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Aquila Resources Announces Positive Feasibility Study Results for its Back Forty Project

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Aquila Resources Announces Positive Feasibility Study Results for its Back Forty Project

 

 

 

 

 

Aquila Resources Inc. (TSX: AQA) announced today the results of an independent open pit only Feasibility Study completed on its 100% owned zinc- and gold-rich Back Forty Project in Michigan. The Feasibility Study was compiled by Lycopodium Minerals Canada Ltd with support from globally recognized experts and specialist consulting engineering companies in environmentally critical areas such as waste water treatment, tailings and waste rock management and mine design. All economic values within this news release are in US dollars unless indicated otherwise.

 

 

“The completion of the Back Forty Project Feasibility Study is a significant milestone for Aquila and sets the stage for the next steps to develop this deposit,” said Barry Hildred, President and Chief Executive Officer of Aquila. “Back Forty is well-positioned as a permitted project in a favourable mining jurisdiction that is close to existing infrastructure. We can now focus the Company’s resources on the pre-construction phase at Back Forty while considering funding alternatives to complete the development of the Project.”

 

 

Highlights

 

  • Pre-tax NPV at a 6% discount rate of $259M and IRR of 32.0% at base case metal prices of $1,300/oz gold, $1.20/lb zinc, $20/oz silver, $3.00/lb copper and $1.00/lb lead.
  • After-tax NPV at a 6% discount rate of $208M and IRR of 28.2% with a 2.2 year payback.
  • Open pit Proven and Probable Mineral Reserves of 11.65M tonnes.
  • A project life of seven years with total payable gold production of 468,000 oz (or an average of 67,000 oz per year) and 135,000 oz in Year 1. Total payable gold equivalent production of 1.1 million oz.
  • Total payable zinc production of 512M lbs (or an average of 73M lbs per year). Total payable zinc equivalent production of 1.2B lbs.
  • Initial project capital costs estimated at $294M with a 24-month construction period.
  • Sustaining capital costs of $110.6M.
  • Gross C1 cash costs1 of $499/oz gold equivalent or $0.46/lb zinc equivalent and net C1 cash costs of -$590/oz gold or -$1.73/lb zinc.
  • Gross AISC2 of $677/oz gold equivalent or $0.62/lb zinc equivalent and net AISC of -$171/oz gold or -$1.34/lb zinc.
  • The Company has also identified a number of opportunities to further enhance the overall economics of the Project including the future addition of an underground expansion.

 

 

Andrew Boushy, P.Eng., Senior Vice President, Projects commented, “I want to thank our entire expanded team of specialists and consultants for all of their efforts in helping us complete the Feasibility Study. The robust results of the study clearly demonstrate that Back Forty is a compelling project based only on an open pit operation and we see several opportunities to further enhance value that will be advanced during the detailed engineering phase. We have set the bar high for environmental protection and plan to engage local contractors who live in the community in which we will operate.”

 

 

____________________________

1 C1 cash costs, which are intended to measure direct cash costs of producing paid metal, does not have a standardized meaning under IFRS. See “Non-IFRS Measures”.
2 All-in sustaining costs (“AISC”) does not have a standardized meaning under IFRS. See “Non-IFRS Measures”.

 

 

 

Back Forty Project Background

 

 

The Back Forty Project is a polymetallic (zinc, gold, copper, silver, lead) Volcanogenic Massive Sulphide deposit located in Menominee County, Michigan, USA. The Back Forty deposit was originally discovered in 2002, and is currently wholly-owned by Aquila. The Project is located approximately 55 km south-southeast from Iron Mountain, and approximately 19 km west of Stephenson, Michigan.

 

 

Mineralization at the Back Forty deposit consists of discrete zones of: 1) zinc or copper-rich massive sulphide (±lead), which may contain significant amounts of gold and silver, 2) stockwork stringer and peripheral sulphide, which can be gold, zinc, and copper-bearing (±lead/silver), 3) precious metal-only, low-sulphide mineralization, and 4) oxide-rich, precious metal-bearing gossan.

 

 

Major aspects of the Project include mine open pit, hydrological cut-off wall, oxide and sulphide processing plants, tailings management facility, waste rock storage facilities, contact and non-contact water basins, mine services, access road and a state of the art waste water treatment plant.  The reclamation and closure plan includes the backfilling of the open pit with waste rock and the capping of the tailings and waste rock facility followed by a minimum of 20 years of environmental monitoring as required by Michigan law.

 

 

Access to the facility is from the west side of the Project from the existing River Road. Principal access will be via a main security gate near the process plant. Power to the site will be provided via an incoming high voltage line from the east side of the Project.

 

 

Mineral Reserve Estimate

 

 

The Proven and Probable Mineral Reserve Estimate for the Project is summarised in the table below.  Approximately 70% of the Mineral Reserve Estimate is in the Proven category. Only Measured and Indicated Mineral Resources are included in the open pit Mineral Reserve Estimate. The Mineral Reserve Estimate was prepared by P&E Mining Consultants Inc.

 

 

 

Back Forty Mineral Reserve Estimate as at February 6, 2018
  Ore

Mt

NSR

$/t

Gold

g/t

Silver

g/t

Zinc

%

Lead

%

Copper

%

Proven 8.12 $120 1.95 18.4 3.02 0.13 0.35
Probable 3.53 $85 1.63 29.3 1.76 0.41 0.10
Proven + Probable 11.65 $109 1.85 21.7 2.64 0.21 0.28

 

 

1. CIM definitions were followed for the Mineral Reserve Estimate.
2. The Mineral Reserve Estimate used average long term metal prices of $1,250/oz gold; $20.00/oz silver;  $1.15/lb zinc; $1.00/lb lead; and $3.00/lb copper. 
3. A Mineral Reserve is defined within a mine plan, with pit phase designs guided by Lerchs–Grossmann (LG) pit shells, after dilution and mining loss adjustments.
4. The Mineral Reserve Estimate is derived from Measured and Indicated Mineral Resources only.
5. Metallurgical recovery used was a variable function of the rock type and metal grade.  
6. The Mineral Reserve Estimate for the Project will be comprised of eight different ore types that will be processed either though a flotation concentrator or cyanide leach plant. NSR cut-off values applied are: Ore 1 – $16.50/t, Ore 2,3,4,7,8 – $16.00/t, Ore 5 – $17.50/t, and Ore 6 – $28.50/t.
7. The life-of-mine strip ratio is 4.3:1 including the pre-construction period.

 

 

 

Mineral Resource Estimate

 

 

The Mineral Resource Estimate from which the Mineral Reserve is derived from is set out below and was prepared by P&E Mining Consultants Inc.

 

 

 

Back Forty Mineral Resource Estimate as at February 6, 2018
Area Metallurgy
Type
Class NSR

Cut-off

Tonnes Gold Gold Silver Silver Zinc Zinc Copper Copper Lead Lead
$/tonne (1,000) g/t K oz g/t K oz % M lb % M lb % M lb
Pit

Constr-
ained

Floatable Meas 21 6,797 1.75 381 18.4 4,027 3.45 516.5 0.38 56.4 0.16 23.4
Ind 21 3,768 1.58 191 25.2 3,056 3.15 261.7 0.24 19.9 0.39 32.8
M & I 21 10,565 1.68 572 20.9 7,083 3.34 778.2 0.33 76.3 0.24 56.2
Inf 21 71 1.01 2 30.7 70 2.98 4.7 0.14 0.2 0.37 0.6
Leachable Meas 22 553 5.61 100 34.8 618 0.19 2.4 0.05 0.6 0.13 1.5
Ind 22 1,777 2.15 123 39.6 2,263 0.41 16.1 0.03 1.3 0.29 11.5
M & I 22 2,330 2.97 223 38.5 2,881 0.36 18.5 0.04 1.9 0.25 13.0
Inf 22 378 3.62 44 40.1 487 0.38 3.2 0.06 0.5 0.52 4.3
Total Meas 21+22 7,350 2.04 481 19.7 4,645 3.20 518.8 0.35 57.0 0.15 24.9
Ind 21+22 5,545 1.76 314 29.8 5,319 2.27 277.8 0.17 21.2 0.36 44.3
M & I 21+22 12,895 1.92 795 24.0 9,964 2.80 796.6 0.28 78.2 0.24 69.2
Inf 21+22 448 3.21 46 38.6 557 0.79 7.9 0.07 0.7 0.49 4.9
Out of Pit Floatable Meas 70 556 1.79 32 26.8 480 5.32 65.2 0.33 4.0 0.41 5.0
Ind 70 3,059 1.84 180 26.2 2,577 4.23 285.4 0.51 34.3 0.30 20.3
M & I 70 3,615 1.83 213 26.3 3,057 4.40 350.7 0.48 38.4 0.32 25.3
Inf 70 544 2.96 52 37.5 656 1.38 16.6 0.62 7.5 0.39 4.6
Leachable Meas 70 37 7.38 9 74.3 89 0.31 0.3 0.12 0.1 0.11 0.1
Ind 70 77 3.85 9 47.3 117 0.32 0.5 0.15 0.2 0.13 0.2
M & I 70 114 5.01 18 56.1 206 0.32 0.8 0.14 0.3 0.13 0.3
Inf 70 137 5.93 26 81.0 356 0.42 1.3 0.16 0.5 0.49 1.5
Total Meas 70 593 2.14 41 29.8 569 5.01 65.5 0.32 4.1 0.39 5.1
Ind 70 3,135 1.88 190 26.7 2,694 4.14 286.0 0.50 34.6 0.30 20.5
M & I 70 3,729 1.93 231 27.2 3,262 4.28 351.5 0.47 38.7 0.31 25.7
Inf 70 680 3.56 78 46.2 1,011 1.19 17.8 0.53 8.0 0.41 6.1
Total Floatable Meas 21+70 7,353 1.75 414 19.1 4,507 3.59 581.7 0.37 60.5 0.18 28.4
Ind 21+70 6,827 1.69 371 25.7 5,633 3.64 547.1 0.36 54.2 0.35 53.1
M & I 21+70 14,180 1.72 785 22.2 10,140 3.61 1,128.8 0.37 114.7 0.26 81.5
Inf 21+70 615 2.74 54 36.7 726 1.57 21.2 0.57 7.7 0.38 5.2
Leachable Meas 22+70 590 5.72 109 37.3 707 0.20 2.6 0.05 0.7 0.12 1.6
Ind 22+70 1,854 2.22 132 39.9 2,380 0.41 16.7 0.04 1.6 0.29 11.7
M & I 22+70 2,444 3.07 241 39.3 3,087 0.36 19.3 0.04 2.2 0.25 13.4
Inf 22+70 514 4.24 70 51.0 842 0.39 4.5 0.09 1.0 0.51 5.8
Total Meas 21+22+70 7,943 2.04 522 20.4 5,214 3.34 584.3 0.35 61.2 0.17 30.0
Ind 21+22+70 8,680 1.80 504 28.7 8,013 2.95 563.8 0.29 55.8 0.34 64.9
M & I 21+22+70 16,623 1.92 1,026 24.7 13,227 3.13 1,148.1 0.32 116.9 0.26 94.9
Inf 21+22+70 1,129 3.42 124 43.2 1,568 1.03 25.7 0.35 8.7 0.44 11.0
   
1. Mineral Resources which are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability. 
2. The Inferred Mineral Resource in this estimate has a lower level of confidence that that applied to an Indicated Mineral Resource and must not be converted to a Mineral Reserve. It is reasonably expected that the majority of the Inferred Mineral Resource could be upgraded to an Indicated Mineral Resource with continued exploration.
3. The Mineral Resource was estimated using CIM guidelines and include the Mineral Reserve.
4. Metallurgical type Oxide (all gold domains and leachable Gossans) is leachable, while all other metallurgical types are flotable.
5. The Mineral Resource Estimate was based on metal prices of $1,375/oz gold, $22.27/oz silver, $1.10/lb zinc, $3.19/lb copper and $1.15/lb lead. 

 

 

Mining

 

 

The Project area consists of subdued terrain and topography. The area, topography and climate are amenable to the conventional open pit mining operations proposed for the Project.  No underground mining is planned at this stage although the potential for underground mining will be evaluated in the near future.

 

 

The mining operations will encompass a single large open pit that will be mined with conventional mining equipment in three pushback phases. The mining fleet will consist of major equipment used directly in the rock-moving operation including blast hole drills, hydraulic excavators, and 91 t haul trucks. Various support equipment will be required, such as dozers, graders, water trucks, and light vehicles for maintenance, personnel transport and mine supervision.

 

 

For scheduling purposes, the Back Forty open pit was subdivided into three phases. Mining commences in a small higher-grade starter pit and subsequently expands outwards by pushing back the pit walls.  This enables annual waste stripping quantities to be distributed over time to avoid highly variable annual total material mined tonnages.

 

 

A summary of the phase tonnages is shown in the table below. 

 

 

 

Pit Phase Tonnages
    Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Total
Waste Stripping          
Over Burden Mt 1.23 1.65 0.90 3.78
Waste Mt 4.63 19.43 22.39 46.45
Total Waste Mt 5.86 21.08 23.29 50.23
Strip ratio w:o 2.6 4.1 5.4 4.3
Ore Production          
Flotation Ore Mt 1.95 4.33 3.66 9.94
Leach Ore Mt 0.28 0.78 0.65 1.71
Total Ore Mt 2.23 5.11 4.30 11.65
Avg NSR $/t $135 $98 $109 $109

 

 

 

Ore may be delivered either to the primary crusher or placed into one of the nearby stockpiles.  Waste is either taken to a waste storage facility or used in tailings dam construction. 

 

 

In order to improve mining selectivity and reduce ore dilution, two different bench heights will be used.  The Oxide and Pinwheel Ore Zones can be narrow and closely spaced, hence they will be mined using a 2.5 m high bench height. In the Main and Tuff Ore Zones and in large waste areas away from the ore zones, bench heights of 5.0 m will be used to minimize unit mining costs. In waste areas near the ore zones, waste must be mined on the 2.5 m bench as part of the ore/waste mining separation. Approximately 10% of the waste rock tonnage will be mined on 2.5 m high benches.

 

 

Mineral Processing and Metallurgy

 

 

The process plant design for the Project is based on a flexible metallurgical flowsheet designed for treatment of a variety of different ore types.  The flowsheet is based on well proven unit operations in the industry.

 

 

The key project design criteria for the process plant are:

 

  • Nominal throughput of 4,000 tpd sulphide ore and 800 tpd oxide ore.
  • Crushing circuit availability of 75% supported by the use of surge bins and dedicated feeders for choke feeding cone crushers for optimum crushing performance and wear minimization. 
  • Oxide and sulphide process plant availability of 91.3% through the use of standby equipment in critical areas and reliable grid power supply.
  • Sufficient automated plant control to minimize the need for continuous operator interface and allow manual override and control if and when required.

 

 

Sulphide Mineral Reserve that will be processed through the flotation concentrator have been classified into five ore types from three zones:

 

  • Main Zone – Representing over half of sulphide mineralization, will produce separate zinc and copper concentrates, each containing payable levels of gold and silver.
  • Tuff Zone – Representing approximately one third of sulphide mineralization, will produce separate zinc and lead concentrates, each containing payable levels of gold and silver.
  • Pinwheel Zone – Represents the remaining 12% of mineralization and has been sub-classified into 3 ore types. All Pinwheel ore types will produce copper mineralization that contains payable levels of gold and silver. However, only one of the ore types (Type 8) will produce zinc concentrate and this will not contain any payable by-products.

 

 

Project value will be maximized by campaigning the different sulphide ore types through the process plant separately, with the minimum duration of any campaign approximately one month. A total of seven different ore stockpiles will be used to facilitate campaigning and also ensure that both the sulphide and oxide process plants are fed with the highest value ore available.

 

 

For the initial 18 months of operation, only Main and Pinwheel type ores will be campaigned through the process plant. After 26 months of operation, Pinwheel ore will be depleted and for the remaining life, only Main and Tuff ores will be campaigned through the process plant.

 

 

The overall sulphide process plant flowsheet includes the following steps:

 

  • Primary crushing.
  • Grinding and classification
  • Bulk rougher flotation.
  • Zinc rougher flotation.
  • Bulk concentrate re-grind.
  • Zinc concentrate re-grind.
  • Bulk cleaner flotation, using three stages of cleaning.
  • Zinc cleaner flotation, using two or three stages of cleaning depending on head grade.
  • Bulk concentrate thickening and filtration.
  • Zinc concentrate thickening and filtration.
  • Tailings thickening and disposal in the common Tailings Management Facility (TMF).

 

 

The overall oxide process plant flowsheet includes the following steps:

 

 

Three stage crushing using an open circuit jaw crusher, open circuit secondary cone crusher and tertiary cone crusher in closed circuit. 

 

  • Grinding and classification.
  • Pre-leach thickening.
  • Cyanide leach.
  • CCD washing and clarification of pregnant solution.
  • De-aeration and zinc precipitation (Merrill Crowe).
  • Mercury removal using a retort.
  • Smelting to produce doré.
  • Cyanide destruction of tailings.
  • Tailings thickening and disposal in a common TMF.

 

 

Metal Production

 

 

Metal production figures are summarized in the table below.

 

 

 

Metal Life of Project Production Average Annual Production
Gold (K oz) 468 67
Zinc (K lbs) 512,198 73,171
Copper (K lbs) 51,109 7,301
Silver (K oz) 4,458 637
Lead (K lbs) 24,183 3,455

 

 

 

A summary of the life of project revenue by metal, revenue by product, and recovery by metal are included in the tables below.

 

 

         
Revenue by Metal   Revenue by Product   Metal Recovery by Product
Metal % of Revenue   Product % of Revenue   Metal Concentrates Doré
Gold 41%   Zinc Concentrate 45%   Gold 64.5% 91.6%
Zinc 41%   Copper Concentrate 31%   Zinc 91.7%  
Copper 10%   Doré 16%   Copper 80.6%  
Silver 6%   Lead Concentrate 8%   Silver 64.1% 68.6%
Lead 2%   Total 100%   Lead 81.5%  
Total 100%              

 

 

 

Concentrate Marketing

 

 

In addition to a Doré, the Back Forty Project will produce zinc, copper and lead concentrates. The zinc concentrates will on average grade 52.7%, the copper concentates will on average grade 19.3%, and the lead concentrate will on average grade 35%. Over its seven year life, the Project will on average annually produce 71,160 tonnes of zinc concentrate, 23,120 tonnes of copper concentrate and 5,600 tonnes of lead concentrate. All concentrates are expected to be marketable. Studies are ongoing to evaluate the optimal blends, destinations and transport options for Back Forty concentrates. The Company believes that there are multiple attractive options for each of the concentrates. 

 

 

Capital and Operating Costs

 

 

The capital estimate is summarized in the following tables by area and by discipline. All costs are based on Q1 2018 pricing. The estimate is deemed to have an accuracy of ±15%.

 

 

 

Capital Estimate Summary by Area
Area $ M
Indirect Construction 19
Common Plant 20
Oxide Plant 33
Sulphide Plant 59
TMF/WRFs 39
Infrastructure 33
Mining 25
Management Costs 22
Owner costs 13
Subtotal 263
Contingency (12%) 31
Total 294

 

 

 

Project Implementation Strategy

 

 

The implementation strategy for the Back Forty Project is based on a traditional Engineering, Procurement and Construction Management (“EPCM”) implementation approach with horizontal discipline-based contract packaging. Horizontal packages were established for earthworks, building works, concrete works, field erected tankage, structural, mechanical and piping installation, electrical and instrumentation supply and installation. Opportunities for vertical or area packages will be reviewed. An experienced project management firm will be engaged to oversee Engineering and Procurement support (“EP”) services for the development of the process plant and the associated infrastructure and directly manage project controls and construction with a focus on project delivery best practices as part of an integrated owner’s team with Aquila.

 

 

Mine Sustaining Capital

 

 

Expenditures incurred after Year -1 are considered sustaining capital and are summarized in the table below. The majority of the sustaining capital consists of capital lease payments for the mining equipment. Given the five year life of the open pit, no equipment replacements are planned.

 

 

 

Mine Sustaining Capital Cost Summary ($ ‘000)
  Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Year 6 Year 7 Total
Equip. & Down payments 749 277 40 100 1,165
Equip. Capital Leases 6,420 7,709 8,287 8,287 4,181 84 84 35,052
Mine Development 2,956 163 110 3,228
Freight & Spares 358 399 414 416 209 9 4 1,811
Total Mine Sustaining Costs 10,483 8,548 8,811 8,743 4,390 193 88 41,256

 

 

 

Project Infrastructure Sustaining Capital

 

 

Infrastructure sustaining capital costs include subsequent TMF stage raises over the life of mine, waste rock facility expansion costs, mine closure costs, salvage value and rehabilitation costs. The sustaining capital schedule over the life of mine is estimated as shown in the table below.

 

 

Project Sustaining Capital Cost Summary ($ ‘000)
  Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Year 6 Year 7 Total
Cut-off Wall 4,658 4,658
Tailings Management Facility 15,734 4,360 5,155 1,813 27,062
South Waste Rock Facility 8,538 8,538
North Waste Rock Facility 9,798 19,263 29,062
Total Project Sustaining Costs 38,728 23,623 5,155 1,813 69,320

 

 

 

Operating Costs

 

 

A summary of the life of Project operating costs is outlined in the table below. 

 

 

 

Operating Costs Summary
  Life of Project

($M)

$/t

ore

Gross Revenue 1,437 123
Realization Charges 180 15
NSR (Base Case) 1,256 108
     
Mining 160 14
Processing 184 16
G&A 27 2
Total Site Opex 371 32

 

 

 

Economic Analysis

 

 

A summary of key Back Forty Project metrics is outlined in the table below. The Base Case metal price deck is: $1,300/oz gold, $1.20/lb zinc, $20/oz silver, $3.00/lb copper and $1.00/lb lead.

 

 

 

Summary Economic Analysis – Base Case Metal Prices
Item Description Total
Ore Mt 11.7
Strip Ratio waste : ore 4.3
Grade Gold equivalent 4.3 g/t
Grade Zinc equivalent 6.7%
Total Recovery & Payability % of con’d ZnEq 69.1%
Payable Zinc Mlbs  512
Payable Gold koz 468
Payable Zinc Equivalent Mlbs  1,197
Payable Gold Equivalent koz 1,105
Tailings Mt 11.0
     
Gross Revenue $/t ore 123
NSR (Base Case) $/t ore 108
Total Site Opex $/t total ore 32
Royalties $/t total ore 1
EBITDA $/t total ore 75
EBITDA margin EBITDA / NSR 69.6%
Gross C1 Cash Costs $/oz AuEq 499
Net C1 Cash Costs $/oz Gold (590)
Net C1 Cash Costs $/lb Zinc (1.73)
     
Initial Capital $M 294
Total Investment (including Closure) $M 480
Gross AISCs $/oz AuEq 677
Net AISCs $/oz Gold (171)
Net AISCs $/lb Zinc (1.34)
     
Annual After-Tax Operating Cash Flow $M pa 62
After-Tax NPV at a 0% discount rate $M 316
After-Tax NPV at a 6% discount rate $M 208
After-Tax IRR   28.2%
After-Tax Payback Years 2.2
     
Pre-Tax NPV at a 6% discount rate $M 259
Pre-Tax IRR   32.0%
   
1. None of EBITDA, C1 cash costs or all-in sustaining costs (“AISC”) have a standardized meaning under IFRS. See “Non-IFRS Measures”.
2. Gold and zinc equivalencies were determined using total contained and payable metals and the respective ratio of Base Case metals prices. 
3. Evaluation includes financial impacts of the Company’s silver stream with Osisko Gold Royalties (OGR) but does not include the financial impact of its gold stream with OGR for which the majority of the upfront payments have yet to be received and for which there is uncertainty regarding the exact timing of these payments. See the Company’s Q1 2018 Financial Statements and MD&A available on SEDAR for additional details regarding the gold stream.

 

 

 

Figure 1 illustrates life of project production, payable production and cash flow that would result under the Base Case macro-economic scenario.

 

 

Sensitivity Analysis

 

 

  Base Case

-15%

Base Case Base Case
+ 15%
Gold ($/oz) 1,105 1,300 1,495
Zinc ($/lb) 1.02 1.20 1.38
Silver ($/oz) 17.00 20.00 23.00
Copper ($/lb) 2.55 3.00 3.45
Lead ($/lb) 0.85 1.00 1.15
Pre-Tax      
NPV (6% discount rate) (M) 102 259 416
IRR 17.9% 32.0% 44.1%
After-Tax      
NPV (6% discount rate) (M) 79 208 332
IRR 15.5% 28.2% 38.9%
Payback Period (years) 3.3 2.2 1.5

 

 

 

Opportunities

 

 

Aquila believes there are a number of opportunities available to the Company to improve the performance of the Project as currently outlined in the Feasibility Study, all of which require additional evaluation. These include:

 

 

Underground Expansion

 

 

The Feasibility Study Mineral Reserve Estimate does not consider any out of pit Mineral Resource. The Company believes there is an opportunity to develop the out of pit Mineral Resource, which currently stands at 3.7M tonnes (Measured + Indicated), but additional studies will be required to demonstrate the economic viability of an underground expansion. An underground expansion would also defer mine closure costs which currently commence in Year 8 at a nominal cost of $74.7M. The Company’s existing permits are for an open pit mine only and amendments and additional environmental studies would be required to allow underground mining. Aquila will soon be commencing an exploration drill program to further define the underground Mineral Resource.

 

 

Process Plant

 

 

Metallurgical test work and optimization is continuing with the objective of decreasing process plant cyanide consumption, water treatment costs and tailings treatment operability. Studies will also be undertaken to follow up on initial test results that have demonstrated increased copper recoveries particularly in the years of higher copper grades in the process plant feed.

 

 

Next Steps

 

 

Certain pre-construction activities have already commenced. The Company is finalizing its Project Execution Plan which will further define the Project development strategy including contracting philosophy, plans for basic and detailed engineering and any required permit amendments, as well as plans for building the owner’s team in preparation for the construction and operational readiness phases of the Back Forty Project.  

 

 

The Company will continue discussions with prospective financial partners to secure the required capital to build the Back Forty Project. Aquila, with the assistance from its advisors, will consider all strategic and financial options available to the Company and the Project.

 

 

With its current cash resources and an additional $47.5M in staged payments that remain available to the Company under its gold stream purchase agreement with Osisko Gold Royalties Ltd, Aquila is well-financed to complete its planned pre-construction and exploration activities.

 

 

Technical Report

 

 

The Company will file the Feasibility Study Technical Report on SEDAR in accordance with NI 43-101 within 45 days of 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 Feasibility Study and Technical Report. To fully understand the summary information set out in this news release, the Technical Report to be filed on SEDAR should be read in its entirety.

 

 

Qualified Persons

 

 

This news release has been reviewed and approved by the Qualified Persons noted below. The Qualified Persons have reviewed or verified all information for which they are individually responsible.

 

 

 

Qualified Person Employer Professional Designation
Neil Lincoln Lycopodium Minerals Canada Ltd P.Eng.
Eugene Puritch P&E Mining Consultants Inc. P.Eng.
David Penswick Gibsonian Inc P.Eng.
Kebreab Habte Golder Associates P.Eng.

 

 

 

ABOUT AQUILA RESOURCES

 

Aquila Resources Inc. is a development‐stage company with strategic assets in the Great Lakes Region. The Company’s experienced management team is focused on advancing pre-construction and exploration activities for its 100%‐owned zinc‐ and gold‐rich Back Forty Project in Michigan.

 

 

Aquila’s flagship Back Forty Project is an open pit volcanogenic massive sulfide deposit with underground potential located along the mineral‐rich Penokean Volcanic Belt in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The Project contains approximately 1.1B pounds of zinc and 1M ounces of gold in the Measured & Indicated Mineral Resource categories, with additional upside potential. Aquila has received all State and Federal permissions required for the construction and commencement of operations at the Back Forty Project.

 

 

The Company has three other exploration projects: Reef Gold Project located in Marathon County, Wisconsin, the Bend Project located in Taylor County, Wisconsin and Aquila Nickel located in the Upper Peninsula, Michigan. Reef is a gold-copper property and Bend is a volcanogenic massive sulfide occurrence containing copper and gold.

 

Posted August 1, 2018

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VIZSLA SILVER AGREES TO ACQUIRE NEWLY CONSOLIDATED PAST-PRODUCING SILVER DISTRICT IN THE EMERGING SILVER-GOLD-RICH PANUCO - SAN DIMAS CORRIDOR IN MEXICO

Vizsla Silver Corp. (TSX-V: VZLA) (NYSE: VZLA) (Frankfurt: 0G3) i... READ MORE

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Additional Drill Results Highlighted by Hole D-380 in Block 6 at Oko West, Intersecting 39.7 m Grading 5.27 g/t Au Including 2.8 m @ 14.18 g/t Au and 13.0 m Grading 10.50 g/t Au

Reunion Gold Corporation (TSX-V: RGD) (OTCQX: RGDFF) is pleased t... READ MORE

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STLLR Gold’s Tower Gold Project Infill Drilling Continues to Confirm Mineralization at the Jonpol Deposit

STLLR Gold Inc. (TSX: STLR) (OTCQX: STLRF) (FSE: O9D) announces ... READ MORE

March 28, 2024

Hudbay Provides Annual Reserve and Resource Update and Production Outlook

Consolidated copper production is expected to average 153,000i to... READ MORE

March 28, 2024

Aya Gold & Silver: Record 2023 Production, Revenue and Operating Cash Flow

Aya Gold & Silver Inc. (TSX: AYA) (OTCQX: AYASF) is pleased t... READ MORE

March 28, 2024

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