Monday, March 13, 2017

Wellgreen

I apologize, I was farting around with Blogger and deleted the original post - so from now on I'm the SAG (Stupid Angry Geologist), please excuse me, I'm off to find someone to blame.....
Here is the original post:
Wellgreen - this is going to be easy, we already know that it is going to be crap, because...
Nice ATV....
Yeahhhh, IKN for the win (link).

Summary

  • Wellgreen is a PoS
  • Big, low grade, high capex 'deposit'
  • very positive metal prices used in the PEA
  • Ignore it and Northmet as well.

I also like the way that they go out swinging and compare Wellgreen with a load of other Ni-PGE projects and mines, and show that it is low grade very low grade. Prepare to be blown away by the truly awe inspiring grades....
Nickel
PtEq
Feck, don't you hate it when you leave your Ni-PGE project in your pants pocket, it goes through the wash, and you find that all the metal has been washed away? BTW - smaller bars are not better, but the presentation does give us some useful advice - "avoid Northmet".
I like to compare exploration projects against active mines, basically to see if they are good enough to go into production. We can check Wellgreen against the results from the Kevitsa Mine (Boliden - Finland):
look at how much money they don't make....

So Wellgreen's message is - "Buy our shares, our project is worse than a break-even mine".

I also got a good chuckle on how they calculated the equivalent grades
  • NiEq - from Ni, Pt, Pd, Cu, Au, Ag, Rh, Co
  • Maybe they should have included Mn for fun? Everyone one loves Mn....
  • They used some high metal prices in the PEA, so at today's prices (bold), it is definitely uneconomic.
    • Au = $1250/oz ($1204.1/oz)
    • Cu = $3/lb ($2.62/lb)
    • Ni = $8/lb ($4.55/lb)
    • Pt = $1450/oz ($940.9/oz)
    • Pd = $800/oz ($754)
Heck, the metal prices used in the PEA were nowhere close to the current metal prices, a typical, fudge the numbers to make sure the deposit seems economic and hope that the readers are too stupid to understand.

It is so lucky that the project is located half-way to the north pole and require a large CAPEX....
Let us look a bit closer at the resource, maybe there are a couple of higher grade areas that could be expanded?
NiEq Grade distribution

PtEq Grade distribution
So, there are a couple of teeny weeny higher-grade zones. Nothing out of this world, and the resources can be expanded to the east (left in the image above).

At depth they like to show a lot of upside, telling us that lots of holes ended in "high-grade"
look at the cyan line - the PEA stage 5 opportunity pit outline
It isn't that special, yes, they can expand some of the deeper mineralization, but that it going to significantly increase the amount of waste rock (outlined in black) they have to move, and that cost will kill a marginal grade deposit.

Wellgreen do have a decent amount of cash, but the Wellgreen deposit has been well explored. There is upside to outline more resources, but what they really need to do is try and find a high-grade zone, because having "more of the same" (i.e. lots of low grade crap) isn't going to help.

You need to look beyond the big resource numbers and look at the grade and ask yourself - Where is the upside? If you are wanting to bet on Nickel, go for it, but the mineralization at Wellgreen is going to sit in those hills until the next glaciation.

you can get the 3D model from here (link)

Otto Rock put it more succinctly:

Conclusion: With the phrase “One Of The Largest Undeveloped (insert metal of choice) In The World” we have a hack, a short-cut to know when a bunch of mining parasites are trying to rip us off. So if you see it in company literature, in a promo pump or perhaps quoted by a CEO in an interview, you now know what to do!




7 comments:

  1. So dude censored am I?

    Fine. Catch you mucho later.

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  2. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  3. Yeah any Jr. Company with a nickel project is looking how much nickel equivalent they can get out of 200 ppm cobalt.

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    1. Another trick you see with Junior exploration companies is reporting silicate-Ni. You can have >0.2% Ni in ultramafic rocks and if you use a nice 4 acid digest you can give the impression of thick, low to medium grade values

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  4. Yeah any Jr. Company with a nickel project is looking how much nickel equivalent they can get out of 200 ppm cobalt.

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    1. The other trick is max out the PGE number by throwing in gold, and silver. This will just get lost when processing the concentrates

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  5. Any chance you would do a report on the recent drill reports for AP project from timmins gold. There are few drill results pending but some of the drills it seems are drilled outside the pit boundary. Any thoughts on them?

    Greatly appreciate your work and sorry to be asking favor on stocks i hold.

    ReplyDelete