Mundo
Minerals Limited (ASX: MUN)
ASX
RELEASE
3 SEPTEMBER 2007
Open
Briefing®. Mundo Minerals. Outlines Upside at Projects
Date of
lodgement:
3-Sep-2007
Title: Open
Briefing®. Mundo Minerals. Outlines Upside at Projects
Record
of interview:
corporatefile.com.au
Mundo Minerals Limited
(ASX code – MUN) is about to commence development work at the Torrecillas
gold project in Peru
as part of assessing the resource potential of the project. Previously, Mundo
Minerals has suggested that Torrecillas has a potential resource of around
500,000 ounces. Does this remain a realistic target or, if the Company has
altered its expectation, can you explain the rationale for the change in focus?
Michael
Schmulian, Managing Director South America
The 500,000 ounces was a
conservative figure and we now believe there is a potential resource of in
excess of 1 million ounces because of the likelihood of the vein systems
continuing at depth.
We’ve completed a
detailed re-evaluation of all our data. This included previous surface
sampling, which we’ve expanded considerably, studying the geometries of
the known mineralised ore shoots in the Torrecillas mine itself and other
satellite veins, plus our drilling. We believe the total strike length is
more than 6 kilometres of veins and part of the vein system lies under cover so
we believe it will be more than that. We estimate that around 30% of the
total vein strike will be economically mineable at an average grade of 20g/t
and assuming an average width of 40cm. Based on these parameters, we
calculated the original resource potential of 500,000 ounces to a depth of 200
metres vertical.
However, we know that the
vein systems in the region extend to significant depths. Two or three
other mines in the region are mining as deep as 800 metres. Directly
along strike from our property, on the adjacent property, there is a
considerable drop in the topography and the direct extension of our vein system
is exposed 800 metres lower down topographically. This gives us a very
strong indication that our vein system continues down to at least 800 metres
vertical which would give a potential resource of around 2 million ounces doing
a simple extrapolation - and we expect the veins to go even deeper than
that.
We have therefore revised
our estimate of resource potential to at least 1 million ounces, but we believe
that is still conservative based on that extrapolation. We’d expect
around a 60-70% conversion to reserves.
corporatefile.com.au
You will be commencing a
decline development. How does the cost of the decline development in Peru compare with development costs experienced
in Australia?
How will you be accessing the vein structures and how long do you think
it will take to access the mineralised zones?
Michael
Schmulian
I’m not totally up
to date with Australian costs, but I understand they are in the region of
around A$4,000 per metre of decline development. We have signed a contract for
US$760 per metre for our decline development, which is around 25% or less
compared with Australian costs. We carried out a detailed comparison of
doing the development in-house against using contractors and concluded that the
contractor rate was very reasonable.
We will be accessing the
veins from both the new decline, which should take about six months to reach
the fresh vein structures, and from the existing workings. We’ll be
able to start development from the existing workings immediately within the
next week or so at a fairly modest production rate.
corporatefile.com.au
What is the possibility
of expanding the potential ounces at Torrecillas beyond the level you’ve
just outlined? What is the potential for regional expansion beyond the
tenements you currently own?
Michael
Schmulian
Part of the vein systems
lie under cover, with probably about 30% of the total ground covered by younger
rocks, so there’s certainly potential to add another 30% in the covered
portions of the veins. There is also down dip resource potential because we
think these systems will extend beyond the 800 metres to 1,000 metres or
deeper. In addition, we believe the assumption of an average mining width
of 40cm could be quite conservative because it appears that, as we go deeper,
most of the veins become wider and this could provide a significant increase in
production if it proves to be the case.
We believe the
Torrecillas ore system is a major system with the potential to sustain two or
three decades of mining from both the existing known vein system and additional
veins that go under cover. I mentioned earlier that our vein system extends
onto the adjacent property and we would look to perhaps do a deal with the
owners in the future.
More broadly, we see
Torrecillas as the first step in establishing a significant mining presence in Peru.
We’re aiming to establish a major mining camp around Torrecillas and then
in others regions of Peru.
Peru
is a very fertile region for a medium-sized gold producer. The region is
ideally suited to a company with production aspirations of around 50-100,000
ounce a year and, although it will only be possible to have a few years of
reserves at any one time, these types of deposits will sustain production over
the long term.
corporatefile.com.au
Is that the scale of development
you envisage at Torrecillas given the increase in potential ounces you have
just outlined? What annual development would that entail?
Michael
Schmulian
Yes, we’re aiming
for annual production at Torrecillas of around 50-100,000 ounces.
We’ve estimated the lower end of that range would require 1,600-2,000
metres of annual development. The cost of that development is relatively
cheap at only around US$20/oz. We would envisage that we would replace
our annual reserves through underground development with very little drilling,
so that the US$20/oz essentially covers both the exploration and ore
development costs.
As we develop the vein
systems, we will get a better feel for the geometry of the ore systems and the
areas which are more mineralised. So we won’t have to develop all
the veins on each level and the degree of the capital intensity will reduce as
we go deeper.
corporatefile.com.au
You are moving to first
gold production from your Engenho Gold Project in Brazil. How is this progressing?
Are you still on target for production to commence in March 2008?
Michael
Schmulian
It’s progressing
extremely well and everything is on schedule. One of the key items was
the tailings dam which we needed to essentially have excavated prior to the wet
season beginning in late October and we’ve done that. The site
earth works are complete, foundations are currently being put in and over 60%
of the plant and processing equipment has been acquired. We have located,
and are in the process of buying, all the mining equipment.
At this stage there are
no major concerns. We’re on schedule for mining to commence in
October and we anticipate we will be commissioning the plant probably early
March 2008 with the first gold pour before the end of the March quarter.
corporatefile.com.au
During the last Open
Briefing® you mentioned an additional anomaly on your tenements - Mazoca -
and the fact that this had similarity to the initial anomaly that led to the
discovery of the Engenho ore body. What is the programme to further explore the
Mazoca anomaly and what timeframe do you have to commence this additional
exploration work?
Michael
Schmulian
We will do some infill
soil sampling first and widen the area of the original survey undertaken by
AngloGold. The Mazoca anomaly was confined by the area of the survey on
its eastern and western limits. The soil sampling has commenced and we should
have the results back in a couple of months. We will then commence
drilling Mazoca by probably late October.
corporatefile.com.au
Have you formed an
opinion on any additional exploration potential on your Engenho
tenements? What activities are planned to test this potential?
Michael
Schmulian
Using the data we
inherited from AngloGold–Ashanti, we have located two or three other
anomalies away from the immediate Engenho ore body. We will follow a
similar programme of infill soil sampling and extension of the soil programme
to better define these anomalies. They will then be drilled in a systematic
way, probably immediately after we complete the first phase of the Mazoca
drilling. We plan to use one drill rig and we will prioritise the targets
including Mazoca.
We’ve also
identified immediate extensions to the Engenho ore body along strike, but the drilling
access to these potential extensions from the surface is not good and the
current thinking is to drill them from underground. That drilling will probably
not take place until the second half of 2008.
corporatefile.com.au
What is the potential in
the medium term to expand the annual production profile from Engenho beyond the
current budgeted production of around 30,000 ounces per annum?
Michael
Schmulian
The potential to increase
that initial production target is extremely good. Firstly, from potential
new deposits such as the Mazoca anomaly and other satellite positions and also
from the immediate extensions to the Engenho ore body at depth. Secondly,
there is the possibility of producing at a higher annual production rate from
the current known resource. The current production target is based on
mining 30 vertical metres a year, but we believe that - as we develop our
mining method, understand the ore body better and develop greater skills within
our mining team - we can increase that to at least 45 vertical metres a year,
which is now fairly standard in Australia.
That means that, just from the Engenho mine, there’s potential to
increase production by up to 50% and if we include the potential additional
satellite ore bodies, there is potential to go to at least 60,000 ounces per
annum.
How will we treat that
ore? Although the existing plant has a nominal capacity of 195,000 tonnes
per annum, we believe that it could process 250-270,000 tonnes a year without
any modifications. We’ve also designed the plant so that we can add
additional capacity of around 75-100% without significant capital
investment.
corporatefile.com.au
Mundo’s third
project; Tocantins in Brazil
is a JV with IAMGOLD. You are soon to commence a diamond drilling
programme as a follow up to recent RAB drilling. What is the
programme? When do you expect to confirm the potential of that area?
Michael
Schmulian
The diamond drilling
programme is for around 40 drill holes totalling just over 6,000 metres. The
programme will commence soon with the rig probably on site next week and it
will take until around March 2008 to complete. We’re expecting to
drill each hole to a maximum of 150 metres. The programme is designed to
test all the anomalies over the entire 1.5km strike.
We expect to define a
resource, mainly in the inferred category, at the completion of the programme
and at that stage we will have a very good idea of the potential of that
particular lease. Based on what we’ve seen from the RAB drilling,
we’re targeting a potential resource of in excess of 600,000 ounces down
to about 120 metres, which is open pittable.
corporatefile.com.au
Given the large tenement
area that you have at Tocantins, could you
elaborate on the broader exploration potential from this region and
Mundo’s objectives from exploration?
Michael
Schmulian
Bear in mind that my
previous answer covered only one lease within the very large area that we
control and we will be continuing to explore the rest of the belt at the same
time. We set ourselves a resource target of 400-800,000 ounces in each
deposit discovered on the joint venture tenements for the entire region and we
could possibly exceed that with this drilling on the first lease.
Looking across the
broader Tocantins region, we have identified
between four and six very strong exploration targets which we believe have
equal potential to the lease we are currently drilling. Our expectation
would be to start developing resources on perhaps four of those targets within
a 2-3 year timeframe. Once we get into full production we aim to be
sourcing ore from between four and six mines and processing it at a central
plant. As I’ve said, much of the area is essentially unexplored or
under-explored. We have identified strong geochemical anomalies which are
just as good as the one covering the lease that we’ve drilled.
These are completely untested and we will systematically drill them.
At this stage the
likelihood of finding multi-million ounce ore bodies is fairly low and
that’s why the area hasn’t attracted the major mining companies,
but we also believe that the potential of finding a number of 0.5-1 million
ounce ore bodies is extremely high.
corporatefile.com.au
In light of the upgraded
potential at Torrecillas and the forthcoming exploration programmes at Engenho
and Tocantins, have you revised your
Company-wide production targets?
Michael
Schmulian
Yes we have.
We’re targeting annual production of 50-60,000 ounces at Engenho,
70-80,000 ounces at Torrecillas and perhaps even 100,000 ounces there, and
potentially at least 150,000 ounces from the Tocantins
mining camp. Total annual production for the Company is potentially well in
excess of 250,000 ounces - just from the areas we’re currently working on
at the three projects. We see upside not only at our existing tenements,
but also we see abundant opportunities in Peru
and Brazil and in South America in general.
corporatefile.com.au
What other corporate
objectives do you have in addition to developing the three projects? What
is a longer term production target?
Michael
Schmulian
Within a 4-5 year
timeframe, we could expect to have a resource base that could sustain 400,000
ounces of annual production. We see all our current projects as 10-20
year assets and we will build on those to establish a strong South American
mining house with additional long life assets.
I see Peru in particular as very
promising. There are a number of opportunities to do deals with the many
North American juniors exploring there. We have a strong business development
strategy. Up until now we’ve been focusing on establishing our
initial position in the country at Torrecillas, but we are now becoming
proactive at looking at other opportunities. Peru
and Brazil remain our focus,
but within the next twelve months we would expect to have identified other
opportunities for production in the short term in South
America.
However, the main
priority is to continue to explore and develop our existing assets to reach,
and sustain, our target production over the long term.
corporatefile.com.au
Thank you Michael.
For further
information on Mundo Minerals Ltd visit http://www.mundominerals.com/ or
contact John Langford on 08 9429 8889.
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