NextSource Materials (TSX: NEXT; US-OTC: NSRCF) announced Monday it has made its first bulk container shipment of SuperFlake graphite from the company’s Molo mine in Madagascar.
This first shipment has been sent to the company’s downstream technical partner’s Battery Anode Facility (BAF) located in Mauritius.
There, the shipment will be processed into spheronized, purified graphite (SPG) that will then be further processed into coated SPG as part of large scale, multi-step verification tests being conducted by automotive EV supply chains in South Korea and Japan, the company said. NextSource said it expects to receive its first series of verification test results in December of this year.
The company has also completed commissioning, after a period of just over six months and achieved full operations of its solar and battery hybrid power plant at Molo.
“As we continue the optimization phase of the commissioning process and towards ramp- up to nameplate production capacity for Phase 1 of Molo mine operations, NextSource is well positioned to play a critical role in the global, sustainable lithium-ion battery supply chain that is expected to see exponential growth over the next few decades,” CEO Craig Scherba said in a news release.
“We are also delighted to have completed commissioning of our solar hybrid plant, which will enable us to significantly reduce our carbon emissions and all-in sustaining costs. NextSource is committed to playing our role in global decarbonization,” he said.
Solar plant fully operational
The solar hybrid plant will generate clean power to a capacity of 4 GWh, with the current PV array designed with extra capacity such that no expansion of the PV array will be required for Molo production capacity increases of up to 32,000 tonnes per year.
The plant is owned and operated by CrossBoundary Energy under a 20-year power purchase agreement and comprises a 2.69 MWp solar photovoltaic array combined with a 1.37 MWh battery energy storage system, and a 3.1 MW thermal (diesel) generator plant. The entire photovoltaic array, incorporating 4,902 photovoltaic panels covering an area of 12,663 square metres, has been fully integrated with the battery energy storage system (BESS).
Together with load balancing provided by the BESS, the solar hybrid plant will be capable of supplying up to 100% of the Molo processing plant’s power requirements during peak daylight hours, with the thermal facility supplying all baseload and off-peak power requirements, to ensure uninterrupted power supply to the mine.
The plant will be able to provide up to 35% of Molo’s complete system power needs from renewable energy, significantly reducing all-in sustaining costs and carbon emissions by 2,275 tonnes annually.
NextSource said its aim is to become a vertically integrated global supplier of graphite anode material with plans to construct, in stages, multiple BAFs capable of producing CSPG at commercial scale in key jurisdictions.
The company said it will leverage its exclusive access to its partner’s intellectual property (IP) for SPG, currently used in multiple OEM supply chains (Tesla and Toyota), and an EV supply chain-verified coating IP to produce CSPG.
NextSource shares were up 3.6% to $1.56 on Tuesday at mid-day in Toronto, valuing the company at $243.4 million. Its shares traded in a 52-week range of $1.20 and $3.24.
Be the first to comment on "NextSource Materials ships first graphite from Molo mine in Madagascar"