Kuriskova uranium project low-cost, Tournigan says

A drill rig at Tournigan Energy's Kuriskova uranium project in central Slovakia, 10 km northwest of the city of Kosice. Photo by Tournigan EnergyA drill rig at Tournigan Energy's Kuriskova uranium project in central Slovakia, 10 km northwest of the city of Kosice. Photo by Tournigan Energy

Slovakia has four nuclear reactors that generate half the nation’s electricity needs, and two more reactors are planned or under construction. That makes Tournigan Energy‘s (TVC-V) flagship Kuriskova uranium deposit in the country an attractive project, the company says.

Tournigan says Kuriskova could potentially offer Slovakia a steady source of uranium for thirty years at its current consumption rate. The Slovak Republic, among the world’s highest per capita consumers of nuclear power, is a land-locked nation in the eastern portion of Central Europe bordering the Czech Republic to the northwest, Poland to the northeast, Ukraine to the east, Hungary to the south, and Austria to the west.

A preliminary feasibility study on the uranium deposit identifies a base case internal rate of return of 30.8% on a pre-tax basis with a 1.9-year payback after the start of production using forward prices of US$68 per lb. U3O8 and US$15 per lb. molybdenum. At an 8% discount rate the pre-tax net present value is estimated at US$277 million.

Tournigan’s management believes its high-grade uranium project could prove to be among the world’s lowest-cost uranium producers. Operating costs over the life of the mine are pegged at US$22.98 per lb. U3O8 net of a molybdenum credit of about US$1.27 per lb U3O8. During the first four years of production operating costs would be about US$16.68 per lb. U3O8 net of the molybdenum credit.

Average annual production would be about 786 tonnes of uranium as a U3O8 concentrate and 84 tonnes of moly in molybdenite with a life-of-mine U3O8 production of 20.9 million lbs. or 9,500 tonnes.

The prefeasibility envisions that the project would be best developed as an underground mine with an underground processing facility. The mine plan is based on underhand drift-and-fill mining using a road-header as the primary production method.

Initial capital costs are estimated to reach US$225 million including owner’s costs and a contingency of US$31 million. During the life of the mine there will be sustaining capital requirements of about US$71 million.

Construction will take about three years.

Metallurgical tests at Hazen Research in Golden, Colo., suggest that uranium and moly recoveries can be achieved using conventional alkaline leaching and precipitation circuits that will produce separate uranium (yellowcake) and molybdenum concentrates. Recoveries of uranium were 92% and molybdenum, 87%.

Looking ahead, Tournigan says it will continue to test exploration targets within the area and do further step-out exploration drilling where high-grade mineralization is open along strike and at depth. 

Kuriskova is about 10 km northwest of the city of Kosice, a regional industrial centre in East-Central Slovakia.

Tournigan’s strategic partner at Kuriskova is French uranium heavyweight Areva.

At presstime in Toronto shares of Tournigan were trading at 9.5¢ apiece within a 52-week price range of 6.5¢-41.5¢. The company has about 208.02 million shares fully diluted.

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