strategies, which
assumes a long-term price of USD119/t FOB Red Sea for DR pellets, incorporating
CRU Strategies estimate that Wadi Sawawin pellets would also benefit from a
long-term USD21/t freight premium to Brazilian Tuberao pellets. The study also
identifies a sustained 17Mt supply deficit for DR pellets in the MENA region in
2013.
The BFS confirms the Wadi Sawawin project to be feasible at 5Mtpa. The project
configuration envisages mining and primary crushing at mine site after which ore
will be transported 52km by road to a beneficiation and pelletizing plant on the
coast, adjacent to the proposed deep-water port and related power and
desalination facilities. The project process, based on the British Steel
flowsheet, will employ fine grinding and reverse flotation to produce pellets
suitable for use in Direct Reduction Iron (“DRI”) plants and the port will be
built with sufficient capacity to load Suez-size and coastal ships. The capex
consists of USD184m for the mine and ore transportation, USD399m for processing,
filtering and tailings, USD246 for pelletising, and USD556m for port, power,
desalination plant and other infrastructure, leading to a total installed cost
of USD1,385m. Construction, EPCM services, design allowance, owners costs and
contingencies result in total capex of USD2.0bn. Operating cost is USD47.4/dmt,
consisting of USD22.7 for processing, USD8.0 for pelletising and port, with the
remainder incorporating mining, road transport and administration.
The key economic parameters for a 5Mtpa project, based on the detailed analysis
undertaken in the BFS, are:
* total capex excluding power and desalination plant of USD1.6bn, a USD180m
reduction versus the pre-feasiblity study
* total capex, including power and desalination plant, of USD2.0bn
* operating costs of USD47.44/t pellets, or circa USD58/t pellets if power and
water acquired from a dedicated third party provider including a capital
charge payable over 14 years
* project IRR of 9.4%, which produces an equity IRR of 13.5% based on 60%
leverage
* estimated project IRR of 10% producing equity IRR of 14%, if power and water
provided by third party
* NPV8 of USD225m, or USD282m if power and water provided by third parties
In addition, London Mining has undertaken a further analysis on the 5Mtpa
project to reflect the company’s views that a further USD75m reduction in capex
is achievable based on a desktop study and the expectation of a long-term price
USD15/t higher at USD134/t :
* project IRR of 11.9%, which produces equity IRR of 18.4% based on 65%
leverage
* project IRR of 13% producing equity IRR of 20%, if power and water provided
by third party
* NPV8 of USD668m, or USD734m if power and water provided by third parties
The current JORC resource is sufficient for a mine life of 14 years at the run
rate of 5Mtpa. London Mining expects to confirm sufficient measured and
indicated resources to JORC standards in Q1 2010 to confirm a 20 year mine life.
The current resource is based entirely on the exploitation licence of 3.5km2
with exploration licences of 211.2km2 to be investigated in 2010. London Mining
plans an 8,000m drilling programme in 2010 to delineate further economic
mineralisation which would allow for the expansion of the resource to enable
10Mtpa DR pellet production for 20 years.
London Mining also undertook a desktop study to examine the economics of
constructing a 10Mtpa pellet producing mine:
* total capex of USD3.2bn, including power and desalination plant, equating to
1.6x the 5Mtpa capex on a like-for-like basis
* total opex of circa USD36/t pellets, vs USD47.4/t for 5Mtpa production
* project IRR of 14.5%, which produces equity IRR of 22.1% based on 60%
leverage
* project IRR of 17%, which produces equity IRR of 28% based on 65% leverage
and London Mining’s views on further capex savings and expected long-term
price
* NPV8 of USD1,127m, or based on London Mining’s views on further capex
savings and expected long-term price, an NPV8 of USD1,775m
The BFS process was managed by the London Mining project team, based primarily
in Oman, who engaged a team of consultants comprising: WorleyParsons (project
management, transport, bathymetry and ESHIA studies), Ausenco (mineral
processing and plant engineering), Snowden Group (geology and mine planning),
AMMTEC (ore variability testing), Corus Consulting (formerly British Steel
Consulting Overseas, mineral processing), CRU Strategies (market report) and
Southern Mining Consultants (financial analysis). The study also included a
series of optimisation studies covering: ore transport method (road train, rail,
conveyor or pipeline), processing plant location (mine or coast) and scale
(3Mtpa, 5Mtpa or 10Mtpa). The study used historic work undertaken by British
Steel between 1976 and 1994 including 5,657m of drilling and process testwork
that demonstrated that Wadi Sawawin ore could be processed to produce a DR
pellet with >67.2% Fe and <2.2% of silica (SiO2) plus alumina (Al2O3). The BFS
has been conducted to ensure the operation will meet Equator Principles.
SLI is in discussions with the Saudi Binladin Group regarding financing and
offtake arrangements, as previously announced. Standard Chartered, Milbank
Tweed and Al Sawaf have been engaged to advise on the financing process. The
joint venture expects to raise financing to build the project through a
combination of funding from local sources (including PIF and SIDF), commercial
debt and the provision of offtake arrangements in exchange for an equity stake.
The minimum leverage achievable is expected to be 60%.
The next milestone for the project is the completion of an updated JORC resource
in Q1 2010 ahead of commencement of the financing process, which is targeted to
be concluded by the end of 2010. Construction is anticipated to take 27 months
with commissioning currently anticipated in Q2 of 2013.
Graeme Hossie, CEO of London Mining, said “The BFS has shown that the Wadi
Sawawin mining and DR pellet project provides a substantial economic opportunity
and is of significant importance to steelmaking in the region. The project has
been shown to be technically and economically sound, scalable with a large
resource base and possesses areas of strategic and competitive advantage over
alternative sources of DR pellet supply due to market proximity and competitive
operating costs. There is very substantial exploration potential adjacent to
the immediate mining area and London Mining expects to increase measured,
indicated and inferred resources through the ongoing drilling campaign. The
results of the Wadi Sawawin BFS has allowed Saudi London Iron to now commence
offtake and financing discussions with parties in the region and we expect to
give updates on progress in due course.”
As regards the Company’s Marampa iron ore mine in Sierra Leone, an update on the
project, including a JORC resource update on the tailings, is expected to be
released in January 2010.
Please see the full announcement, including notes to Editors and Glossary of
technical terms enclosed.
For more information, please contact:
London Mining Plc
Graeme Hossie, Chief Executive Officer +44 20 7201 5000
Rachel Rhodes, Finance Director
Thomas Credland, Head of Investor Relations
Liberum Capital (Nominated Advisor/Broker)
Clayton Bush/Ellen Francis +44 20 3100 2000
GMP Securities Europe (Broker)
Jeremy Wrathall +44 20 7647 2800
Crux Kommunikasjon AS
Charlotte Knudsen +47 97 56 19 59
Threadneedle Communication (UK)
Laurence Read/ Graham Herring +44 20 7653 9850
The Company's website can be found at www.londonmining.co.uk
<
http://www.londonmining.co.uk/>.
This information is subject of the disclosure requirements acc. to §5-12 vphl
(Norwegian Securities Trading Act)
[HUG#1366758]
Full Announcement BFS Wadi Sawawin:
http://hugin.info/137683/R/1366758/334130.pdf