Junior
Placer sold off its interest in Minera Las Cristinas, the operating company formed by Placer and Venezuelan state enterprise Corporacion Venezolana de Guayana, to Vannessa in mid-July. Vannessa’s total interest in the project will be 95%.
At the same time, the major retains a 2% net smelter return on Vannessa’s portion of copper revenues from the project and a net smelter return on Vannessa’s share of the gold revenues. This starts at 1% if the gold price is below US$276 per oz., moves up to 3% if the gold price is between US$276 and US$350, and runs to 5% if gold goes over US$350.
Placer also has a retained back-in right, which kicks in if a bankable feasibility study shows a 250,000-oz.-per-year gold mine is profitable. The right can be exercised for Vannessa’s capital costs and “pre-production soft costs,” plus 10%. Vannessa would then be entitled to 2% of Placer Dome’s net smelter return on gold and copper production — provided it has spent a minimum of US$2 million in capital costs on the project and maintained the mining rights for more than a year.
Vannessa is looking at the possibility of a 100,000-oz.-per-year mine, a much smaller operation than had been planned by Placer. The junior estimates that a project on that scale, which would only exploit near-surface mineralization, would cost between US$35 million and US$50 million to go into production.
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