PENSANA Plc
25 May 2022
THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CONTAINS INSIDE INFORMATION
Pensana Plc
("Pensana" or the "Company")
Completion of FEED and Value Engineering Study
Pensana Plc (LSE: PRE) has completed a Front End Engineering Design (FEED) and Value Engineering Study into establishing a UK-based world-class, independent and sustainable supply of the magnet metal rare earths vital for the electric vehicle, offshore wind turbine and other strategic industries.
Highlights
Pensana Chairman, Paul Atherley commented:
“Completion of this study is another important step for Pensana in its plans to establish an independent and sustainable rare earth processing hub in the UK. The strong fundamentals and robust economics provide a solid platform for the financing and development of the project.
The growing concerns over supply chain resilience and the burgeoning demand for magnet metals from the electric vehicle and offshore wind sectors is reflected in the growing customer demand for our products.”
The study outlines the plans to establish the world’s first independent and sustainable magnet metal rare earth separation hub at the Saltend Chemicals Park in the Humber Freeport, UK, treating material sourced from the Longonjo Operations in Angola and third-party feedstock from a variety of other sources.
Saltend is targeting production of 12,500 tonnes per annum of separated rare earths including 4,500 – 5,000 tonnes of neodymium and praseodymium (NdPr) oxides, representing around 5% of the projected world demand in 2025.
The study has been prepared by Wood Plc, SRK Consulting, Snowden Mining Industry Consultants (Pty) Limited and Paradigm Project Management (Pty) Ltd.
Financial and Production Summary
The key material assumptions and outcomes of the results of the study are set out below.
Study | Unit | |
---|---|---|
Production Assumptions | ||
Life of Mine (based on Measured and Indicated category MRE) | 20 | years |
Average grade, TREO1 (Year 1-5) | 3.72 | % |
Average grade, TREO1 (Year 6-20) | 2.18 | % |
Average grade, NdPr2 (Year 1-5) | 0.78 | % |
Average grade, NdPr2 (Year 6-20) | 0.48 | % |
Average strip ratio (LOM) | 0.29 | waste:feed |
Design ROM throughput | 1.5 | mtpadry |
Design concentrator production | 107,000 | tpadry |
Design MRES Refinery production | 41,100 | tpadry |
Design Saltend Refinery capacity | 46,600 | tpadry |
Annual Production of Rare Earth Oxides (TREO) | 12,500 | tpa |
Annual Production NdPr Oxides3 (included in TREO) | 4,500 – 5,000 | tpa |
Average concentrator recovery (NdPr) | 45 | % |
Average MRES recovery (NdPr) | 72 | % |
Average SX recovery (NdPr) | 92 | % |
Operating Costs4 | ||
Average annual operating cost | 199 | US$ million |
Average operating (total rare earth oxide) | 16 | US$/kg |
Capital Costs | ||
Saltend Refinery | 195 | US$ million |
Longonjo Mine Infrastructure | 49 | US$ million |
Longonjo Concentrator Plant | 123 | US$ million |
Longonjo MRES Refinery | 127 | US$ million |
Total Capital Pre-production | 494 | US$ million |
Average annual sustaining capital (year 1 - 5) | 7 | US$ million |
Average annual sustaining capital (from year 6) | 16 | US$ million |
Financial Metrics5 | ||
Revenue6 (average p.a. based on first five years steady state production) | 976 | US$ million |
EBITDA6 (average p.a. based on first five years steady state production) | 630 | US$ million |
NPV86 (un-leveraged, post-tax) | 3.5 | US$ billion |
IRR | 71 | % |
Payback from first production | 1.5 | years |
The study estimates have been prepared by Wood Plc in conjunction with Paradigm Project Management (Pty) Ltd under the review of Professional Cost Consultants (PCC).
All costs are estimated in United States Dollars and are considered Class 3 as defined in the American Association of Cost Engineers document 18R-97.
The key fiscal terms are:
The Longonjo mining licence is renewable for a period up to 35 years and has the same basis as the internationally accepted oil and gas contracts through which the country has successfully financed its main revenue industry.
Production assumptions: 1st 10 years:
Year: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
Tonnes treated (Longonjo) | Mt | 1.0 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 |
TREO grade | % | 3.20 | 4.67 | 4.09 | 3.45 | 3.20 |
NdPr grade | % | 0.70 | 0.95 | 0.85 | 0.73 | 0.68 |
Concentrator recovery (NdPr) | % | 45 | 45 | 45 | 45 | 45 |
MRES recovery (NdPr) | % | 72 | 72 | 72 | 72 | 72 |
MRES tonnes produced (Longonjo) | Kt | 21 | 41 | 37 | 32 | 30 |
Saltend design capacity | Kt | 46.6 | 46.6 | 46.6 | 46.6 | 46.6 |
3rd party MRES feed | Kt | 1 - 3 | 2 - 6 | 6 - 10 | 11 - 16 | 13 - 18 |
Saltend SX recovery (NdPr) | % | 92 | 92 | 92 | 92 | 92 |
NdPr oxide produced | Kt | 2.30 | 4.75 | 4.75 | 4.75 | 4.75 |
Year: | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | |
Tonnes treated (Longonjo) | Mt | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.5 |
TREO grade | % | 3.16 | 2.88 | 2.97 | 2.62 | 2.60 |
NdPr grade | % | 0.69 | 0.65 | 0.62 | 0.57 | 0.58 |
Concentrator recovery (NdPr) | % | 45 | 45 | 45 | 45 | 45 |
MRES recovery (NdPr) | % | 72 | 72 | 72 | 72 | 72 |
MRES tonnes produced (Longonjo) | Kt | 30 | 28 | 27 | 25 | 25 |
Saltend design capacity | Kt | 46.6 | 46.6 | 46.6 | 46.6 | 46.6 |
3rd party MRES feed | Kt | 13 - 17 | 15 - 19 | 16 - 20 | 18 - 22 | 18 - 22 |
Saltend SX recovery (NdPr) | % | 92 | 92 | 92 | 92 | 92 |
NdPr oxide produced | Kt | 4.75 | 4.75 | 4.75 | 4.75 | 4.75 |
Notes:
1. TREO = total rare earth oxides, the sum of La2O3, CeO2, Pr6O11, Nd2O3, Sm2O3, Eu2O3, Gd2O3, Tb4O7, Dy2O3, Ho2O3, Er2O3, Tm2O3, Yb2O3, Lu2O3, Y2O3
2. NdPr = Neodymium + praseodymium oxide and is included within TREO (NdPr OXIDE is expected to represent approximately 94% of total revenue)
3. Targeted annual production assumes sourcing third party MRES / MREC feed to be processed at Saltend as an alternative to ramping Longonjo up to 2 Mtpa
4. Excludes the purchase cost of 3rd party feedstock. Total cost of US$200 million per annum is split US$135 million for Longonjo and $65 million for Saltend.
5. Assumes third party feed to be purchased at same cost per tonnes of MRES when compared to Longonjo.
6. Management estimates, inclusive of Angolan and UK operations, are based on underlying independent studies undertaken by:
• SRK Consulting: Mineral resource estimates
• Snowden Mining Industry Consultants (Pty) Limited: Mine plan schedule and pit optimisation
• Wood plc: Longonjo Operations and Saltend technical engineering and design; CAPEX and OPEX cost estimates; supervision of metallurgical testwork and pilot plant programmes
• Paradigm Project Management (Pty) Ltd: Longonjo Mine site infrastructure and bulk services technical engineering, design and cost estimates
• HCV Africa: Environmental and Social Impact Assessment, Environmental Management Programme, Relocation Action Plan, and hydrology
• Grupo Simples: Angolan Environmental and Social Impact Assessment
• Adamas Intelligence: Market Forecasts
7. Net Present Value is calculated at an operational level (pre-financing) and is anticipated to be a blend of equity and long-term debt financing. Revenue estimates are based on NdPr oxide prices as per Adamas Intelligence base forecast (Q2 2022). NdPr oxide prices starting at $153/kg in 2022, escalating at CAGR of 3.7% p.a. to 2035, flat real thereafter.
Establishing the World’s First Independent and Sustainable Rare Earth Oxide Separation Facility at the Saltend Chemicals Park in Humber, UK
The Saltend Refinery will be the first major new rare earth concentrate facility to be established in over a decade once commissioned and would be one of only three major producers located outside China when it comes into full production in 2024.
Benefitting from Humber’s Freeport status, the Saltend Refinery will be a major step in establishing a magnet metal supply chain outside China and has the potential to bring high-value manufacturing jobs back to the UK. The US$195 million facility will create over 150 permanent high value jobs, with over 500 jobs during the construction phase and an estimated 750 indirect jobs created as a consequence of the investment.
Saltend is set to become one of the world’s largest rare earth processing hubs, eventually importing sustainably sourced feedstock from around the globe, and processing it into magnet metal and other rare earth products largely for export to customers in South East Asia, Europe and the US, as companies look to reorientate their supply chains in light of recent geopolitical events.
The Saltend Refinery will make use of the existing Saltend Chemicals Plant infrastructure with the utilities and maintenance skills provided by the pxGroup as its owner and operator.
The high value manufacturing process involves separating and purifying the various rare earth metals. This is accomplished by dissolving the mixed rare earth sulphate received from Longonjo and other sources treating the resulting solution through several chemical dissolution and solvent extraction processes before precipitating the separated elements back into a purified solid state for sale.
Four products are to be separated, NdPr oxide, Lanthanum carbonate, Cerium concentrate, and the mid and heavy rare earth elements including Terbium, Dysprosium, Samarium, Europium, and Gadolinium carbonates.
The Saltend Refinery is designed in a manner to easily allow for an increase in capacity, especially in the NdPr separation process and to allow for expansion into separation of the heavy rare earths to cater for mixed rare earth carbonates sourced from ionic clay deposits.
Ethically Sourced Rare Earths from the State-of-the-Art Longonjo Operations in Angola
Pensana will establish the Longonjo Operations in Angola to supply the Saltend Refinery. The free dig, at surface, weathered carbonatite resources will be mined and treated through a flotation concentration plant followed by further hydrometallurgical beneficiation to produce a high-grade mixed rare earth sulphate (MRES) in the Mixed Rare Earth Sulphate Refinery.
The Longonjo Operations are adjacent to the fully recommissioned Caminho de Ferro de Benguela railway line, which links directly to the Atlantic deep-water port of Lobito and will use very low-cost hydro-electric power from the Angolan National grid system, recently contracted at 2 cents per KWh for 10 years.
The Longonjo Operations will treat 1.5 million tonnes per annum for a period of 20 years, with the material being sourced from Measured (45%) and Indicated (55%) Mineral Resources, producing approximately 40,000 tonnes per annum of MRES for export to the Saltend Refinery.
The Longonjo design includes the open pit development, concentrator and MRES Refinery plants, tailings storage facility (designed to meet the requirements of the Global Industry Standard on Tailings Management), process water supply, hydro-electric bulk power supply, mine infrastructure, workshops, offices, accommodation village, recreational facilities, and other associated port and rail side infrastructure.
The operations will represent a major investment in the Angolan mining sector supporting the Government’s policy to diversify the economy away from the dominant oil and gas and diamond industries as well as providing employment in an under-developed region.
In September 2020, a substantial upgrade to the Longonjo Mineral Resource estimate was announced. International mining industry consultants SRK Consulting reported an upgraded Measured, Indicated and Inferred Mineral Resource estimate of 313 million tonnes at 1.43% REO including 0.32% NdPr for 4,470,000 tonnes of REO including 990,000 tonnes of NdPr making it one the world’s largest undeveloped rare earth deposits.
Mineral Resource estimate category | Tonnes (million) | REO grade (%) | NdPr grade (%) | Contained REO (Tonnes) | Contained NdPr (Tonnes) |
Measured | 26 | 2.58 | 0.55 | 664,000 | 141,000 |
Indicated | 165 | 1.51 | 0.33 | 2,490,000 | 536,000 |
Inferred | 123 | 1.08 | 0.25 | 1,320,000 | 313,000 |
Total: | 313 | 1.43 | 0.32 | 4,470,000 | 990,000 |
Table 1: Summary of Longonjo Mineral Resource Estimate, at 0.1% NdPr lower grade cut.
REO includes NdPr. Figures may not sum due to rounding.
Rapid Route to Production
The overall Development Schedule provides 14 months for main construction and six months for commissioning and ramp-up to full production in mid-2024.
With a view to accelerating the Project execution phase, various activities have been initiated to mitigate the post-Covid supply chain disruptions, material price increases and other inflationary pressures including:
The Saltend facility will be commissioned on third party feedstock ahead of feeding the plant with high grade MRES when operations at Longonjo come online.
Should there be delays, Saltend will continue to treat third party feedstock until Longonjo comes online.
Design, costing, and contractor selection for the Longonjo Mine site infrastructure, along with the provision of bulk services, have been completed and ready to be mobilised.
Modularisation (by ADP in Cape Town, a company with 25 years of experience in Angola modular processing plants) of the Longonjo plant to optimise the site construction crew size and do pre-commissioning tests before despatch to site.
Strong Demand Growth from Electric Vehicles and Offshore Wind Leading to Shortages Equivalent to 15 Times Saltend’s Annual Production By 2035
The following are extracts from the recent “Adamas Intelligence – Rare Earth Market Outlook to 2035”:
The processing of rare earths is currently limited to a small number of Chinese companies, which control nearly 90% of the global market. The market for sustainably sourced concentrates is expected to grow as the magnet suppliers come under pressure from their international automotive customers to diversify away from environmentally damaging sources.
When it comes into production in 2024 Saltend will become one of three significant rare earth producers outside China. Lynas Corporation of Australia, (ASX: LYC, market capitalisation: US$6.1 billion) currently the world’s largest non-Chinese producer, last year produced around 5,461 tonnes of NdPr oxides from its facility in Malaysia. MP Materials (NYSE: MP, market capitalisation: US$7.3 billion) is planning to produce approximately 6,000 tonnes of NdPr oxides from 2024.
Long-Term Production Profile from Longonjo and Third-Party Feedstock
The Longonjo Operations life may have the potential to be extended beyond the current 20-year plan by the exposure of the underlying un-weathered carbonatite material as mining progresses. Subject to favourable metallurgical studies, this mineralisation has the potential to add a further dimension to the operations and extend the life of mine significantly.
Pensana is in active discussion with a number of potential third party feedstock suppliers including existing producers and mines that are either in construction or planning to be developed in the near-term. Pensana will offer an attractive alternative to selling to Chinese processors.
Marketing and Offtake
The Company is in discussions for ~50% of Saltend’s capacity of NdPr oxides to supply directly to an Asian magnet manufacturer. In addition, the Company has developed a marketing agreement with a major Asian trading house to market 30% of the production capacity within Asia to secure direct offtake agreements with customers.
The Company has been in talks with most of the major automotive original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) within Europe and the US who are seeking to secure a sustainable source of material independent from China and will update the market on these developments in due course.
Within Europe, there has been a transition towards OEMs of both electric vehicles and offshore wind purchasing rare earth materials directly to supply the magnet manufacturers in order to secure supply of these critical materials. Pensana has been approached by the offshore wind industry to secure 500 tonnes per annum of NdPr oxide from 2024 in order to meet the increased demand of the global wind energy market.
In addition, due to challenges securing the supply of Cerium and Lanthanum products from China, the European customer base has approached Pensana to offer an alternative supply from the Saltend facility. Furthermore, a UK based manufacturer has shown interest in 1,000 tonnes per annum of Cerium carbonate to be applied in the catalyst and water treatment industries.
It is anticipated that this growing interest in the products planned to be produced from Saltend will be translated into formal offtake agreements over the forthcoming weeks and months.
Study Underway for Heavy Rare Earth Separation
Heavy rare earths Dysprosium (Dy) and Terbium (Tb) are critical for high technology magnets required for automotive industry.
The Company has initiated a design and cost estimate to produce the first separated Dy and Tb independently of China and is actively looking to accelerate this project due to the strong interest from the Japanese market.
Moving further down the supply chain within the EU region offers a competitive advantage for magnet manufacturers who are investigating establishing magnet production in the EU, further lowering the carbon footprint generated by transporting volumes of material to and from Asia.
Positive climate impact
Increasing the supply of rare earths is essential to support the global drive towards net zero.
Pensana has consciously embedded climate mitigation and adaptation to climate change in its strategy and business operations.
The Company has become a partner of the Taskforce for Climate-related Financial Disclosure (TCFD) and will disclose against the recommendations, including highlighting risks and opportunities from climate change, with effect from its 2021-2022 reporting cycle.
Pensana will develop and annually report on a low greenhouse gas emission (GHG) supply chain (scopes 1, 2 and 3) and will target continual reduction of GHG emissions aligned to scientific expectations to support the global drive towards net zero GHG emissions.
This will ensure that developed products meet the requirements of the EU taxonomy for sustainable activities for the manufacture of low carbon technologies.
Commitment to low greenhouse gas emissions was considered from the outset, and was a key consideration with initial planning of the Longonjo and Saltend operations, supporting infrastructure and across the value chain.
Positive Environmental, Social and Governance
Pensana takes its risks and opportunities from ESG seriously. The business has an ESG sub-committee chaired by a non-executive director and the CEO is responsible for the delivery of ESG related targets. Additionally, the business has committed to developing digital traceability for Saltend feedstock which will be traceable from source to end use to meet the demand from customers to know the source and sustainability credentials of their raw materials.
The information contained within this announcement is considered by the Company to constitute inside information as stipulated under the Market Abuse Regulations (EU) No.596/2014. Upon the publication of this announcement via a Regulatory Information Service, this inside information will be considered to be in the public domain. The person responsible for arranging for the release of this announcement on behalf of the Company is Paul Atherley, Chairman.
-ENDS-
For further information, please contact:
Shareholder/analyst enquiries:
Pensana Plc
Paul Atherley, Chairman IR@pensana.co.uk
Tim George, Chief Executive Officer
Rob Kaplan, Chief Financial Officer
Virginia Skroski, Head of Investor Relations & Communications
Media enquiries:
Finsbury Glover Herring:
Gordon Simpson / Richard Crowley Pensana-LON@finsbury.com
The information contained within this announcement is considered by the Company to constitute inside information as stipulated under the Market Abuse Regulations (EU) No.596/2014. Upon the publication of this announcement via a Regulatory Information Service, this inside information will be considered to be in the public domain. The person responsible for arranging for the release of this announcement on behalf of the Company is Paul Atherley (Chairman).
About Pensana Plc
The electrification of motive power is by far the most important part of the energy transition and one of the biggest energy transitions in history. Magnet metal rare earths are central to the transition away from internal combustion engines and critical to electric vehicles and offshore wind turbines.
Pensana plans to establish Saltend as an independent and sustainable processing hub supplying the key magnet metal oxides to a market which is currently dominated by China. The US$195 million Saltend facility is being designed to produce 12,500 tonnes per annum of rare earth oxides, of which 4,500 – 5,000 tonnes will be neodymium and praseodymium (NdPr), representing over 5% of the world market in 2025.
Pensana’s plug and play facility is located within the world class Saltend Chemicals Park, a cluster of leading chemicals and renewable energy businesses in the Humber Freeport and will create over 500 jobs during construction and over 125 direct jobs once in production.
It will be the first major separation facility to be established in over a decade and will become one of only three major producers located outside China.
Pensana is aiming to establish Saltend as an attractive alternative for mining companies who may otherwise be limited to selling their products to China, having designed the facility to be easily adapted to cater for a range of rare earth feedstocks.