ENERGY MINERALS

POSCO formalises Black Rock backing

BLACK Rock Mining claims its Mahenge graphite project in Tanzania is now the only large-scale development in the world outside China with both product qualification and a long-term offtake deal.

POSCO formalises Black Rock backing

The statement, from CEO John de Vries, comes as the ASX-listed developer finalised a binding offtake agreement with South Korean conglomerate POSCO that includes a US$10 million prepayment to top up Black Rock's accounts as it seeks to finalise its development finance and commence construction.

Market entry finalised

De Vries said a major component of Black Rock's market entry strategy was now in place.
 
"The binding agreements with POSCO provide critical customer validation that we have a commercial and high value graphite product that will be sold as a qualified product into consumer markets under a long term contracted offtake," he said.
 
POSCO is Black Rock's largest shareholder with 13%.
 
The binding deal is for 100% of the fines to be produced from Mahenge's initial module, with a minimum 20,000tpa, and assuming annual production of 30,000tpa.
 
Pricing will be based on industry benchmarks.
 
The pair last week expanded their original 2021 graphite offtake agreement with a memorandum of understanding for delivery of 600 tonnes per annum of large natural flake graphite concentrate from stage one.
 
Black Rock is looking to secure debt financing with credit-approved term sheets next quarter, although it is also considering other options, including bringing in a partner at the project level given inbound interest from battery and equipment makers, private equity and sovereign wealth funds.

Lowest quartile producer

A review of its definitive feasibility study last October confirmed Mahenge as a low-cost, tier-one production opportunity, although inflation has hit the capital costs with an increase to $182 million capital cost for the 1.15Mtpa module one that will produce 89,000tpa of graphite concentrate.
 
Construction is expected to take around two years.
 
A second module, which could be developed in tandem with stage one, would cost $107 million and would be largely funded by US-based Urbix. 
 
Mahenge is ultimately designed as a four-module operation processing 4Mtpa of open pit ore to produce 347,000tpa at steady state.
 
The studies show it should have average C1 cash costs over the first decade of $466/t, some of the lowest globally. Consensus pricing of $1709/t gives good margins.
 
Black Rock owns 84% of the project, carrying Tanzania's government's 16% share
 
The company started the quarter with around A$7.6 million cash.
 
Black Rock shares, which have traded at A10c-22c over the past year were last traded at 11.5c, valuing the company at $113 million.

 

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the mining sector, brought to you by the Mining News Intelligence team.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the mining sector, brought to you by the Mining News Intelligence team.

editions

MiningNews.net Research Report 2024

Access a multi-pronged tool to identify critical risks and opportunities in Australia’s mining industry.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence Investor Sentiment Report 2024

Survey revealing the plans, priorities, and preferences of 120+ mining investors and their expectations for the sector in 2024.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence Mining Equities Report 2023

Access an exclusive, inside look on the quarterly mining IPOs and secondary raisings data and mining equities performance tables with an annual Stock Exchange Comparisons supplement.

editions

Mining Journal Intelligence World Risk Report 2023 (feat. MineHutte ratings)

A detailed analysis of mining investment risks across 121 jurisdictions globally, built on 11 ‘hard risk’ metrics and an industrywide survey.