Highland Copper Company Inc. (TSX-V: HI) (OTCQB: HDRSF) is pleased to announce the results of the Preliminary Economic Assessment and mineral resource estimate for the White Pine North project in Michigan, USA. The PEA demonstrates the robust economic strength of this long-lived project.
Simultaneously, Highland is pleased to introduce Kinterra Copper USA LLC as a joint venture partner on the project. Kinterra will bring additional financial and technical strength required to progress the project through to development. Kinterra has made a cash payment of $30 million to Highland for a 66% stake in the White Pine North project. Additionally, the joint venture has agreed to spend a further $30 million to advance the project through permitting, infill drilling and feasibility study.
Highland continues to make great progress in 2023. Combined, these announcements markedly improve Highland’s prospects of advancing its larger White Pine North project while focusing on moving its Copperwood project to construction and operation. Highland believes this is positive for all stakeholders, particularly the State of Michigan where Highland’s project development is aligned with the State vision of electrification and regional support for local communities.
Key highlights of the PEA and joint venture transaction include (all figures in $USD):
“Today’s announcements are transformational for Highland Copper. While we continue to maintain our focus on the fully-permitted Copperwood project, we have a viable path to simultaneously advance the White Pine North project, keeping our focus on near-term value creation by creating a new US copper producer. As significant capital is required to develop both projects, the joint venture arrangement allows us to move forward without having to issue any shares, and unlocks tremendous value for our shareholders. Kinterra recognizes the quality of our asset base and is committed to working with Highland to advance White Pine North. We look forward to working with Kinterra as partners to progress this great asset.
We are pleased that all stakeholders, including the various Michigan communities and our shareholders, will benefit as we surface the significant asset value at both projects. We look forward to updating the market as we advance.” stated Denis Miville-Deschênes, President and CEO of Highland Copper.
Key Preliminary Economic Assessment Highlights1,2
The PEA provides a base case assessment of mining the mineral resources of the White Pine North Project. The PEA considers White Pine North as a stand-alone project, where potential synergies with Copperwood are not considered. The Project is the extension of the historical White Pine mine which operated from 1953 to 1995. The results of the White Pine North PEA demonstrate the long-lived nature of the project with strong economics and cash flows. Key highlights include the following, with all figures being shown for 100% of the asset:
“The White Pine North project was able to operate successfully for 50 years until the mid-1990s. The results of the PEA indicate that the project could have another 22 or more years of mining in the Upper Peninsula. We look forward to continuing our work with the state of Michigan, making Copperwood and White Pine North key economic contributors in the region, becoming an important part of domestic copper supply and aiding in the on-going goals of electrification in Michigan and the US” said Denis Miville-Deschênes, President and CEO of Highland Copper.
1) The reader is advised that a PEA is preliminary in nature and is intended to provide only an initial, high-level review of the Project potential and design options. The PEA mine plan and economic model include numerous assumptions and the use of Inferred resources. Inferred resources are too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves and to be used in an economic analysis except as allowed for in PEA studies. There is no guarantee that Inferred resources can be converted to Indicated or Measured resources, and as such, there is no guarantee the Project economics described herein will be achieved.
2) Readers are cautioned that the PEA is an economic analysis of mineral resources. Mineral resources are not mineral reserves and do not have demonstrated economic viability.
3) White Pine North NPV includes revenue related to 88% of the unexercised Osisko Gold Royalties Ltd (“Osisko”) silver option. Osisko has the right to pay an additional $23 million in order to secure the rights to the balance 88% of the silver stream. If this option was exercised, the adjusted NPV8% of White Pine North would be $634 million.
4) Included within mineralized material within the conceptual mine plan area are approximately 7 million tonnes of mineralized material on lands that White Pine Copper LLC’s mineral title has not been confirmed.
Key Joint Venture Agreement Highlights
The joint operating agreement among Kinterra Copper USA LLC and, Highland’s wholly owned subsidiary Upper Peninsula Copper Holdings Inc. provides financial capacity to proactively advance both key Michigan projects. The following are the key terms of the investment by Kinterra and the joint operating agreement:
The joint operating agreement contemplates that White Pine LLC will be governed by a management committee, which will consist of three representatives appointed by Kinterra, and two by Highland. Highland expects to continue to be involved in the development of the White Pine North project. The management committee will propose programs and budgets for future expenditures. Highland will have the option to elect to participate in future work programs.
In a challenging capital markets environment, Highland is pleased to have secured funding, without issuing any shares, to support our strategic goals at both Copperwood and White Pine North.
“The structure of the funding package, in addition to the strength of Kinterra’s balance sheet, provides critical financial flexibility to advance Highland’s projects. The initial investment allows Highland to progress to early site works at Copperwood and move towards construction in 2024. The additional capital of $30 million at White Pine North ensures no contributions will be required by Highland in the near-term expenditure period. Looking forward, the White Pine North project will benefit from Kinterra’s financial strength, particularly through funding 66% of the initial capital, should we jointly elect to construct White Pine North in the future,” said Barry O’Shea, CFO of Highland Copper.
Highland Copper Strategic Next Steps
Highland will continue towards its goal of becoming a US domestic copper producer in the near-term with the development of the Copperwood project. Highland will then look to production and cash flow growth from White Pine North through its joint venture partnership with Kinterra.
We look forward to updating the market as we advance towards our key strategic goals and surface the considerable underlying asset value of Copperwood and White Pine North.
1) NPV excludes the potential impact of Osisko exercising its silver option.
Advisors
With respect to the Kinterra joint venture transaction, the Company’s financial advisor is BMO Capital Markets and the Company’s legal counsel is McMillan LLP.
Kinterra’s legal counsel with respect to the joint venture transaction is Bennett Jones LLP.
Preliminary Economic Assessment Detail
All amounts in this news release are in US dollars, unless otherwise indicated. Due to rounding, numbers presented throughout this release may not add up precisely to the totals provided. Readers are cautioned that the PEA is an economic analysis of mineral resources. Mineral resources are not mineral reserves and do not have demonstrated economic viability.
The PEA and mineral resource estimate have been prepared by G Mining Services Inc. (“GMSI”).
White Pine North Project Geology
The White Pine deposit is located in the Ontonagon County, Michigan State. The base of the Nonesuch Formation hosts the bulk of the copper mineralization at White Pine, which consists of cupriferous siltstone, black shale and fine-grained sandstone beds, and low-grade siltstone, sandstone and red shale beds.
The copper mineralization in the area of the former White Pine mine occurs in the bottom 6 m (20 ft) of the Nonesuch Formation at the contact with the Copper Harbor conglomerate. Beds within the lower 21 m (70 ft) of the Nonesuch Formation are laterally persistent and can be correlated across the mine. The shale and siltstone in the lower part of the Nonesuch Formation are divided into two sedimentary sequences, the lower “Parting Shale” and the upper “Upper Shale”, separated by the Upper Sandstone.
Copper mineralization at the White Pine deposit occurs as two distinct styles — very fine-grained sulfide (chalcocite) and as native copper. Sulfide mineralization is estimated to account for 85-90% of the copper in the deposit, but both modes of copper are intimately associated throughout the deposit.
Mineral Resources
GMSI prepared a Mineral Resource estimate for the White Pine Project based on data provided up to and including September 28, 2022. The resource estimate was prepared in accordance with CIM Standards on Mineral Resources and Reserves (adopted May 10, 2014) and is reported in accordance with National Instrument 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects. Classification, or assigning a level of confidence to Mineral Resources, has been undertaken with strict adherence to CIM Standards on Mineral Resources and Reserves. In the opinion of GMSI, the resource evaluation reported herein is a reasonable representation of the global Mineral Resources found at the White Pine Project at the current level and spacing of sampling.
The mineral estimate was prepared under the supervision of Réjean Sirois, P. Eng. consultant for GMSI, and Christian Beaulieu, P. Geo. consultant for GMSI, both independent “qualified persons” as defined in NI 43-101. Geovia GEMS™ and Leapfrog Geo™ software were used to facilitate the resource estimation process.
The modelling of the copper mineralization horizons was based on the footwall and hanging wall of the three selected “columns” (sedimentary sequences), namely the Parting Shale, and the Full Column. The Parting Shale was modelled with a minimum thickness of 2 m and the Full Column with a minimum thickness of 3 m. In instances where the Parting Shale column was less than 2 m, dilution was applied in the footwall to ensure that the 2 m thickness was honored. The Mineral Resources are reported within the Full Column or the Parting Shale, based on mine engineering considerations.
Copper and silver assays were composited to the full thickness of the column. Grade distributions were reviewed and assay capping was not deemed necessary. Grade estimation was undertaken using Ordinary Kriging for copper grades and Inverse Distance Squared for silver grades into a percentage block model based on the wireframes of the two columns. A three-pass estimation approach was adopted, with increasing search ellipses and relaxed estimation parameters. A 300 m buffer zone around existing workings was excised from the Mineral Resources.
The block model was validated both visually and statistically and was found to be a good representation of the composites. Mineral Resource classification was based primarily on estimation passes, and other considerations such as drill spacing, quality of historical data and confidence in grade continuity.
The White Pine North deposit’s total Indicated Mineral Resources are reported at 150.7 Mt grading an average 1.05% Cu and 13.5 g/t Ag containing 3.50 Blbs Cu and 65.5 Moz Ag using a lower cut-off grade of 0.90% Cu for the Parting Shale and Full Column combined. Inferred Mineral Resources are reported at 96.4 Mt grading an average 1.03% Cu and 9.0 g/t Ag containing 2.18 Blbs Cu and 27.8 Moz Ag using a lower cut-off grade of 0.90% Cu (Parting Shale only).
Mineral Resource Estimate – White Pine Project – 0.9% Cu cut-off Grade – June 12, 2023
Ore Column | Resource Category |
Tonnage (Mt) |
Copper Grade (%) |
Silver Grade (g/t) |
Copper Contained (M lbs) |
Silver Contained (M oz) |
Full Column (3 m) | Indicated | 37.8 | 1.03 | 10.1 | 857 | 12.3 |
Inferred | 0 | – | – | 0 | 0 | |
Parting Shale (2 m) | Indicated | 112.8 | 1.06 | 14.6 | 2,640 | 53.1 |
Inferred | 96.4 | 1.03 | 9.0 | 2,183 | 27.8 | |
White Pine North (Total) | Indicated | 150.7 | 1.05 | 13.5 | 3,497 | 65.5 |
Inferred | 96.4 | 1.03 | 9.0 | 2,183 | 27.8 |
Notes on Mineral Resources:
1) Mineral Resources are reported using a copper price of US$4.00/lb and a silver price of US$25/oz.
2) A payable rate of 96.5% for copper and 90% for silver was assumed.
3) Metallurgical recoveries of 88% for copper and 73.4% for silver were assumed.
4) A cut-off grade of 0.90% copper was used, based on an underground “room and pillar” mining scenario.
5) Mineral Resources are reported within the most probable extraction scenario of Full Column or Parting Shale based on mine engineering.
6) Operating costs are based on a processing plant located at the White Pine site.
7) A flat NSR royalty rate of $0.10/lb Cu payable was applied, which incorporates three royalties on the project (Osisko Silver royalties, Osisko Copper royalties, and Longyear Royalty).
8) Minimum mining thicknesses of 2 m and 3 m were applied to the Parting Shale and the Full Column respectively.
9) No mining dilution and mining loss were considered for the Mineral Resources.
10) Mineralized rock bulk densities is assumed at 2.74 g/cc.
11) Classification of Mineral Resources conforms to CIM definitions.
12) The qualified persons for the estimate are Mr. Réjean Sirois, P.Eng., consultant for GMSI and Mr. Christian Beaulieu, P.Geo., consultant for GMSI. The estimate has an effective date of June 12, 2023.
13) Mineral Resources that are not mineral reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability. The estimate of Mineral Resources may be materially affected by environmental, permitting, legal, title, taxation, sociopolitical, marketing, or other relevant issues.
14) Parting Shale: interval defined from the base of the Lower Transition unit to the top of the Tiger unit.
15) Full Column: interval defined from the base of the Lower Transition unit to the top of the Thinly unit.
16) The quantity and grade of reported Inferred Resources in this estimation are uncertain in nature and there has been insufficient exploration to define these Inferred Resources as Indicated or Measured Mineral Resources.
Mining Plan
The PEA envisions that the deposit will be mined with a mix of conventional highly mechanized, drill and blast and continuous mining room-and-pillar mining method. The method consists of the extraction of a series of entries and cross-cuts in the mineralization, leaving pillars in place to support the back. The entries, cross cuts and pillars have been sized using geotechnical analysis and experience from historical mining at White Pine.
The mine will comprise three sectors; the Eastern, Center and Western parts. The mine will be accessed via a new covered box-cut to establish a portal at the mine entrance from the surface, located at the western side of the deposit. The pre-production period requires 18,193 m of development to establish the main entry panel requiring four to six drifts according to the ventilation requirements. Ground conditions are expected to be good to excellent, similar to the historical White Pine mine. The ground support consists a 1.8 m rebar bolts on a 1.2 m by 1.2 m pattern. At room intersection rebar bolt length is increased to 2.4 m.
The production schedule is based on mining a fixed target of 5.475 M tonnes/year. To achieve this annual production, seven to fourteen production panels must be in production simultaneously. The number of required panels depends on the tonnage from the development as well as the height of the rooms of each panel. The mining of the room will be done using a single-pass approach. In the first pass, larger pillars are left in place. The mining recovery is approximately 57%.
Life-of-Mine Metal Production
The LOM production for the White Pine Project is shown below. Payable copper production is estimated at 922,803 tonnes (2,034 million pounds) with an annual average of 42,428 tonnes (93.5 million pounds) over the 23.4-year mine life which includes a 21-month commissioning and ramp-up period. The average copper payable rate is 96.5%. Payable silver production over the LOM is 26.2 million ounces with an annual average of 1,203 thousand ounces of silver.
Production Physicals | Pre-production | Production | Total |
Concentrate (k of dmt) | 102.8 | 3,129 | 3,232 |
Cu con. Grade (% Cu) | 30.5% | 30.5% | 30.5% |
Cu metal production (M lbs) | 69.3 | 2,108 | 2,177 |
Ag metal production (k oz) | 965.9 | 2,9323 | 30,290 |
Cu payable metal (M lbs) | 66.8 | 2,034 | 2,101 |
Ag payable metal (k oz) | 865.5 | 26,165 | 27,031 |
Processing and Metallurgy
The PEA envisions a process plant design for the Project that is based on the historical metallurgical flowsheet to produce copper concentrate with a nominal throughput of 15,000 tpd and a planned availability of 92%. The flowsheet consists of a standard grinding circuit with SAG and Ball Mill in closed circuit with cyclone targeting a primary grind of 105 microns. The cyclone overflow feeds the primary flotation cells following by a desliming cyclone and secondary flotations cells. The concentrate from the primary and secondary flotation cells will be sent to a regrind mill in close circuit with cyclone targeting a grind of 20 microns. The regrind cyclone overflow feeds two stages of concentrate cleaning cells before thickening, filtration concentrate and tailings disposal.
The copper recovery is estimated at 88% with a concentrate grade of 30.5% Cu. Silver recovery is estimated at 73.4%.
Power and Surface Infrastructure
The Company envisions using the available power from the grid in conjunction with a natural gas fired power generation plant to be built on site. The combined power capacity is estimated at 38 MW. The existing tailings disposal facility will be utilized to deposit tailings from the White Pine North project, which will require dam raises over the life-of-mine. Water supply is available from an existing Lake Superior pump station.
Capital and Operating Costs
The initial capital costs, including all direct and indirect costs, are estimated at $880.4 million, including a contingency of $140.4 million. It is anticipated that pre-production revenue of $265.2 million will reduce the capital expenditures to $615.2 million.
Initial Capital Expenditure Summary
Initial CAPEX1 | ($M) |
General | 0.6 |
Infrastructure | 44.4 |
Power & Electrical | 76.1 |
Water & TDF Mgmt. | 97.3 |
Mobile Equipment | 93.2 |
Mine Infrastructure | 93.1 |
Process Plant | 148.9 |
Construction Indirects | 71.5 |
General Services & Owner’s Costs | 42.7 |
Pre-Production, Commissioning | 72.3 |
Sub-Total Before Contingency | 740.0 |
Contingency (18.8%) | 140.4 |
Total Incl. Contingency | 880.4 |
Less: Pre-Production Revenue | (265.3) |
Total Incl. Contingency & Pre-Prod. Revenue | 615.2 |
Sustaining Capital Expenditure Summary
The total LOM sustaining capital is estimated at $657.8 million. The sustaining capital includes the extension of the conveyor system for extracting ore to surface and replacement of equipment which typically has a useful life of 50,000 hours.
Sustaining Capital | LOM |
($M) | |
Tailings disposal facility expansion | 88.0 |
Water treatment plant | 15.0 |
Mine equipment purchases | 319.3 |
Mine development expenditures | 99.0 |
Mine Infrastructure expenditures | 136.6 |
Total Sustaining Capital | 657.8 |
Operating Costs Summary
Operating costs include mining, processing, G&A services, concentrate transportation and concentrate treatment and refining charges. The concentrate transportation, treatment charges and refining are deducted from gross revenues to calculate the net smelter return (“NSR”). The NSR for the Project during operations is estimated at $8.1 billion, excluding $265 million of NSR generated during pre-production and presented as a reduction of initial capital expenditures. The average NSR over the LOM is $3.97 per pound of payable copper. The average operating cost over the LOM is $29.90 per tonne of ore or $1.64 per pound of payable copper with mining representing 58% of the total operating costs, or $17.39 per tonne of ore.
Operating Cash Flow2 | LOM | $/t ore | $/lb Cu Payable |
($M) | |||
Cu Revenue | 8,138 | 72.76 | 4.00 |
Ag Credits | 654 | 5.85 | 0.32 |
Revenue | 8,792 | 78.60 | 4.32 |
Concentrate Transportation Costs | 375 | 3.35 | 0.18 |
Treatment & Refining Charges | 349 | 3.12 | 0.17 |
Net Smelter Return | 8,068 | 72.14 | 3.97 |
Royalties | 205 | 1.83 | 0.10 |
Mining Costs | 1,945 | 17.39 | 0.96 |
Processing Costs | 711 | 6.36 | 0.35 |
G&A Costs | 483 | 4.31 | 0.24 |
Working capital adj in OPEX | -33 | -0.30 | -0.02 |
Total OPEX (incl. royalties) | 3,311 | 29.6 | 1.63 |
Operating Cash Flow | 4,758 | 42.54 | 2.34 |
2) Excluding commissioning period.
Sensitivity Analysis
Variance | After-Tax Results | |||
NPV0% (M$) | NPV8% (M$) | IRR (%) | Payback (yrs) | |
Copper Price Sensitivities | ||||
3.50 $lb | 1,822 | 457 | 15.8% | 4.7 |
3.75 $lb | 2,273 | 639 | 18.4% | 4.0 |
4.00 $lb | 2,723 | 821 | 20.8% | 3.5 |
4.25$lb | 3,174 | 1,003 | 23.1% | 3.1 |
4.5 $lb | 3,624 | 1,184 | 25.4% | 2.7 |
Initial Capital Cost Sensitivities | ||||
-20% | 2,881 | 971 | 26.5% | 2.5 |
-10% | 2,802 | 896 | 23.4% | 3.0 |
0% | 2,723 | 821 | 20.8% | 3.5 |
10% | 2,645 | 746 | 18.7% | 3.9 |
20% | 2,566 | 671 | 16.9% | 4.4 |
Operating Cost Sensitivities | ||||
-20% | 3,287 | 1,034 | 23.2% | 3.1 |
-10% | 3,005 | 928 | 22.1% | 3.3 |
0% | 2,723 | 821 | 20.8% | 3.5 |
10% | 2,442 | 714 | 19.5% | 3.7 |
20% | 2,159 | 607 | 18.2% | 4.0 |
Estimated Timeline
The estimated timeline for the White Pine North Project is shown below. Upon receipt of required permits and necessary approvals a 39-month mine development, construction, commissioning, and pre-production ramp-up period is foreseen followed by 21.75 years of commercial production.
Project Timeline | Total |
Construction and Mine development (months) | 18 |
Commissioning and pre-production (months) | 21 |
Commercial production (yrs) | 21.75 |
Closure (months) | 36 |
PEA Assumptions
Feasibility Study Assumptions | Total |
Avg. Copper Price ($/lb) | 4.00 |
Avg. Silver Price ($/oz) | 25.00 |
Treatment Charge ($/t) | 65 |
Refining Charge (¢/lb) | 6.5 |
Avg. Copper Payable Rate (%) | 96.5% |
Avg. Silver Payable Rate (%) | 90% |
Summary Economics for White Pine Project
Summary Economics for White Pine Project | |
Pre‐tax NPV @8% ($M) | 1,023.6 |
Pre-tax IRR @8% | 23.1% |
After‐tax NPV@ 8% ($M) | 821 |
After-tax IRR @8% | 20.8% |
Undiscounted After‐Tax Cashflow (LOM) ($M) | 2,723.5 |
Payback Period from start of processing‐years | 3.5 |
Initial Capital expenditures ($M) | 615.2 |
LOM Sustaining Capital Expenditures ($M) | 657.8 |
LOM C‐1 Cash Costs $/lb (net of bi‐product) | 1.58 |
Nominal Process capacity mt/d | 15,000 |
Mine Life‐years | 21.75 |
Annual Payable Metal Production | |
Copper (M lb) | 93.5 |
Silver (k oz) | 1,203 |
LOM Average Process Recovery | |
Copper % | 88.0 |
Silver % | 73.4 |
All-in Cash Cost
LOM Costs | ($M) | ($/tonne milled) | ($/payable lb) |
Mining | 1,945 | 17.39 | 0.96 |
Processing | 711 | 6.36 | 0.35 |
G&A | 483 | 4.31 | 0.24 |
Offsite costs (transport, TC/RCs) | 723 | 6.47 | 0.36 |
By-product credits | (654) | (5.85) | (0.32) |
C1 Cost | 3,208 | 28.69 | 1.58 |
Capex and closure cost | 1,477 | 13.20 | 0.73 |
Royalty costs | 205 | 1.83 | 0.10 |
Interest Cost (Equipment Financing) | 19 | 0.17 | 0.01 |
C3 Cost | 4,909 | 43.89 | 2.41 |
Environment and Permitting
The former White Pine mine has hosted mining activities for over a century and most recent mining activities spanned from the 1950’s to 1995. The site been the subject of an extensive remediation program outlined in judicial Consent Decree and Remedial Action Plan agreements between Copper Range Company, Michigan’s Attorney General, and the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE). The entire surface area overlying the underground mine along with the associated surface component area and tailings impoundments are listed as a “facility” under Part 201, Environmental Remediation, of Michigan’s Public Act 451 of 1994 as Amended, the Natural Resource and Environmental Protection Act (NREPA). With the completion of the final closing of the acquisition of the mineral and surface rights from CRC, the Company has assumed all environmental liabilities related to the Consent Decree and on-going environmental obligations, and has been indemnified by White Pine LLC, the owner of the White Pine North project, for such liabilities.
The Project considers additional ore extraction and processing on site by modern methods and under current regulations. No federal permits are applicable, however, state (NREPA) permits will be needed, anticipated to include:
The Company had begun baseline environmental surveys with intent to assemble baseline data suitable for obtaining permits. Historical data exists on surface water, ground water and near-surface soils. Updated baseline data collection is underway or being planned, including groundwater, surface water, biological and wetland surveys, archaeological surveys, and other data that support the developing mine plan. The Company anticipates this work will continue under the joint venture.
Qualified Persons
Carl Michaud, P. Eng., of GMSI, an independent qualified person, as defined under NI 43-101, has read and approved the technical portions of this news release. The following qualified persons will be responsible for the preparation of their relevant portions of the technical report to be prepared in accordance with NI 43-101 and they have reviewed and approved this news release.
Qualified Persons | Company | Area of expertise |
Carl Michaud, P.Eng. | G Mining Services Inc. | Operating cost estimation, economic analysis and mine engineering |
Réjean Sirois, P.Eng. | Consultant for G Mining Services Inc. | Geology and mineral resource estimation |
Christian Beaulieu, P.Geo. | Consultant for G Mining Services Inc. | Geology and mineral resource estimation |
Luc Binette, P.Eng. | G Mining Services Inc. | Infrastructure and capital cost estimation |
Martin Houde, P.Eng. | G Mining Services Inc. | Mineral processing and recovery methods |
Andrea K. Martin, P.E. | Foth Infrastructure & Environment LLC | Environment and Permitting |
Technical Report
The Company is planning to file a technical report in accordance with NI 43-101 on SEDAR, within 45 days from the date of this news release. Readers are cautioned that the conclusions, projections and estimates set out in this news release are subject to important qualifications, assumptions and exclusions, all of which are detailed in the technical report. To fully understand the summary information set out in this news release, the technical report that will be filed on SEDAR should be read in its entirety.
About The White Pine North Project
The White Pine North Copper Project is located in the historical copper range district of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, approximately 7.5 km south of Lake Superior in Ontonagon County. The Project covers approximately 4,500 hectares (11,000 acres) of surface rights and approximately 11,990 hectares (29,615 acres) of mineral rights. The former White Pine mine was in production from 1953 through 1995. By the time it closed, over 4.5 billion pounds of copper had been produced from the mine. In July 2021, Highland Copper completed the acquisition of the White Pine north project from Copper Range Company.
About Highland Copper Company
Highland Copper Company Inc. is a Canadian company focused on exploring and developing copper projects in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, U.S.A. The Company owns the Copperwood deposit through long-term mineral leases and 34% of the White Pine North project. The Company also owns surface rights securing access to the deposit and providing space for infrastructure as required. The Company has 736,363,619 common shares issued and outstanding.
About Kinterra
Kinterra Capital is a private equity firm investing in the people, ideas, critical minerals, and strategic infrastructure necessary to accelerate the energy transition. Kinterra leverages significant domain specific technical and transactional expertise to source and manage investments that create value for key stakeholders, all while enhancing the communities within which we operate through meaningful partnerships. At Kinterra, the focus is on innovative ideation, rigorous analysis and executing with excellence to make investments that will create a more sustainable future.
Red Pine Exploration Inc. (TSX-V: RPX) (OTCQB: RDEXF) is pleased ... READ MORE
F3 Uranium Corp. (TSX-V: FUU) (OTC Pink: FUUFF) is pleased to ann... READ MORE
Collective Mining Ltd. (NYSE: CNL) (TSX: CNL) is pleased to ann... READ MORE
Aris Mining Corporation (TSX: ARIS) (NYSE-A: ARMN) announces t... READ MORE
Staffing in place and operations shakedown underway Rare E... READ MORE