Court quashes NGO challenge to KORE Mining’s drill program in California

The Long Valley project in California Credit: KORE Mining

A U.S. court ruling announced today will allow KORE Mining (TSXV: KORE; US-OTC: KOREF) to proceed with drilling at its Long Valley gold project in California’s Mono County.

On Tuesday, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California denied a motion by NGOs to overturn authorization granted by the United States Forest Service (USFS) of KORE’s proposed drill program. An initial, 3,000-metre program was approved by the USFS in October 2021.

To date, KORE had voluntarily limited any work at the Long Valley project pending the outcome of the court case between the NGOs and the USFS. Now that the USFS motion for summary judgment has been granted and the authorization upheld, KORE will begin exploration during the summer/fall of 2023.

KORE said its team has worked closely with the USFS to avoid cultural impacts and mitigate other potential impacts of drilling. The program is expected to employ modern technology and existing road infrastructure to minimize disturbances. KORE will also complete pre-disturbance cultural surveys, remove 100% of all drill cuttings, have zero water or waste discharge and intensively remediate all sites post-work.

There will be no long-term impact from the program and no permanent installations will be left behind, KORE has said. The USFS thus granted KORE a categorical exclusion from the National Environmental Protection Act for the plan of operations.

Details of the Long Valley exploration drill program will be announced over the coming weeks.

The company has identified opportunities to expand the shallow oxide mineralization at the project in all directions. Additional mineralization could extend mine life, reduce capital intensity and generate higher project economic returns than the 1.2 million oz. of indicated gold and 500,000 oz. of inferred gold (in 64 million tonnes of 0.58 gram gold per tonne and 22 million tonnes of 0.65 gram gold, respectively), as modelled in a October 2020 preliminary economic assessment.

According to the PEA, the project would generate a post-tax net present value of US$273 million (at a 5% discount) with an internal rate of return of 48%, based on a US$1,600 per oz. gold price. Production is expected to average 102,000 oz. of gold per year over a seven-year mine life.

Additionally, the company notes that as a fully intact epithermal deposit with a large at surface footprint, Long Valley has the potential for high-grade sulphides and discrete vein zones in the underlying feeder structures.

The discovery of high-grade, sulphide dominant gold-silver mineralization in addition to near-surface oxide mineralization would open up additional development pathways for the project, such as underground mining, KORE said.

Shares of KORE Mining shot up by 50% by 12:30 p.m. ET following the announcement. The company’s market capitalization stands at around $8 million.

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