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To: LoneClone who wrote (21089)6/9/2008 11:10:39 AM
From: LoneClone  Respond to of 193999
 
Euromax Gains A Further Promising Asset in Serbia Courtesy of Freeport-McMoRan

By Charles Wyatt

minesite.com[tt_news]=46023&tx_ttnews[backPid]=762&cHash=58a3d14b97

It is usually a good thing in life to have a senior protector hovering in the background to help if things get tough. Early on it is a father or bigger brother who saves one from bullying at school. In the mining game it helps if a junior has close ties to a major producer as there are always goodies that may be handed down, or the major may come in as a partner if a project is simply too big for the explorer to bring through to development. Majors tend to be very flexible in their policies and it is this that leads to the goodies. A country may go out of favour, or a project seen as too small, and it is then that the favoured junior may get first refusal.

John Menzies, chief executive of Canadian listed Euromax Resources, agrees with this though he points out that he does not like the word juniors, preferring to call them smaller companies, and compares his activities to the scavengers who follow the bigger animals of the jungle. “If you like to call us the jackal of southeastern Europe I would have no objection as we are happy to grab the morsels that fall from the big boys.” Last year the major event for his company was the deal with Freeport McMoRan Mining whereby Euromax farmed into nine properties and applications in Serbia and Macedonia - making the company one of the most active minerals explorers in the region. At Rudnitza in Serbia, and Ilovitza in Macedonia large gold rich porphyry copper deposits are now being explored. In Serbia at Ceovishte a neogene andesitic breccia body is undergoing its first systematic drilling programme. At Kazandol, in Macedonia, a copper-oxide project is being explored with the objective of early production.

John Menzies was a bit wary of assigning preferences to the projects when Minews spoke to him back in April, but agreed that Ilovitza was probably number one and Rudnitza number two. However he made the proviso that another deal was on the way and this could go to the head of the table. He certainly liked Kazandol and made the point that this could be a cheap open pit project which would add to the cash flow still being contributed to the company by gas in Canada. The wild card in EurOmax’s pack is Ceovishte which, if drilling comes up to expectations, could be the best of all.

But that was then, and now is now. Menzies has pulled off another deal with Freeport McMoRan and judging by the tone of his voice he reckons that it could be even better than the first. It could certainly be big and this is why he will not be drawn on the reasons that the major has decided to hand it on. What he will say, however, is that when you look at the portfolio of projects that Freeport McMoRan has under its belt ranging from the huge Grasberg mine in Indonesia, which has the world’s largest known gold reserve and one of the largest copper reserves, through its other projects in the DRC, southwest US and South America, it is not surprising that southeastern Europe has slipped down the batting order.

This new deal is the acquisition of an option on the Karavanslija property in Serbia which he describes as having large mineralized systems within extensive alteration zones and possibly being the largest mineralised systems currently being explored in Europe. The deal is that EurOmax acquires 100 per cent by paying US$50,000 and issuing 2.5 million shares. In order to exercise the option EurOmax must complete a 3 year exploration programme including 4,400 meters of drilling at the direction of Freeport McMoRan which retains a one time only back-in right after Euromax has completed 20,000 metres of drilling. This right allows it to earn a 70 per cent interest by completing a feasibility study and paying to EurOmax a 1 per cent net smelter royalty. If the right is not exercised, EurOmax will have to pay Freeport McMoRan a similar NSR and Menzies points out that by taking shares and retaining an interest the major is giving its blessing to the expertise of his company.

The licence contains two well defined mineralised centres at Karavanslija and Medenovatz. At the centre of Karavanslija is a coincident gravity, magnetic and topographic anomaly surrounded by strong lead and copper soil geochem anomalies which are often related to ancient mining activity. Skarn mineralisation is widespread in outcrop and the subsurface possibly forming mantos around an unexposed intrusion. In fact four styles of mineralization have been encountered – copper gold skarns, lead zinc copper gold skarns, gold in volcanics and gold-nickel-cobalt silica breccias. A fair handful, to which can be added the skarn with massive zinc and copper mineralisation in a creek below the ridge of altered andesite at Medenovatz which overlies skarned carbonates. Extensive ancient workings cross the ridge which is surrounded by a 2.5 by 1.5 kilometer soil multi-element geochemical anomaly best defined by a 1000 ppm lead-in-soil contour.

All very promising to a geologist and these ancient workings are worthy of comment.Artisanal gold workings in Africa usually denote high grades as only these proved economic to mine. In Europe things were a bit different as silver, for instance, was in more demand at certain times in history for its use in coinage than gold. The grades then in demand were not so high.

And another point. Very few directors of smaller mining companies bother to pick up the telephone and talk direct to Minews when news is being released. Most tend to leave it to their IR/PR advisors and hope for the best. The two notable exceptions are Peter Hambro at Hambro Mining and John Menzies at EurOmax who leap into action to make sure that releases have been received and all questions answered. There is quite a gap in size between the two, but John is on the right track Don’t bet against him catching up… given time.Less than ten years ago Peter Hambro Mining faced a precipice when Homestake walked away from the Pekrovskoye joint venture, and look at it now.



To: LoneClone who wrote (21089)6/9/2008 11:11:37 AM
From: LoneClone  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 193999
 
Kingsgate Gets Ready To Expand If The Thai Government Lives Up To Expectations

By Our Man In Oz

minesite.com[tt_news]=46049&tx_ttnews[backPid]=762&cHash=c1dae2fba7

Out of the forest and into the gold. That’s one interpretation of how investors have been treating Kingsgate Consolidated over the past six weeks. Since mid-April, the Australian-based goldminer with its major asset in Thailand, has enjoyed a remarkable 50 per cent share price rise from A$3.69 to recent trades at A$5.54. What makes that increase particularly interesting is that over the same time the gold price has fallen 5 per cent from US$929 an ounce to around US$885/oz today. Newcomers to Kingsgate might imagine that the cause of the difference is the discovery of more gold near the company’s flagship Chatree mine. They would be wrong. The cause is approval from the Thai Government’s Forestry department to expand the Chatree mine – not that this means Kingsgate is totally out of the woods just yet.

“It was a significant development, but we’re still waiting on a final Ministerial sign-off,” was how Kingsgate chief executive, Gavin Thomas, described the Forestry approval. He told Minesite’s Man in Oz during a brief chat in his Sydney office that the process of obtaining government approvals for the expansion, which will effectively double the size of Chatree, was coming to an end. “There’s no doubt that the government is keen to see Chatree expand,” he said. “And there’s also no doubt that it wants to avoid a situation similar to what happened at Padaeng.”

Padaeng? What, asks Minesite, has a zinc mine in north Thailand got to do with a gold mine further south. “Ahh,” says Thomas. “Padaeng was a mess created by an approvals delay similar to ours.” What followed was a long explanation from Thomas on how the Thai mining and investment approvals process operates, which is far too detailed for anyone other than a student of government (poor sod). Cutting through the red tape, green tape and fine print, it’s sufficient to say that what’s been happening in Thailand is a combination of departments trapped in the middle of changes in government – with a military coup tossed in to spice up the brew. The result is that Chatree’s expansion paperwork has been delayed to a near-critical point. Padaeng’s paperwork delay went critical, forcing the closer of the zinc mine, workers laid off, and minimal zinc production, made possible only by importing feedstock for the project’s smelter.

“That is a situation the Thai government does not want to see repeated,” Thomas said. “It’s one of the reasons why we believe that this time we are very close to finalising what has been a two-year process.” If he’s right, and the stock market says he is, then Kingsgate’s share price recovery could easily continue as analysts re-rate the company’s production profile and future profits. What they like is the plan to lift production from a modest 86,000 ounces last financial year (and a forecast of between 65,000oz and 80,000 this year), to a much more respectable target in 2008-09 of up to 140,000oz and then up again to 300,000oz from 2010 onward. With the benefit of low-cost hydro-electricity, a skilled workforce, and every other service a mine needs within easy distance that should mean a significant cut in costs which were running at US$404/oz in the March quarter.

Thomas says he is pleased with the way Chatree has been operating despite being forced to mine low-grade ore ahead of the expansion approval. Over the past two years the average gold grade has been a lowly 1.2 grams a tonne and 1.1g/t respectively. Expansion, and the move into fresh ore, means a doubling in grade to 2g/t from next year. Getting to that point will not take long. Kingsgate has ordered all of the major equipment needed, including new ball mills, and is expanding its mining fleet. The construction contractor, Ausenco, is on standby to move, and exploration crews ready to bolster the resource and reserve position in what is already recognised as one of Asia’s biggest gold systems.

By the time Minesite readers absorb this latest, exclusive, Kingsgate update there might even be more information in the market with Thomas due to speak today (Tuesday) at a Macquarie Bank gold forum in Sydney. That might be an ideal opportunity for a more detailed explanation of the expansion plan, construction crew readiness, and the arrival in Thailand of more equipment. But, on the flipside of the good news, Thomas might also outline precisely how tight the situation has become for Kingsgate which has been forced by the delay in government approvals to scrounge around looking for small pods of residual and remnant ore to keep its mill turning.

“I’m not saying we’re desperate, but it’s heading that way,” he told Minesite. “You can only exist on remnant ore for a certain amount of time, and we’re getting close to that point.” As an example, Thomas talks about a surface pod of low-grade ore left behind when Chatree opened, but which has just been mined to extract 2,500 ounces of gold, little more that one week’s output, but important to the project (and the company). “The government understands the position we’re in, that’s why we’re confident, and that’s why the Forestry approval was so important,” he said. “They’re very keen to avoid another Padaeng situation, and they’re very keen to get Thailand back to the position where it is one of Asia’s fastest growing economies, and a prime destination for foreign investment.”

For keen followers of Kingsgate unable to make the Macquarie Bank gold seminar in Sydney that means keep an eye on Minesite for any announcement on developments in Thailand. If the market’s 50 per cent increase in the Kingsgate share price is an accurate pointer to the breaking of a two-year log jam then it might also represent the potential for a further re-rating of the company – if the Thai Government delivers on the signals it is sending.