Lundin’s NGEx targets copper-gold in Chile

VANCOUVER — NGEx Resources (NGQ-T) looks to have a promising collection of copper-gold porphyry properties in Chile’s prolific Region III, but considering the company comes under the umbrella of the serially successful Lundin Group of companies, that may not be surprising.

The property package is part of a larger portfolio of Chilean-Argentinean copper-gold and other base metal properties, as well as a joint-venture copper-gold project with Teck Resources (TCK.B-T, TCK-N) in northwest British Columbia.

“My background is porphyry copper-gold in South America. I actually spent a lot time down there when I worked with Teck,” says NGEx president and chief executive officer Wojtek Wodzicki in an interview at the Lundin offices here. “And this portfolio we have right now is better than anything we had then. Copper-gold deposits like these are good because it’s a market sweet spot and it’s a deposit type that’s of interest to a lot of different people, and that’s a real benefit for a company like us.”

In Chile at its Vicuna area projects southeast of Copiapo, NGEx signed a joint-venture agreement with Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation to give three projects — Los Helados, Josemaria and Filo del Sol — another strong financial backer. Ownership in the three projects is split 60-40 between operator NGEx and JOGMEC, respectively.

The most-advanced target is Los Helados, a large porphyry copper-gold system that extends 1,000 metres north-south and 700 metres east-west, and remains open to the south, west, east and at depth. NGEx is currently following up on a 2011 drill program that hit mineralization at depths exceeding 900 metres,

“We’re drilling there right now at significant depths, and the idea is to take that to resource by the end of 2012, but keep in mind Los Helados is still pretty much wide open in every direction so it really depends on how the step-out program goes.” Wodzicki says. “It’ll be a great problem to have if it just keeps growing, it’ll generate strong continuous value. How soon we run into the deposits limits will determine how much drilling we’ll continue to do.”

Highlights from NGEx’s 2011 drill program at Los Helados include: 711 metres grading 0.54% copper and 0.3 gram per tonne gold starting from 40 metres; 438 metres of 0.7% copper and 0.31 gram gold from 208 metres; 575 metres carrying 0.6% copper and 0.33 gram gold starting from 186 metres; and 46 metres of 0.4% copper and 0.1 gram gold starting from 892 metres.

“We’re definitely not done with Los Helados,” Wodzicki says. “There is still a lot of value to be added from that project, and that shareholder value is what it’s all about. We’ve got plenty of capital and we’re not doing anything until we fully understand the nature of that deposit, and we’re nowhere near that yet.”

NGEx is running a parallel program at Josemaria 15 km to the east. The deposit has a previously reported resource totalling 460 million tonnes grading 0.39% copper and 0.3 gram gold at a 0.3% copper equivalent cut-off for 4 million lbs. contained copper and 4.4 million oz. contained gold.

NGEx has just released results from the first ten holes of a 19,200-metre resource-drill program at Josemaria, with highlights including: 520 metres of 0.83% copper equivalent including 0.54% copper and 0.42 gram per tonne gold; 404 metres carrying 0.79% copper equivalent that includes 0.51% copper and 0.41 gram gold; and 404 metres of 0.8% copper equivalent including 0.54% copper and 0.39 gram gold. 

“The results are in-line with what we expected,” Wodzicki says. “What they did do is follow-up on those hints of higher grades at the core of the deposit we saw in the inferred resource, and some of those holes have good numbers. If things continue this way it will be very good for us.”

NGEx’s strategy is to continue to release results from the twin drill programs over the remainder of 2012, culminating with year-end resource estimates on Los Helados and Josemaria. With US$18 million cash-in-hand to end February and financial commitments from its JOGMEC, NGEx is well-positioned to complete a planned 40,000 metres of drilling this year.

“We have some great catalysts in the Josemaria and Los Helados resource updates, so I expect the share price today to be a distant memory,” Wodzicki comments. “What we’re exploring at Los Helados has a good chance at being a major discovery and as we start with the drill results in the next few months, it will generate some momentum.”

NGEx’s share price has sagged over the past six months from a high of $3.51 to a presstime close of $2.50 on average trade volumes of 106,000 shares per day. A drop-off in news over the fourth quarter, combined with a softening in metal markets based on slowing Chinese growth and questionable industrial-sector demand have not helped.

“If we have a bit of a downtime like we are having at the moment, we have the backing to get through that, and it’s a major benefit to our shareholders,” Wodzicki argues. “We won’t get stuck needing financing at an inopportune time. And I think a lot of people appreciate that angle, there are a lot of people familiar with the Lundin Group that have made money with its investments, and have done it with multiple companies. These people are really aware of that.”

NGEx also expects further progress in 2012 at the GJ-Kinaskan copper-gold porphyry project in northwest British Columbia. The company has a staged option agreement under which Teck can earn up to a 75% stake in GJ-Kinaskan through exploration and developmental expenditures totalling US$44 million,

“That’s a good example of our strategy, which is that as a junior company you have to focus on a couple of projects,” Wodzicki says. “You can’t do everything. GJ was a significant resource but with the way the company evolved, we didn’t have a lot of expertise in Canada, it was just sort of sitting there and we didn’t have the staffing resources. I’d worked with Teck before and they definitely have a northern B.C. strategy with assets like Galore Creek and other things, so it was a really good fit in a lot of ways.”

GJ-Kinaskan has a measured and indicated resource of 153.3 million tonnes grading 0.321% copper and 0.369 gram gold at a cut-off of 0.20% copper, or a contained 1.09 billion lbs. copper and 1.82 million oz. gold.

Teck is in the process of earning a 51% stake in the GJ project by spending US$2.5 million on exploration.  The second stage of the option requires a total of US$12 million in spending by 2017 with minimum annual expenditures of US$2 million. Teck has installed a 40-person camp at the project, and is expected to proceed with further exploration during the 2012 field season.

It’s a model NGEx hopes to follow with its copper-gold properties on the Chilean-Argentinean border. Along with Los Helados and Josemaria, the company is drilling at an earlier-stage Filo del Sol target, situated 12 km south of Los Helados.

“It’s basically one big land package across the border,” Wodzicki says, pointing it out on a map. “We have a joint agreement with the two governments.”

The region hosts a series of large copper-gold operations including BHP Billiton (BHP-N, BHP-L, BHP-A) and Rio Tinto’s (RIO-N, RIO-L, RIO-A) Escondida copper-gold mine and Anglo American’s (AAUKY-Q, AAL-L) Los Bronces-Andina copper-gold mine.

“(Our deposits) are likely to be concentrate producers so you have all the Asian smelter opportunities, and we already have the JV agreements with Japan, which could end up with a company like Sumitomo or any number of larger Japanese mining corporations,” Wodzicki explains, “So you’ve got that market and you’ve got the gold market with companies like Goldcorp who are our neighbours to the south, and you have Barrick and even Newmont looking at these copper-gold deposits because it’s a relatively easy way for them to expand.”

Print

Be the first to comment on "Lundin’s NGEx targets copper-gold in Chile"

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*


By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. To learn more, click more information

Dear user, please be aware that we use cookies to help users navigate our website content and to help us understand how we can improve the user experience. If you have ideas for how we can improve our services, we’d love to hear from you. Click here to email us. By continuing to browse you agree to our use of cookies. Please see our Privacy & Cookie Usage Policy to learn more.

Close