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Mine Technical Reporting Depends on Author, Whatever National Rules or Regulations. Society of Mining Engineers New York, April 29, 2013 John C. Tumazos, CFA. Canadian NI 43-101. “Qualified Person” has all discretion No minimum standards of drill density No minimum standards of reliability
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Mine Technical Reporting Depends on Author, Whatever National Rules or Regulations Society of Mining Engineers New York, April 29, 2013 John C. Tumazos, CFA
Canadian NI 43-101 • “Qualified Person” has all discretion • No minimum standards of drill density • No minimum standards of reliability • Public criticisms of studies filed under SEDAR not widespread • All national codes describe “proven and probably reserves” in terms of qualitative degrees of reliability to give author latitude
Criticisms of Application, not code • Criticisms of insufficient engineering hours, “canned” computer printouts in lieu of true engineering, insufficient drill samples, no “plan of implementation,” no detailed design or no true DFS • Thus, most complaints center on how the system is applied and not the very broad discretion given to “Qualified Person”
Too Few Resources • Bottom Line Conclusion: Weakest Project Proposals Need to Die Off Quickly to Free Technical Resources for Stronger Ones • Many large companies should have one project and not many to weed out the weakest faster • There aren’t enough engineers to give a man-year more engineering to each major aspect of a project at each phase of scoping/PEA, prefeasibility study or feasibility study • Financial markets react by depriving most or many projects of capital entirely
5 Things We Look to First • Mining cost per tonne & total op ex • Total cap ex • Indirect social costs • Geostatistics • Does project have a reasonable chance of a social license to operate ? • In a minority of situations we may pay extra attention to water, metallurgy, end markets or other factors
Mining Cost per tonne • Will the rocks jump out of the mountain and walk through the mill ??? • Ranges of $1.50 to $3.50 per tonne common in practice, but mine studies predict $1.25 to $2.33 per tonne • FCX Morenci @ 750,000 tons per day had $2.10 per tonne in November 2011 in favorable desert climate
Total Cap Ex • Small projects under 10,000 mptd less susceptible to huge overruns • Self-managed projects include Osisko, Detour Gold, Mercator Minerals, Agnico-Eagle’s 5 newer mines, ATI Rowley, Utah Ti, Nucor mills, Steel Dynamics mills • 100,000+ mtpd high pressure grinding floatation mills = epicenter of overruns • Acid Test = Will a manager do the work himself ? Engineering firms price to greatest excess if owner unable / refuses to do any work in house or oversee site. • Analogy to a Steelworkers strike : Union watches if managers get hands dirty to “run the coke battery” and back down if managers will do the hard work. Mine suppliers sense a weak management just like the unions
Indirect Social Costs • May exceed 50% of direct costs, but almost never mentioned in mine studies before hand • For example, in a recent period FCX’s operating costs for 4 South American mines doubled when it paid for a new water & sewage system for Arequipa, Peru’s #2 city • “First Nations” protocols encourage indigenous employment, but < 50% literacy or alcohol reduce productivity in Canada’s far north • 1% to 3% of revenues to local social funds common • Minera Antamina provides artificial insemination to imported Aussie sheep and a Juarez child symphony • Medical care, education, clean water and other services
Geostatistics • Underlying Issue: Many or maybe half of geologists do not embrace mathematics or geostatistics • Geos’ Complaint: Top cuts of assays make gold discoveries smaller. Geologists resist techniques that deflate their achievements. Over-emphasis on qualitative interpretation with insufficient data density common. • We observe 1,000-fold range in “tonnes resources per assay” and 125-fold range in “oz gold per assay” • About half of 43-101 studies of gold mines do not disclose standard deviation of assays, coefficient of variation of assays or top cutting procedures if any • Geochemists, geophysicists or geostatisticians more likely to embrace the analysis thereof, discuss and disclose the math behind their resource calculations
Reasonable Chance of Social License • Does the owner propose an 1,800 foot deep pit beneath lakes surrounded by vacation cottages ? • Do the water supplies for the proposed mine compete with farmers in a dry place? • Has the local region grown tired of mining because of rapid social change ? • Do indigenous communities reject the authority of the national government ?
Market Forces Regulate Projects • Low metals prices and $175 Bil pretax writeoffs in 2008-12 with $42.3 B Al, $30.5 B Au, $25.5 B Cu, $22.5 B Integrated Steel, $12.8 B Ni, $11.2 B coal, $8.7 B iron ore, etc. No sector reputable. More ahead as prices fall. • Many resources funds closed, many $ withdrawn, personnel fired or generalists do not staff metals. • Equity investors and lenders demand more rigorous documentation. Studies can’t be a joke ! • Capital providers want permits in hand, tight infill drilling initial years to payback, bulk recovery tests, mining costs > $2/t, current data, detailed design, low risks, etc. • Fixed price construction contracts will evolve
Conclusions • Reserves, NPV or rates of return reported in regulatory filings are estimates • Wide variations in the accuracy, methods or conservatism of such estimates exist • Users of such information may apply extra high discount rates where project difficulty or uncertainty largest as indicated by sparse data, variable data, remote location, difficult logistics, etc.