Energizer expects better economics from feasibility at Madagascar project

9th September 2013 By: Henry Lazenby - Creamer Media Deputy Editor: North America

TORONTO (miningweekly.com) – Madagascar-focused Energizer Resources on Monday said a series of milestones at its flagship Molo graphite project, and recently updated mineral resources had led it to expect improved economics from a feasibility study currently under way.

The company’s shares jumped more than 16% in early trade on the TSX on Monday to C$0.185 a share, before falling back to C$0.165 apiece around noon.

The company in February published the results of a preliminary economic study (PEA) for the project, which had found it to hold an after-tax net present value (NPV), using a 10% discount rate, of $341.8-million, and an after-tax internal rate of return (IRR) of 41%.

The project was expected to cost $162.04-million to construct and would produce about 84 000 t/y of 98% to 98.6% pure flake graphite, which could sell at an average market price of about $1 564/t. The project was expected to have a three-year payback period.

"The recent metallurgical results indicating that nearly half (47.4%) of the graphite concentrate produced from the Molo composite material submitted for analysis, at SGS, consists of large and jumbo flake graphite at a grade of 96.8% carbon, was certainly a pleasant surprise, as the highest quoted natural flake graphite prices are those for +80 (large flake) at purities greater than 95% carbon," president and COO Craig Scherba said in a statement released on Monday.

Energizer added that it had managed to produce an ultra-high purity concentrate of 99.9% carbon, with first-pass, single-stage hydrometallurgical purification, with all its graphite concentrate able to be upgraded to this purity level.

"We are also pleased to note that we can achieve high-purity grades through flotation or physical processing alone, which has significantly less expensive operating costs than achieving ultra-high purity through chemical or pyrometallurgical methods," Scherba said, noting this potentially positioned the company as one of the lowest-cost producers of ultra-high purity graphite.

The latest metallurgical results were expected to positively impact economics in the PEA, particularly the operating costs, IRR and NPV, with a full feasibility study expected in the fourth quarter.

The company hired consultants DRA to generate new capital expenditure and operational expenditure figures based on the new metallurgical analysis, versus the existing numbers in the PEA study.

"We feel that Molo is well positioned to be a significant contributor to the global graphite supply, and we are striving to reach that goal despite the challenging capital market environment," Scherba said.

Energizer initially discovered vanadium at the Green Giant project in 2007, and had established a National Instrument 43-101-compliant vanadium resource ranking the project as one of the largest known vanadium deposits in the world.

However, the company decided to rather develop a graphite mine, as the energy requirements and capital costs associated with a vanadium mine were deemed too high.

The company said it set about to understand the graphite market beyond its insights already established with vanadium. “We found a rapidly evolving graphite market, with over 84 exploration companies managing about 150 graphite projects worldwide; however, many were in only in the ‘infant’ stages of exploration.

“Of those 84 companies, only 3 have completed a PEA study, and only one has completed a full feasibility study. The consensus from industry analysts is that only two to three projects have the necessary criteria to make it to production. We also learned that there has not been a new graphite mine constructed outside of China and Brazil within the last 25 years," the company said.

Further, Energizer said a pilot plant was being started this month at Molo, with graphite concentrate on track to be delivered to potential offtake partners in November.

Mine construction is expected to start in the third quarter of 2014, and production will follow in the fourth quarter of 2015, at rate of 84 000 t/y.

The deposit is located near Fotadrevo, in the southern region of the country, and is owned under a joint venture with Malagasy Minerals, in which Energizer has a 75% ownership and is the operator of the project.