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Zenyatta shares scream higher ahead of graphite discovery drilling results

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:00 PM on Friday, March 30th, 2012

Without any official news, Zenyatta Ventures shareprice skyrocketed almost 60%. Meanwhile it awaits results from drilling on a new graphite discovery.

Author: Kip Keen
Posted: Friday , 30 Mar 2012

HALIFAX, NS (MINEWEB) –

Over the past two days, trading in Zenyatta Ventures (TSX-V: ZEN) – a newcomer to the graphite exploration game in Ontario, Canada – went from sleepy to hyper. Until Wednesday’s open, daily trading volume of Zenyatta stock averaged 57,000 over the past 16 trading days. Though it had no news to report, that started to change on Wednesday. Zenyatta’s shares climbed 20 percent to C$0.18 on trading volume over a million, about a twenty-fold increase relative to its daily average over the past few weeks.

And on Thursdayn Zenyatta shares sky-rocketed. As of presstime – with still no news to report – Zenyatta was up 58 percent to C$0.29 on a blistering 4.6 million in trading volume.

Graphite – for which Zenyatta recently started exploring near Hearst, Ontario – is undoubtedly the powder setting off Zenyatta shares. Back in early January Zenyatta noted it had drilled a compelling intercept with numerous broad intervals showing significant graphite in a breccia pipe, what it now calls the Albany graphite deposit. Zenyatta highlighted eight of these intercepts, with as much as 68 metres @ 4.2 percent carbon starting about 113 metres downhole. The other intercepts graded between about two and five percent carbon over widths from about five to 50 metres.

At the time the news did not register on Zenyatta shares which were trading around the C$0.15 mark. It did at Zenyatta, which quickly sent samples of the Albany graphite core to a mineralogist at Lakehead University in Ontario for study.

In late February Zenyatta said the results looked positive, with fine to coarse sized flakes and graphite accounting for almost all the reported carbon. This was good news for Zenyatta as it is the coarser-sized flakes of graphite that catch a premium on the graphite market. Thus Zenyatta took the next logical steps. It would drill more, it said, and it would contract SGS Lakefield, an independent consulting company, to test the core samples further to get a sense of how amenable Albany graphite might be to extraction and processing. Those results are expected in May or June.

Around Mid-March Zenyatta started drilling the deposit to test girth. Zenyatta has reason to believe it might be sizeable as it had defined the target as a particularly strong electromagnetic anomaly some 1,400 metres by 800 metres. In a stylized long section on its website Zenyatta shows the deposit as a deep, 1,400-metre-long breccia pipe with a graphite matrix. Drilling will go at this picture with a finer brush.

Zenyatta has said it would drill 4,000 metres in the breccia pipe and that results would be out within a few weeks. That was March 15, some two weeks ago. Has the ticking clock on imminent drilling results caught investor attention? It may be. As of presstime Zenyatta President and CEO Aubrey Eveleigh could not be reached for comment.

Whatever the case, Zenyatta now stands as another example of the hot market for graphite stories. As previously mentioned in these pages, investors look to be clamouring to find graphite investment vehicles and have been willing to pay a premium – as was the case in a recent private placement by Flinders Resources (TSX-V: FDR), another graphite-focused junior. Graphite prices have burgeoned in recent years as it has become apparent that the growing battery industry especially will need large amounts of high purity graphite.

Source: http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/view/mineweb/en/page103118?oid=148474&sn=Detail&pid=102055

First Graphite Announces Option Agreement for Mt. Heimdahl Property

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:59 PM on Wednesday, March 28th, 2012

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA–(Marketwire – March 28, 2012) –

THIS PRESS RELEASE IS NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION IN THE UNITED STATES OR TO U.S. NEWS AGENCIES

First Graphite Corp. (the “Company”) (TSX VENTURE:FGR) is pleased to announce that it has entered into a mining option agreement (the “Option Agreement”) dated March 26, 2012, with Thomas Lewis (the “Optionor”), pursuant to which the Optionor has granted the Company an option (the “Option”) to acquire a 100% interest in certain claims located in the Slocan Valley region of the province of British Columbia (the “Mt. Heimdahl Property”).

The Mt. Heimdahl Property, totalling approximately 1045 hectares is located in the Valhalla Ranges, in high-grade metamorphic rocks of the Valhalla Complex, within the Omineca Crystalline Belt. Infrastructure is well developed in the Mt. Heimdahl Property area, as the property is approximately 35 kms south west of Nelson BC, or alternately 41 kms north east of Castlegar. There are existing forestry roads, and a high-tension power line that runs through Koch Creek, approximately 8 kms south of the property, where Eagle Graphite’s beneficiation plant is located.

In consideration of the grant of the Option, the Company will pay $5,000 and issue 100,000 common shares of the Company to the Optionor within five business days of the date that the TSX Venture Exchange issues its approval of the agreement (the “Approval Date”). In order to maintain and exercise the Option, the Company must, by the first anniversary of the Approval Date, issue to the Optionor an additional 100,000 common shares of the Company and pay the Optionor an additional $5,000.

This news release contains certain statements that may be deemed “forward-looking statements”. Forward looking statements are statements that are not historical facts and are generally, but not always, identified by the words “expects”, “plans”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “intends”, “estimates”, “projects”, “potential” and similar expressions, or that events or conditions “will”, “would”, “may”, “could” or “should” occur. Although First Graphite Corp. believes the expectations expressed in such forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, such statements are not guarantees of future performance and actual results or realities may differ materially from those in forward looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on the beliefs, estimates and opinions of First Graphite Corp.’s management on the date the statements are made. Except as required by law, First Graphite Corp. undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements in the event that management’s beliefs, estimates or opinions, or other factors, should change.

THIS PRESS RELEASE, REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE CANADIAN LAWS, IS NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO U.S. NEWS SERVICES OR FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES, AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR A SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO SELL ANY OF THE SECURITIES DESCRIBED HEREIN IN THE UNITED STATES. THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN, AND WILL NOT BE, REGISTERED UNDER THE UNITED STATES SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED, OR ANY STATE SECURITIES LAWS, AND MAY NOT BE OFFERED OR SOLD IN THE UNITED STATES OR TO U.S. PERSONS UNLESS REGISTERED OR EXEMPT THEREFROM.Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this news release.

Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/641771#ixzz1qR2L7IRv

Ahead Of the Herd With Strike Graphite

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:28 AM on Wednesday, March 28th, 2012

Richard (Rick) Mills
AheadoftheHerd.com

As a general rule, the most successful man in life is the man who has the best information

Today I’m speaking with Jody Dahrouge of Dahrouge Geological Consulting Ltd. Dahrouge Geological is in charge of the exploration programs for Strike Graphite Corp. TSX.V – SRK

Graphite has long been used in the aviation, automotive, sports, steel and plastic industries, as well as in the manufacture of bearings and lubricants. Graphite is an excellent conductor of heat and electricity, is corrosion and heat resistant and is also strong and light.

Currently, the automotive and steel industries are the largest consumers of graphite with demand across both industries rising at five percent per annum. The steel industry uses graphite as liners for ladles and crucibles, in the bricks which line blast furnaces and to increase the carbon content of steel. Graphite has already replaced asbestos in automotive brake linings and pads and is used for gaskets and clutch materials. Sparks plugs are also made incorporating graphite.

New, high-tech applications – Flexible graphite sheets, graphene, lithium-ion and vanadium batteries, fuel cells, semi conductors, nuclear, wind and solar power – require more and more graphite production. Graphene seems to be a wonder material and a lot of time, effort and money is being spent researching it – 3000 research reports were written just in 2010.

The natural graphite market is 1-1.2 million tons per year and consists of several different forms of graphite – flake, amorphous and lump. Historical applications primarily use amorphous and lump graphite, however most newly emerging technologies and applications require large flake graphite. Of the approximately 1.2 million tons of graphite that are processed each year just 40% is flake.

China, India and Canada are responsible for most graphite production and processing with China producing the lion’s share at 70–80%. China’s production is 70% amorphous and lower value small flake graphite.

Strike Graphite has recently acquired three graphite projects within mining friendly, politically stable jurisdictions; Deep Bay East, Saskatchewan, Simon Lake, Saskatchewan and the Wagon Graphite Project in Quebec. All three projects possess geologic traits for the discovery of significant, large flake graphite deposits.

Rick: Jody tell us about yourself and Dahrouge Geological Consulting.

Jody: I graduated from the University of Alberta’s geology program in 1988 and for the next three years I worked in the resource industry. The industry is pretty cyclical, being completely tied to the resource market and at that time the market hadn’t yet experienced the explosive growth in commodity demand as a function of Chinese growth.

Consequently a lot of geologists would work for a few years, get laid off, work for a few years and so on. I was employed by ATCO Power, a major coal and electricity producer in Alberta. While working full time for ATCO I decided to go back to University and graduated in 1993 with a degree in computing science.

Upon graduation, instead of going to work in the high-tech industry, I decided to claim stake for industrial minerals in British Columbia. I went to work for a company called Halferdahl and Associates, a consulting company based out of Edmonton that was run by Laurie Halferdahl. Laurie passed away in 1999 after operating his business since 1971.

I purchased the Halferdahl assets from his estate in 1999 and have since run Dahrouge Geological Consulting, we’re primarily focused on industrial minerals and rare metals. We work primarily in Canada and the United States, though we’ve worked around the world, East Africa, China, Australia and South America. We have worldwide experience but we’ve been lucky enough to stay active primarily across North America.

I was also President of Fission Energy for a short time.

Rick: What’s your take on the graphite market?

Jody: Graphite is quite unique because of its unique combination of properties. Graphite in terms of being an electrode has one of the highest conductivities and as you’re aware the amount of graphite in a lithium-ion battery is anywhere from 10 to 20 times the amount of lithium.

The demand just from that one use could potentially double the market over the next ten years to over two million tonnes annually. That type of demand growth would require 25 new mines at 40,000 tonnes per year.

The United States Geological Society (USGS) says the need for graphite in the type of fuel cells being developed could consume as much graphite as all other uses combined.

All of these markets demand the highest quality large-flake graphite, that’s where the most growth would be.

Graphite in itself is not necessarily rare, it’s carbon. It’s an extremely common mineral occuring in a wide variety of geologic terrains. However what is rare is the greater than 177 microns or 0.2 mm large-flake graphite.

Large-flake usually occurs only in very specific geologic environments such as high-grade metamorphic terrains. Metamorphic rocks are those which have changed from their original formation by increasing pressure or temperature, the change gives rise to large-flake graphite under specific conditions.

In order to capture the highest value, you have to beneficiate your graphite deposit and produce this coarse-grained graphite and make sure it’s relatively free of impurities. You need an excess of 94% to 97% carbon content to make the battery-grade graphite.

Rick: Okay, what else is graphite used for?

Jody: One growing demand, or perceived growth in the market, is going to be graphene, which is an exceptionally strong man-made mineral with high conductivity, so there’s all sorts of technological advances that can fuel this growth even further.

Rick: When I look at the recent report by the United States Geological Survey on graphite, there’s no mine production of graphite in the United States. The US relies 100 percent on imports and has for years.

Jody: Yes, and there’s only two mines in production in Canada, one’s in British Columbia and is a small producer, the other is in Quebec. But there are in excess of 40 graphite producers in China. A vast majority of the Chinese mines are producing amorphous graphite, which is generally less than 37 microns, and commands much lower prices than large flake graphite.

China controls about 73% of the market, India is next with 10% to 15%, North Korea is a big producer, less than India, but bigger than Canada in terms of its graphite production, but China consumes most of North Korea’s production.

This is all in terms of a strategic commodity, so once again North American seems to be left out in the cold and beholden to production from China and other Asian countries.

Rick: In 2011, China, Canada, and Brazil were in descending order of tonnage, the major suppliers of crystalline-flake and flake-dust graphite, and in 2011, China produced the majority of the world’s graphite. There’s talk about China cutting back on their graphite production, but this is not, I want to make it very clear that this is not the rare earth space.

The mineralogy and the metallurgy of many rare earth deposits are not well known or understood here in the West, whereas with graphite, we’re perhaps the leaders in mineralogy and metallurgy, we understand it.

Jody: Certainly the experience with rare earth mineralogy is quite important. There’s only been four minerals that are known to have produced rare earth’s; monazite, bastnasite, xenotime and loparite. So the process ability of those minerals is well known, when people started exploring for rare earth deposits, they found rare earths formed numerous minerals that have never been commercially produced.  Hence the large learning curves towards the unknown metallurgy.

There are 17 different rare earths and they are always found together in the host mineral. There are tens if not hundreds of rare earth minerals, some of which are very complicated and not known to be amenable to processing using standard techniques. So, people were finding rare earth deposits, but what was more important were recoveries and processability of the minerals once you recovered them.

Rick: Why is China going to become quickly irrelevant to this market?

Jody: Graphite is a different story. Graphite is a mineral on its own, it’s one mineral. It may have some built-in impurities or may occur with other minerals, such as mica, which may be somewhat difficult to separate from the graphite. However graphite has a relatively low specific gravity allowing a concentrate to be produced by conventional floatation techniques. If the 94% to 97% carbon cutoff for their product was not then attained, they could apply an acid bath to their product to further remove deleterious constituents to upgrade it. It’s not complicated mineral processing or metallurgy. It’s pretty straight forward, overall.

Rick: I was reading about one company using air in the floatation, they got 85% recovery. When they used a pine oil, they got +95%, and then when they went to an acid, they achieved 99.99% purity. It wasn’t a complicated procedure.  It’s not proprietary methods, there’s nothing secretive about it is there?

Jody: No, nothing secretive about it. It’s pretty simple and pretty straight forward. It’s a recovery technology that’s been around for in excess of 100 years. A company that finds a large deposit of coarse-grain flake graphite, with little in the way of impurities, can put a deposit into production a lot faster than say a company that finds a metallurgically complex rare metal deposit, which would have to have a very unique metallurgical process and a mineral upgrading process designed specifically for that deposit.

Rick: I was reading a news release from Northern Graphite saying they just raised $10 million. However, what was interesting was they said that the $10 million is for all the normal stuff, but also they are going to do a prefeasibility and metallurgical studies. I was shocked at just how far $10 million will carry a graphite company through their studies and permitting activities to actually get to the point where you’re going to build a mine. It was mindboggling how far relatively little money could go in this space.

Jody: Exactly, that’s a very good point because the geology of these deposits are typically pretty straight forward. So in terms of getting from the discovery, say an outcrop with graphite all the way to the resource stage, you could, depending on the geology, advance that in terms of months as opposed to years.

Rick: Most people think this is a race to get to be first to production, but that’s not the reality is it?

Jody: The first one to production might garner the most attention, but go back to our comments earlier on regarding the explosive growth of the sector, there’s going to be many mines required to fill the void, not just one or two.

Rick: I’ve had a lot of people asking me about what the industry means by ‘large-flake’ and why one flake is more valuable than the other. Could you explain to our readers exactly what is meant by flake size?

Jody: Well, large-flake graphite is generally referred to as 80 mesh. Mesh size is a technique of measuring openings in a screen. Different mesh sizes correspond to measurement sizes of the screen openings. Millimeters, or microns would the best way to characterize a mesh size.

80 mesh corresponds to greater than 177 microns in size, 0.177 mm. So, that is what the large-flake graphite is classified as, greater than 177 microns, and it demands the highest price.  You can always crush something that is coarse grained and make it smaller, but it is far more expensive to upgrade something that is fine grained into something coarse grained.

The reason the large flake demands the greatest price is because it has the greatest electrical conductivity – it makes the best batteries. Large-flake graphite costs anywhere from $2,500 to $3,500 per tonne.

Rick: Okay, could you explain the different sizes they talk about with respect to the grade and the money they get, the 40 mesh etc., get into that?

Jody: Ok, large flake refers to grains that will not pass 80 mesh and is greater than 177 microns, which is 0.177 mm and up. I prefer to use the micron size, which is in millimeters (mm) as opposed to mesh size because it’s a lot easier for people to understand.

Medium-flake graphite is in the 149-177 micron range. Fine flake is less 149 microns, which is 0.149 mm. Amorphous graphite is generally less than 37 microns and the price is generally under $1000 a tonne.

From the fine flake and above, you start to get a dramatic jump in prices.  Currently, fine flake ranges from $2,000 to $2,500.  Medium flake is actually priced very close, and the large flake can be anywhere from $2,500 to $3,500 or above even.

Rick: How did you get involved in Strike Graphite Corp. TSX.V – SRK?

Jody: I’ve been conducting exploration for various commodities in Saskatchewan since the beginning of my career, and Dahrouge Geological Consulting has been doing it for over 30 years. Saskatchewan is often ranked as one of the best jurisdictions worldwide to do business, I’m sure you’ve seen the Fraser Institute rankings.

We’ve had a lot of success doing business in Saskatchewan. They’ve put every commodity you can imagine under the sun into production, uranium, potash, industrial minerals. They have a booming oil and gas business and they’ve got gold mines and base metal mines as well. So, with the fantastic geology that’s in Saskatchewan, and my background looking for various commodities plus my involvement in the uranium sector, I recognized the potential and the correct geologic area of Saskatchewan to host deposits of graphite.

In the case of Saskatchewan graphite, there’s lots of Canadian Shield-type rocks that have undergone high-grade metamorphic conditions. The rocks were originally sedimentary and when you start going through government files and our private office files, you recognize lots of graphite occurrences.

Rick: Many times uranium is associated with graphite.

Jody: One of the common ways to do uranium exploration is to complete an airborne electromagnetic survey looking for conductors.  As we mentioned, graphite has great electrical conductivity and uranium and graphite often go hand in hand.

In the Athabasca Basin, which is one of the premier uranium exploration and development districts in Northern Saskatchewan, uranium companies will fly these airborne surveys, and they’ll identify a conductor. Commonly the conductors are located along faults. Graphite being primarily carbon, is a great reductant, so when oxygen-rich fluids impregnated with uranium meet this conductor, they deposit out the uranium.

Hence, the prolific uranium district in Northern Saskatchewan. In the course of flying all these airborne surveys over Northern Saskatchewan for 30-40 years, numerous conductors all over the province associated with uranium, and not associated with uranium, were identified, and a number of companies interested in graphite exploration started looking at these occurrences in the early 1970s.

Rick: One of these companies was Superior Graphite.

Jody: Yes, they had identified a project around Deep Bay in East Central Saskatchewan and they explored the property in 1972. What they were doing was following up a 1968 discovery by Sherritt Gordon Mines, in which very rich graphite zones were discovered around Deep Bay while searching for base-metals. In 1968 they drilled several holes, conducted an airborne survey, did ground work etc. Upon finding very little in the way of base-metals, they allowed the property to lapse.

Then in 1972 Superior commissioned a report on the area that focused on the graphite potential. They went as far as bulk sampling, processing, market studies, hypothetical mining, milling, processing scenarios and transportation scenarios. All this work was based around two deposits, one on the west side of Deep Bay, the other on the east side of Deep Bay.

Dahrouge Geological staked the property on the east side of Deep Bay and vended the project into Strike Graphite.

Rick: The project on the west side of Deep Bay is more advanced than Strike’s Deep Bay East property.

Jody: Deep Bay West is within a Native Reserve owned by the Peter Ballantyne Cree Nation and they’ve done a lot of work on it. There’s a historic resource, not 43-101 compliant, we haven’t done the necessary work to confirm the resource, but based on assessment records, we’re pretty confident in that it has in excess of a million tonnes of greater than 10% graphite.

Historic records indicate 60% of that graphite is coarse grained, and work done by Superior Graphite in 1972, 1973, showed greater than 80% recoveries, recent work has shown they can upgrade that deposit to 99% carbon. So graphite in this area will demand the highest prices.

Rick: Is there similarities between what the Natives have and what Strike has?

Jody: It’s not the same deposit, but it’s in the exact same stratographic package, the exact same rock unit, except we’re on the east side of Deep Bay, and they’re on the west side of Deep Bay.

There’s lots of infrastructure in place and they’ve done everything necessary to get to the point where they can start mining and processing. But we believe our deposit has a higher tonnage potential.

Sherritt Gordon and Superior Graphite identified a target area that was 1.6 km long, they drilled four holes into it and results include 35 m of 8.5% graphite. Sherritt’s and Superior’s mineralogy and metallurgical studies showed greater than 40% of the material they collected was coarse-grained 80 mesh or greater.

Preliminary metallurgy showed 80%-85% recovery so I’m quite confident we can get a high-quality, high-value product from our deposit.

Rick: In a February 29th news release, the preliminary data from a VTEM survey confirmed the historic conductor at approximately 2.5 kilometer (km) strike length, and a second, newly discovered conductor, of approximately two km in length.

Jody: What that survey showed is actually not two separate conductors but rather one conductor folded back on itself giving a total strike length of about 5 km. So that gives us a lot of exploration upside for this project.

The target we’re developing is a conceptual exploration target that’s roughly 2000 m in length. It’s up to 35 to 50 m wide and if it continued down to 100 m or beyond in depth we potentially have 18 million tonnes or greater.

That’s not a 43-101 resource, that’s a conceptual exploration target, but we believe, based upon the historic work that was done, we can achieve that target. Remember I believe the airborne survey that we’ve just completed shows the conductor to total in excess of 5 km.

Rick: Let’s talk about the newest project that SRK has, the Wagon property.

Jody: The Wagon property was discovered about 30 years ago by Michelle Roberge, he was a metallurgist at the Niobec Mine, a niobium operation.

This project is located 10km east of the Timcal Mine. The Timcal is the largest graphite producer in Canada, consequently the area has lots of infrastructure, power, mining knowhow and numerous roads.

The way the claims were originally explored was by surface outcrops, they mapped over 100 outcrops. Samples ranged from 4% to 18% graphite and this was by chemical analysis. The geologists described flakes of graphite up to 3 mm, which is exceptionally coarse. So, it’s in the right location and at 3000 hectares in size it’s a large project that is very near an existing graphite mine. Quite frankly, you couldn’t ask for a better project.

Rick: SRK has another project that we want to talk about.

Jody: The third project is called Simon Lake, it’s located in Northeastern Saskatchewan just off highway 905. This highway leads to a group of uranium mines and mills in the eastern part of the Athabasca Basin.

Again, this is a project that was explored originally for base metals but we found a relatively big conductor. It was in coarse-grained metamorphic rocks that were subsequently subjected to high-temperature/pressure conditions and therefore it had the potential to develop coarse-grained graphite.

We originally staked a 500 hectare property covering a 10 km strike line for this conductor but after flying an airborne survey over a much expanded area what we found was a 25 km long conductor that was relatively continuous. Within this conductor were historic drill holes that tested this conductor over approximately 5.5 km of strike length.

I have to caution this isn’t chemical analysis, there could be a lot of inaccuracies in the terms of percentages of graphite, but visually they intersected anywhere from 9 m of 35% graphite to 42 m of 38% graphite.  They never did chemical analyses, as I said they were looking for base metals.

They describe coarse flakes of graphite up to 4 mm across all the way down to fine-grained graphite. Given the length of this conductor at 25 km long and that almost all the holes drilled into it bottomed in graphite we’re assuming, based on the geophysics, a potentially very large source of graphite may exist. We really don’t know what the grade is, but we believe that this is the elephant of graphite deposits in Saskatchewan.

Rick: Nobody is saying we have a mine here, nobody is confirming historic numbers, people talk about seeing moly in drill cores, it’s easy to see molybdenum, the same as visible gold and native copper and electrum. What your saying is “we’ve got something, it appears to be large, we need to go in, spend some money, and find out exactly what we’ve got.”

Jody: Absolutely, we’re not saying the historic visual estimates are reliable, we’re saying they’re a good indication that there’s significant quantities of graphite over a vast area. But it’s important to point out this work was done over the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, multiple geologists at different times tested this feature, and they all describe graphite. So, there’s a high degree of confidence around the potential of this project.

Rick: Graphite is graphite. You’re not going to mistake it, it’s either there or it isn’t. If it’s there you see it and you can judge flake size in the field.

Jody: It’s pretty difficult to mistake it. As we talked about earlier, it’s very important to recognize that, in terms of geology, you fly an airborne survey, you find a conductor. Step two is to get boots on the ground, confirm drill targets, step three is drill test that conductor. The first project we’re actually going to explore in a significant way, is Simon Lake. We intend to drill this conductor at various intervals and are also going to drill unique geophysical characteristics all along this 25 km feature.

We’re going to take the material and analyze it as quickly as possible, look at the mineralogy. If it appears to have coarse-grained characteristics to it or a large percentage of it is coarse grained, we’re going to ship it off quite quickly for metallurgical test work. We hope to come back in the fall with a follow-up drill program and build out a resource around the best part of those combinations of grade, ability to process, and coarseness.

Rick: What about infrastructure in the area?

Jody: We have a road on the west side of the property.  It’s highway 905 and it leads to a couple of uranium mills at Rabbit Lake and McClean Lake and the transportation hub of Points North, which is host to a lot of infrastructure for the uranium explorers. The Cigar Lake Mine is in the area, it’s under development.

On the east side of the property, we have a second road that’s under construction, that goes to Wollaston Lake. Simon Lake has fabulous infrastructure for an exploration property in Northern Saskatchewan.

Rick: If you hit it’s going to be a discovery.

Jody: Yes, a grassroots discovery.

Rick: Give us a step by step breakdown on how you, as a geo running the show, plan to approach this.

Jody: Based upon our review of the historic literature we identified Simon Lake as having high potential to host a graphite deposit of significant size.  So, the very first step beyond that is to conduct an airborne VTEM survey.  The VTEM survey is an electromagnetic survey.  It pumps a current into the air which is transmitted into the ground, that electricity is measured and a conductor, if it’s there is identified.

Rick: Wherever it flows, that’s a target for ground follow up?

Jody: Yes, and it flowed in a very consistent way over a full 25 km. So, our next step is to do ground follow-up. Get some geologists on the ground, where there may be outcrops and lots of granite. Approximately 60% – 70% of the ground is covered by glacial till but the balance of it is rock and our geologists can evaluate that in detail. They can take a close look at these rocks, and they can see graphite right away.

They should be able to see grain size right away and they should be able to get good guesstimates as to the percentages of graphite. So, the next step beyond that is if we want to further targets for drilling, is to conduct ground geophysical surveys, which will further identify the boundaries of these conductors. The next step beyond that is drilling, which we’ve scheduled for the second quarter 2012.

Rick: We understand flying the VTEM to identify a conductor. We understand boots on the ground. What are the ground geophysical surveys?

Jody: We can do ground electromagnetics as well, just like you can do airborne. One common type of survey is called a Max-Min survey and is where two people will read the conductivity of the ground. It involves carrying a cable that is 50 or 100 m long, at one end you have a transmitter and at the other end you have a receiver allowing one to measure the conductivity of the ground. That will allow you to very accurately delineate the most conductive parts of the rock below the surface.

Rick: You’re fine tuning the VTEM.

Jody: That’s exactly what you’re doing. And quite frankly, it might not even be necessary. It might be a bit of overkill because the VTEM survey is extremely accurate and extremely useful on its own. And so, when the geologist goes on the ground he can identify outcrops with graphite in them, right away he might see a drill target. We don’t believe we will need to do any further ground follow-up.

The target is a zone of sedimentary rocks that were subjected to high-grade metamorphic conditions, which likely produced coarse-grained graphite. One of the first targets we’re going to drill is to simply twin one of the historic holes that intersected graphite.  We must reproduce them and in the modern context confirm what they were observing 30-35 years ago.

Rick: Are we going to do any exploratory holes in this first round?

Jody: Absolutely. We intend to drill at least five holes in the first round.  One of the holes will be a twin, and the next four will be exploratory testing various parts of the 25 km long conductor. Once we’ve done that, we’re going to take core samples, log them and write down our own observations.

We will then split the core and send half of it off for analysis, that will tell us exactly what we have in terms of graphite content. We are going to try and identify all the pertinent characteristics that make a graphite operation successful.

Rick: And we’ve got two backup plays?

Jody: We have backup plays. But I’m very confident in Simon Lake. If we have success, with the drilling, the mineralogy, the geochemistry, and with the processing, we can come back in the third quarter, say September to November, and we can further drill test at a very, much tighter spacing, instead of drilling every five km, we could be drilling every 50-100m, and build out a resource in and around a discovery. The resource will be calculated by someone independent, presuming we’ve intersected what we’re looking for. Hopefully we could publish resource numbers sometime in the 1st quarter of 2013.

Rick: Anything you’d like to add Jody?

Jody: The graphite market is not like the rare earth space. I truly believe in the rare earth space, and I think long term it will prove out to be as good as people had anticipated early on. It’s just that with the complexities of those deposits, there may lots of bumps and hurtles, but in the graphite space, those bumps and hurtles are a lot smaller and a lot easier to overcome.

Rick: Thank you, it’s been a pleasure.

Richard (Rick) Mills

[email protected]

www.aheadoftheherd.com

If you’re interested in learning more about the junior resource sector, and specific junior companies, please come and visit us at www.aheadoftheherd.com

Site membership is free. No credit card or personal information is asked for.

 

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Richard is host of Aheadoftheherd.com and invests in the junior resource sector. His articles have been published on over 300 websites, including: Wall Street Journal, SafeHaven, Market Oracle, USAToday, National Post, Stockhouse, Lewrockwell, Uranium Miner, Casey Research, 24hgold, Vancouver Sun, SilverBearCafe, Infomine, Huffington Post, Mineweb, 321Gold, Kitco, Gold-Eagle, The Gold/Energy Reports, Calgary Herald, Resource Investor, Mining.com, Forbes, FNArena, Uraniumseek, and Financial Sense.

 

***

 

Legal Notice / Disclaimer

 

This document is not and should not be construed as an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to purchase or subscribe for any investment.

 

Richard Mills has based this document on information obtained from sources he believes to be reliable but which has not been independently verified; Richard Mills makes no guarantee, representation or warranty and accepts no responsibility or liability as to its accuracy or completeness. Expressions of opinion are those of Richard Mills only and are subject to change without notice. Richard Mills assumes no warranty, liability or guarantee for the current relevance, correctness or completeness of any information provided within this Report and will not be held liable for the consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein or any omission.

 

Furthermore, I, Richard Mills, assume no liability for any direct or indirect loss or damage or, in particular, for lost profit, which you may incur as a result of the use and existence of the information provided within this Report.

 

Richard Mills does not own shares of Strike Graphite Corp. TSX.V – SRK

Strike Graphite is a sponsor of Richards website www.aheadoftheherd.com

Source:  http://aheadoftheherd.com/Newsletter/2012/Ahead-Of-the-Herd-With-Strike-Graphite.html

Riding the graphite bull

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:06 AM on Wednesday, March 28th, 2012

Chris Berry, founder of Mountain Partners asset management company, provided an interesting summary of the graphite space while speaking at the recent Graphite Express Conference in Vancouver.

The conference featured a keynote address from Berry and 5-minute presentations from some of the key graphite explorers, including Zimtu Capital Corp., Northern Graphite, Lomiko Metals, Strike Graphite, Focus Metals, Graphite One Resources, First Graphite, and Standard Graphite. A similar conference followed in Toronto.

Investor interest in graphite has been growing. Last December saw the first graphite conference in London, UK presented by online journal Industrial Minerals.

The journal has a useful page on graphite and provides the following key facts on the mineral:

  • graphite comes in three forms: amorphous, flake and vein/lump. Amorphous graphite contains 70-75% carbon and is the most common. Flake graphite is 85-90% carbon and is used for higher value applications like batteries. Vein/lump graphite is 90-96% carbon and is most valuable because it requires the least processing.
  • graphite is used in refractories – used to line high-temperature equipment; pencils; lithium-ion batteries – used in consumer electronics and electric vehicles; fuel cells; and Pebble Bed nuclear reactors. It is used in foundries, lubricants and brake linings. Graphite is also used to produce graphene, a tightly packed single layer of carbon atoms that can be used to make inexpensive solar panels, powerful transistors, and even a wafer-thin tablet that could be the next-generation iPad. Graphene, extremely light and strong, has been called “the world’s next wonder material.”
  • the closure of graphite mines in China, which produces 75% of the world’s graphite, has resulted in a fall in global graphite production to 1.3 million tonnes per annum in 2011. Like rare earths, China is restricting the export of graphite to protect its own domestic industries. The second largest producer is India, followed by Brazil, North Korea, Austria and Canada.
  • Graphite exploration is focused in Canada, with eight companies exploring properties in Quebec and Ontario. Europe has a number of mothballed mines that could return to production.

Berry, a former Wall Street broker and co-publisher of the Morning Notes investment newsletter, presents the case for graphite as a key solution in solving the global dilemma of how to provide electrification to millions in the developing world, and as a critical metal for developing new battery and nuclear power technology.

What follows below are his key points:

  • The United States, Europe and China have included graphite among a short list of critical metals.
  • the US Geological Service estimates the graphite market to be 10 times the size of the market for rare earth elements. The graphite market is about the same size as the market for nickel. 60% of the market is amorphous graphite and 40% is flake graphite. Most of the growth is in flake graphite (see bullet point below)
  • natural graphite can be processed to make synthetic graphite useful for high-value applications like lithium-ion batteries, but the process is expensive – $10,000 to $20,000/ton versus $3-4,000/t for flake graphite. The result is a race to find the best flake graphite deposits.
  • graphite is different from gold, silver, copper, etc because users require a specific carbon purity level. “It’s security of supply that keeps you up at night,” says Berry.
  • 33% of the graphite market produces refractories and crucibles (used in foundries); only 5% is for batteries. But the lithium-ion battery market is expected to grow by 25% a year.
  • Three of the largest lithium-ion battery makers in the world, GS Yuasa Corp, LG Chem and Liotech, a consortium between Russia and China, are building the largest lithium-ion battery plant in the world, in Russia. “Just these three heavy hitters in the battery space are making multi-million dollar bets on the future of lithium-ion technology, which cannot push forward without graphite,” says Berry.
  • future uses of graphite could include vanadium-redox batteries and hydrogen fuel cells. Graphite could also potentially replace silicon in microchips and silver used in solar panels.
  • by 2020 world consumption of graphite will be 1.9m tonnes, which does not include graphite needed for batteries, fuel cells and Pebble Bed nuclear reactors.
  • China will require 400,000 tonnes of large flake graphite for Pebble Bed nuclear reactors and lithium-ion batteries will require 327,000 tonnes. The current supply of large flake graphite is 400,000t, so there will be a need to double the supply of large flake graphite used in batteries and nuclear reactors in the next eight years. ”The takeaway is if you buy into the electrification thesis, and I’m halfway right, demand should easily outstrip supply,” says Berry.

Gary Economo, CEO of Focus Metals, also makes a number of useful points about graphite in his recently penned article in Proactive Investors USA & Canada. A select few appear below:

  • If there is any doubt about graphite’s importance as a commodity, one only has to look at the trebling of market prices for 97% graphite concentrate during the last decade.
  • Green, off-petroleum technologies are driving demand growth towards a market bubble that even a tsunami of new global production will be unable to deflate by 2020.
  • Industrial Minerals reports that graphite prices between mid-2011 and the end of January 2012 appear to have stabilized after dropping through the end of last year.
  • A current surplus of product in the world market and end-user depletion of stockpiles contributed to the downturn.
  • The United States produces no graphite and is 100% dependent on imports to meet its industrial and technology needs. As a continental neighbor, it makes sense for Canada to look south first, then Europe and Asia as it builds its customer base.

Source: http://www.mining.com/2012/03/27/riding-the-graphite-bull/?utm_source=digest-en-mining-120327&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=digest

Strike Graphite Receives Drill Permit at Simon Lake Property

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:01 AM on Wednesday, March 28th, 2012

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA–March 28, 2012) – Strike Graphite Corp. (TSX VENTURE:SRK) (the “Company” or “Strike”) is pleased to announce it has received exploration drill permits for its Simon Lake Property, located in northern Saskatchewan. The permit will allow the Company to begin the ground exploration on the approximately 25 km long conductive horizon that was recently confirmed with a high-resolution airborne TDEM survey (see news release of February 23, 2012).

The next stage of exploration is designed to accomplish the following:

  • Confirm with drill testing the known graphite occurrences along the 5.5 km long conductive trend
  • Drill test the new high-priority targets along the recently identified 25 km long conductive trend
  • Process drill-core material for graphite mineralogical characterization and initial metallurgical testing

The Company is finalizing the scope of its drilling program and anticipates mobilizing the field crew and drilling contractor within the next 1-2 weeks.

Dahrouge Geological Consulting Ltd. of Edmonton, Alberta, has been commissioned to plan, carry out, manage and report on exploration work at Simon Lake Property. A second phase of summer and fall exploration will consist of follow-up drilling in order to advance the highest priority graphite target in terms of large-flake and high recovery potential.

Geoff Balderson, President & CEO remarks, “We’re definitely pleased with the quick turn around on this permitting application as it further demonstrates support for management’s decision to target and secure strong graphite assets in a known mining friendly jurisdiction. From here, we can continue with our aggressive approach to aim for resource status (compliant to NI 43-101) as quickly as possible for the benefit of our vision for the company and our shareholders.”

About the Simon Lake Graphite Property:

The Simon Lake Graphite Project covers 11,800 hectares, and is located approximately 300 km northeast of La Ronge, Saskatchewan and is intersected by Highway 905. The property consists of several showings of flake graphite mineralization in historic drill holes, which were discovered during the exploration of base metals during the early 70′s. Historic Drill Hole 2-72 encountered a graphitic biotite gneiss with descriptions of “abundant graphite” over a 68 m interval.

Approximately 5.5 km to the southwest, along a the same conductive horizon, Drill Hole E42-5 encountered a graphitic biotite gneiss with core descriptions of “disseminated graphite” or “coarse graphite flakes” over 182.9 m of core, with narrower intervals described as “graphite flakes abundant” and “heavy graphite in 6 to 12 inch bands”.

Within the southwest part of the property, approximately 6 km east of Saskatchewan Highway 905, a large and highly conductive structure has been interpreted as a fold hinge. At this location, the conductive unit exceeds 5 km along strike and is more than 2 km wide; and may represent the strike extension of the graphite-bearing lithologies known at Simon Lake.

Neil G. McCallum, P.Geo. is the Qualified Person pursuant to NI 43-101, and has reviewed and approved the technical disclosure of this news release.

About the Company:

Strike Graphite Corp. is a progressive exploration company with seasoned management targeting strategic assets on a global scale. The Company is also advancing the Satterly Lake gold project in NW, Ontario, located just west of Gold Canyon Resources Inc.

On behalf of the Board of Directors,

Geoff Balderson, President and Chief Executive Officer

For more information on the above or to view the Company’s Corporate Presentation on its Graphite assets and opportunity, please visit the Company’s website at www.strikegraphite.com.

We seek safe harbor.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:

Geoff Balderson
Strike Graphite Corp.
President and Chief Executive Officer
604.669.9330
604.669.9335 (FAX)
[email protected]
www.strikegraphite.com

“Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.”

Corporate Website / Hub on AGORACOM

Source: http://agoracom.com/ir/StrikeGraphite/forums/discussion/topics/525858-strike-identifies-25-km-long-conductor-at-simon-lake-graphite-project/messages/1664660#message

Zenyatta finds graphite while exploring Ontario for nickel-copper

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:06 PM on Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

Zentatta Ventures

 

By Greg Klein

On completing its December 2010 IPO of $9.9 million, Zenyatta Ventures (TSXV:ZEN)began 2011 with big ambitions. The company set out to explore its Albany Project in northern Ontario, which may sit on a structure related to the Mid-Continent Rift, home of a number of significant deposits around Lake Superior. Zenyatta hoped for a nickel-copper-polymetallic deposit comparable to the Norilsk Nickel mine in Siberia, Vale‘s Voisey’s Bay operation in Labrador or Rio Tinto‘s Eagle deposit in Michigan. So far, that goal has proved elusive. But what the Albany Project (aka Arc of Fire) drill results do show, says President/CEO Aubrey Eveleigh, might be equally compelling — the possibility of an exceptionally large deposit containing the exceptionally unusual occurrence of vein-type graphite.

Vein (or lump) graphite is the rarest, hence most expensive, type of natural graphite. At the other end of the scale, amorphous graphite is the type most commonly found and is widely used for steelmaking, auto parts, sports equipment and other applications. Flake graphite is essential to the emerging markets that include solar panels, fuel cells, pebble-bed nuclear reactors and the lithium-ion batteries that are becoming standard for electronic devices and electric vehicles. But little is spoken of vein graphite — likely because there’s so little to speak of.

Currently the world’s supply depends on Sri Lanka, whose mines contain exceptionally pure graphite, often grading over 90%. The product transmits heat and electricity more efficiently than other graphite types and is easier to mould. As a result, it’s in high demand for specialized uses such as the electric brushes used in motors and generators and in powder metallurgy used to manufacture parts for industries that include the automotive, aerospace, energy and medical/dental sectors.

 

So how did Zenyatta’s aspirations turn from a Voisey’s Bay to a Sri Lankan-type target? “We flew our property with an airborne survey and got a very large conductor that measures 1,400 metres by 800 metres,” explains Eveleigh. “That’s a whopping conductor. We thought it was copper-and-nickel massive sulphides. It’s covered with swamp so we had to drill blindly. But we started to get this graphite-rich breccia zone. Basically, from top to bottom we were getting all this graphite. So it’s pretty large and pretty unique because it’s a hydrothermal graphite deposit unlike what anybody is promoting in North America right now. There is one in Sri Lanka that’s similar to it, and that’s a vein-type graphite.”

Results announced January 19 from one hole show eight separate breccia zones, the first starting at 79.8 metres and the last ending at 522 metres. The following assays were released.

  • 4.6% carbon over 9.9 metres
  • 4.2% over 67.5 metres
  • 3.3% over 7.9 metres
  • 2.5% over 48.2 metres
  • 3% over 26.4 metres
  • 4.2% over 5.5 metres
  • 2.1% over 7.5 metres
  • 3% over 16 metres

A mineralogical study at Lakehead University found graphite ranging from fine (-270 mesh) to coarse (+40 mesh). The next step is bench-scale testing to better determine the deposit’s purity, flake-size distribution and recoverability. Results from SGS Canada are expected within two to four months.

“This could be exceptional; it could be very valuable; and certainly the market is bullish on graphite right now,” says Eveleigh.

Meanwhile, drilling will resume presently. “We need to determine the size of it. If we judge by the airborne conductor, it looks pretty big, but you still have to prove that. So we’re stepping out quite a ways, like 200-metre step-outs. If it’s still there, we can extrapolate in between and say this looks like a pretty big deposit. If it’s as big as the conductor suggests, it will be one of the biggest graphite deposits in the world.”

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About 4,000 metres of drilling is planned. And the company’s still looking for that big nickel-copper find in its 121,000-hectare Albany Project. “We have 28 different claim blocks,” Eveleigh points out. “We found the graphite on one block and we’re advancing that, but we’re also exploring the other 27 blocks.”

The graphite deposit has “good access and good infrastructure,” he adds. It sits four kilometres from an all-weather logging road, 30 from the Trans-Canada Highway and 70 from a rail line.

As a geologist, Eveleigh’s career began with Noranda and includes a seven-year stint as a partner in a consulting firm that worked for around 50 juniors and majors. He also held a highly successful position with Wolfden Resources and is currently president of Eveleigh Geological Consulting, which has provided expertise for companies including Rio Tinto, Goldcorp (TSX:G), Agnico-Eagle (TSX:AEM), Diavik Diamond Mines andBHP Billiton.

Zenyatta’s team includes Barry Allan, an exploration geologist turned Senior Mining Analyst for Mackie Research Capital, and Cliff Davis, who boasts over 40 years’ experience in open-pit and underground mining. Brian Davey, a member of the Moose Cree First Nation, has 28 years’ experience in issues mostly related to First Nations economic development. Some other management and advisory staff include Don Bubar, president of Avalon Rare Metals (TSX:AVL) and Roland Butler, co-founder of Altius Minerals (TSX:ALS), which holds a 10% interest in a 3% Voisey’s Bay net smelter royalty.

The company has an 80% earn-in option with Cliffs Natural Resources (CLF), which calls for $10 million of spending over four years. Zenyatta has already earned 25% by completing its airborne survey. Cliffs holds 11.8% of Zenyatta’s shares.

“Cliffs also helps with technical support, so we’re moving this along together,” Eveleigh says. “They obviously like these projects, and they’re very supportive of us.”

Insiders hold 23.5% of Zenyatta shares while another 35% is institutional. At press time Zenyatta had 39.6 million shares trading at $0.15 for a market cap of $5.9 million.

Eveleigh will make a presentation at OnPage Media’s May 2 Graphite Express-Conference at Toronto’s Sheraton Hotel. Click here  for free registration.

Read more articles like this at resourceclips.com .

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Rare Earth Metals Growth Drivers: Siddharth Rajeev

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:30 PM on Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

With so many moving variables in the rare earth space, how can investors evaluate investment opportunities? Siddharth Rajeev of Fundamental Research Corp. finds his top prospects by zeroing in on a specific material and tracking its growth drivers. Rajeev argues that critical materials used in viable new technologies will see increasing demand. In this exclusive interview with The Critical Metals Report, he explains how lithium-ion battery development and the forthcoming WTO ruling effect his outlook for graphite and niobium.

COMPANIES MENTIONED: COMMERCE RESOURCES CORP. – FLINDERS RESOURCES LTD. - FOCUS METALS INC. – GREAT WESTERN MINERALS GROUP LTD. - LOMIKO METALS INC. – LYNAS CORP. – MOLYCORP INC. - QUANTUM RARE EARTH DEVELOPMENTS CORP.

The Critical Metals Report: China recently announced it is maintaining its rare earth export quotas of 31,130 metric tons (t), but the U.S., the EU and Japan filed a claim at the World Trade Organization (WTO), saying that the restrictions are illegal. What will this controversy mean for rare earth prices?

Siddharth Rajeev: One of the main reasons for the run-up in rare earth prices is the export quotas set by China, which controls 97–98% of the supply. End users started looking for alternatives to rare earths, which is resulting in lower demand. As for the WTO case regarding China’s export quotas, Chinese officials think they are in line with WTO regulations. The WTO had previously ruled against China for restricting exports of bauxite, magnesium, zinc, etc., so it is possible the WTO might go against China here as well, which would negatively impact rare earth prices. In addition, companies outside China are now nearing production, including Molycorp Inc. (MCP:NYSE), Great Western Minerals Group Ltd. (GWG:TSX.V; GWMGF:OTCQX) in South Africa and Australia’s Lynas Corp. (LYC:ASX), may alleviate supply constraints, thus driving prices down. Still more projects are expected to come online in the next two years, which would further add to supply.

TCMR: When do you expect the WTO to decide on a ruling?

SR: It’s going to be a long process, but it’s something that could potentially affect long-term rather than short-term prices.

TCMR: Because rare earth materials are so varied, you use a fair-value metric instead of target prices when you evaluate these stocks. But how do you determine the intrinsic value of a critical metal stock when there is all of this uncertainty?

SR: Every commodity is priced based on expected long-term demand and supply. To forecast commodity prices, we project long-term demand based on the potential growth of the major demand drivers. Supply is projected based on the projects that may come onstream over the next 10 years. But as you mentioned, the forecast demand for critical elements is harder than, say, forecasting demand for copper or zinc. Demand for critical elements can be a moving target. We mitigate this problem by constantly updating our models to capture this variable. For example, major lithium demand drivers are expected to be lithium-ion batteries. Precisely forecasting demand for lithium-ion batteries depends on other growth drivers, such as electric vehicle proliferation. So we constantly update our models as to reflect projected demand in related sectors. That’s how we calculate price forecasts for all the commodities in the rare earth and critical metals space.

TCMR: You recently released a report on graphite and its uses for everything from brake linings to batteries and nuclear power. Graphite prices have jumped as much as $500/t in the last year for certain grades. How high could that price go, and what’s driving that?

SR: Over the long term, we are bullish on graphite. The main reasons are the following: First, we think the main demand growth drivers of graphite could be new applications, such as lithium-ion batteries, fuel cells and nuclear power. Natural graphite might take away a significant market share from the synthetic graphite market, because high-purity, high-grade graphite is required for these technological developments. Synthetic graphite currently trades at four to six times the price of natural graphite.

Second, on the supply side, China accounts for more than 70% of production. The U.S. imports its entire graphite consumption. So, again, we are seeing a highly concentrated supply in one area. Another thing, the blue-sky potential for graphite involves a product called graphene, which is made by chemically processing graphite. Graphene is very unique because it’s highly flexible, like rubber, yet stronger than steel, and it’s a very good conductor of heat, 10 times more effective than copper. It’s a recent technology and there is a lot of research going on in the sector. All things considered, we have a bullish outlook on graphite.

TCMR: What companies outside of China are you watching in this space?

SR: We’ll be initiating coverage on Focus Metals Inc. (FMS:TSX.V) in the next month or so. Its project, which it acquired from IAMGOLD Corp. (IMG:TSX; IAG:NYSE) in 2010, is located in Quebec. I have not seen any other project with such high grades of graphite in the deposit. Focus Metals has a grade of 16%, whereas most of the graphite deposits out there are less than 3%. It has large-flake material, which is highly in demand for applications such as lithium-ion batteries. Focus Metals recently completed a resource estimate. It’s working on a scoping study now. It’s a low-capital expenditure project, less than $75 million (M). The company has an extremely strong cash position, $16M. Market cap is just over $80M.

Another story we like is Flinders Resources Ltd. (FDR:TSX.V), a brand-new company. It started trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange Venture a few weeks ago. Its project is the Kringel project. A lot of historic work has been done on the project. It has a historical resource of 7 million tons (Mt) at 9% graphite, which is a high-grade material. It has a lot of catalysts coming up over the next 12 months, one of the biggest being its plans to convert the historic resource to an NI 43-101-compliant resource. It has a fully permitted mine that can be put into production in the next 18–24 months. It has a strong cash position of $5M, and its market cap is $60M.

Another company is Lomiko Metals Inc. (LMR:TSX.V). It’s a very early-stage project. It just acquired a project in Quebec. Some historic work has been done on the property. As for near-term catalysts, it is working on an NI 43-101 technical report [released 3/27/12], and it is going to commence an exploration program on the property.

TCMR: Lomiko is historically a gold company that just diversified into the graphite space. Is that common? Are a lot of companies following suit?

SR: Because of graphite’s highly attractive fundamentals and growing investor interest, we have been seeing a lot of new companies pop up or switch their focus to graphite, which is normal in the commodities sector. We saw the same pattern a few years ago when the rare earth boom started. The same has been the case with lithium. This is common, but bear in mind that a lot of companies might not survive the boom period.

TCMR: Do you see Lomiko’s stock going up because of the diversification?

SR: Our last report on Lomiko’s graphite came out a few months ago. The stock had doubled since the initial report. It’s dropped since then. As long as the graphite market stays in its current space, where I expect it to stay for a while, and if Lomiko’s exploration program produces positive results, that should reflect in the stock price. In other words, it’s too early to tell.

TCMR: You also focus on niobium, which is used in the technology, aviation and steel industries to make metals lighter and stronger. The price for ferro-niobium has come down from more than $46/kilogram (kg) to about $43. Is that a function of more supply or less demand?

SR: Niobium demand is highly correlated with steel demand, and steel demand is highly correlated with global gross domestic product (GDP) growth. The recent slowdown in global GDP growth, especially from China, has resulted in a softening of prices for commodities that service the steel industry.

TCMR: How does that price action affect your outlook for niobium suppliers, particularly in North America?

SR: The U.S. produces very little niobium. That’s been the case for a long time. Brazil is the number-one producer of niobium, accounting for about 92% of global production. Canada comes in a far second. We cover two North American companies in the space. The first is Quantum Rare Earth Developments Corp. (QRE:TSX.V; BR3:FSE; QREDF:OTCBB). It has the Elk Creek project in Nebraska, of which it owns 100%. In March 2011, it came up with an Inferred resource of 80 Mt at 0.62% niobium oxide, which is a significant deposit. This company has quite a few catalysts expected this year. In Q112, it expects a new NI 43-101 resource report, and in Q212 it expects some results of its metallurgical testing. These two numbers should give it enough information to commence a preliminary economic assessment (PEA) later this year.

TCMR: If those reports come out positive, could that override any niobium price challenges?

SR: Definitely.

TCMR: What other companies do you follow in that space?

SR: Another company is Commerce Resources Corp. (CCE:TSX.V; D7H:FSE; CMRZF:OTCQX). It has the Tantalum niobium project in British Columbia. It recently completed a PEA of the property, but its main asset now is its rare earth project in Quebec, which has produced a lot of positive news for the last 6 to 12 months. It recently came out with a huge increase in its resource estimate, and its initial estimate was one of the largest outside of China. The newer resource has doubled the figures, so that’s a significant development. It identified middle rare earths (MREEs) and heavy rare earths (HREEs), which are more valuable than light rare earths (LREEs),close to the surface of the property.

TCMR: Are the price dynamics different for HREEs and LREEs due to respective export quotas?

SR: Yes, exactly. Prices of light and abundant rare earths dropped much more than other rare earths that are more scarcely available. So there’s been a wide fluctuation, and different commodities in the rare earth sector have reacted differently. But overall, the rare earth market has been hit significantly in the last 6 to 12 months.

TCMR: Commerce has, as you mentioned, both MREEs and HREEs. Do you expect those prices to remain high or perhaps escalate?

SR: Overall, we saw significant price increases in the rare earth market, increasing as much as five- or tenfold in some cases over the last few years. We’ve since seen sort of a correction. But even at these relatively lower prices, a lot of projects are economic. So we wouldn’t need to see an increase in prices to make these companies look favorable.

TCMR: What other factors might impact this sector, particularly in an election year, that investors should take into consideration when considering critical metals companies?

SR: Global economic growth and price levels of critical metals are not directly linked. Critical metals are more influenced by new technologies. Any commodity that can be used for viable and efficient new technologies is going to see good growth and demand. This would include commodities like lithium and graphite, which are used in lithium-ion batteries. We have a strong outlook on lithium-ion batteries for electric cars. Those are the kinds of technologies that can be viable in the long run, and all the associated technologies are likewise going to see a significant increase in demand. Critical materials that figure into these developments will be less affected by shorter-term developments like the U.S. presidential election or a slowdown in the Chinese economy because many of these new technologies have a lot of room for upside, even before demand stabilizes.

Thank you for speaking with us today.

SR: My pleasure.

Siddharth Rajeev is vice president and head of research at Fundamental Research Corp., the largest independent equity research firm in Canada. He holds a bachelor of technology in electronics engineering from the Cochin University of Science & Technology and a Masters of Business Administration in finance from the University of British Columbia. He is also a CFA charter holder. He is ranked as a four-star analyst in the energy and mining sectors by Deutsche Asset Management.

Want to read more exclusive Critical Metals Report articles like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators and learn more about critical metals companies, visit our Critical Metals Report page.

DISCLOSURE:
1) JT Long of The Critical Metals Report conducted this interview. She personally and/or her family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Critical Metals Report:Focus Metals Inc., Lomiko Metals Inc., Quantum Rare Earth Developments Corp. and Commerce Resources Corp. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for services.
3) Siddharth Rajeev: I personally and/or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally and/or my family am paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid to do this interview. FRC has been paid by some companies mentioned in this article to initiate coverage.

Source: http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/12926

Lomiko Releases 43-101 Technical Report On The Quatre Milles Graphite Property

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:09 AM on Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

Lomiko Metals Inc. (TSX-V: LMR; OTC: LMRMF; FSE: DH8B, Europe: ISIN: CA54163Q1028, WKN: A0Q9W7) is pleased to announce that its 43-101 compliant report by Consul-Teck Exploration Services regarding the Quatre Milles Flake Graphite Property located in southwestern Quebec has been accepted by the TSX-Venture Exchange and has thus been filed with Sedar (Canadian Securities Administrators).

Lomiko recently optioned the Quatre Milles Graphite Property in Quebec to search for large flake, crystallite graphite which is sought after for use in electric cars, fuel cells, pebble-bed nuclear reactors and to create graphene, a newly discovered, chicken-wire shaped formation of carbon which is one-atom thick and has incredible properties that can make it 200 times stronger than steel, a superconductor at room temperature and heat-resistant. Research scientists world-wide are experimenting with new technology that uses graphene and at least 25 new patents have been filed.

Lomiko’s Quatre Milles Graphite Property

The Quatre Milles Property is road accessible and is located approximately 175 km northwest of Montreal and 17 km due north of the village of Sainte-Veronique, Quebec. The property consists of 28 contiguous claims totaling approximately 1,600 hectares.

The property was originally staked and explored by Graphicor Resources Inc. (“Graphicor”) in the summer of 1989 based on the results of a regional helicopter-borne EM survey. The underlying geology consists of intercalated biotite gneiss, biotite feldspar gneiss, marble, quartzite and calc-silicate lithologies of the Central Metasedimentary Belt of the Grenville Province.

Historical Highlights

-Graphicor completed reconnaissance mapping and prospecting as well as ground geophysics and a 26 hole diamond drill program totaling 1,625 metres.

-The work identified several conductive trends in the central portion of the property and at least three, relatively flat lying graphitic beds.

-Three surface samples were collected and analyzed returning results of 14.16% Cgf, 18.06% Cgf and 20.35% Cgf.

-23 of the initial 26 drill holes intersected graphite concentrations with graphite concentration in range of 4.69% in hole Q90-1 to a highlight of 8.07% Cgf over 28.60 metres in hole Q90-7.

-The highest individual assay was reported in hole Q90-10 reporting 15.48% Cgf over 0.50 metres.

A table of results from the 43-101 indicates:

 ------------------------------------------
 |HOLE NO.|FROM(M)|TO(M)|WIDTH (M)|GRADE  |
 |        |       |     |         |(% CGP)|
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-1   |8.94   |10.46|1.52     |7.33   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-2   |28.68  |30.13|1.45     |10.38  |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-3   |16.23  |17.84|1.61     |4.09   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-4   |9.4    |14.1 |4.7      |3.95   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-5   |2      |3.90 |1.90     |2.07   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-5   |22.13  |23.25|1.12     |10.52  |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-6   |32.54  |41.19|8.65     |8.07   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-6   |43.47  |44.05|0.98     |3.87   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-7   |3.94   |32.54|28.60    |8.07   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-8   |1.54   |2.16 |0.62     |14.89  |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-8   |5.23   |8.05 |2.82     |7.45   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-9   |2.05   |3.10 |1.05     |8.47   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-9   |5.76   |6.8  |1.04     |10.86  |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-10  |2.14   |5.54 |3.40     |8.02   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-10  |7.03   |7.61 |0.58     |10.59  |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-10  |8.53   |9.03 |0.50     |15.48  |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-10  |9.27   |11.24|1.97     |12.37  |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-10  |14.16  |15.46|1.30     |4.26   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-11  |26.82  |34.02|7.20     |4.63   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-12  |0.94   |8.53 |7.59     |8.60   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-12  |38.16  |43.61|5.45     |3.79   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-13  |0.69   |10.28|9.59     |4.64   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-13  |40.95  |43.14|2.19     |3.82   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-14  |5.56   |7.22 |1.66     |8.12   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-15  |2.21   |5.59 |3.38     |9.76   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-16  |       |     |         |NSV    |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-17  |15.48  |18.63|3.15     |8.11   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-17  |21.43  |23.67|2.24     |13.29  |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-17  |36.77  |47.97|11.20    |5.88   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-17  |57.15  |58.21|1.06     |9.53   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-17  |59.54  |69.82|10.28    |5.99   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-18  |10.68  |12.90|2.22     |8.12   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-19  |47.80  |49.25|1.45     |9.16   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-19  |50.42  |58.49|8.07     |5.72   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-20  |13.51  |16.98|3.47     |5.81   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-21  |2.80   |4.98 |2.18     |5.56   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-22  |17.37  |20.04|2.67     |2.58   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-23  |       |     |         |NSV    |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-24  |1.78   |4.14 |2.36     |3.77   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-24  |12.32  |13.09|0.77     |4.20   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-24  |16.86  |18.66|1.80     |4.96   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-25  |19.69  |21.24|1.55     |3.67   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-25  |25.27  |26.65|1.38     |9.66   |
 |----------------------------------------|
 |Q90-26  |       |     |         |NSV    |
 ------------------------------------------

The Company cautions that it has not had the chance to verify the quality and accuracy of the historic sampling and drilling results reported in this news release which predate the introduction of NI 43-101 and cautions readers not to rely upon them. The historic figures were generated from sources believed to be reliable, however, they have not been confirmed. Although the sampling and drilling results are relevant, they have not been verified.

Graphite Market

-The price for flake graphite is $ 2000-$3000 per tonne depending on flake size and grade.

-Graphite prices have been increasing in recent months and over the last couple of years prices for large flake, high purity graphite (+80 mesh, 94-97%C) have more than doubled.

-Graphite prices have almost tripled since 2005 due to the ongoing industrialization of China, India and other emerging economies and resultant strong demand from traditional steel and automotive markets.

-Demand for graphite is expected to rise as electric vehicles and lithium battery technology are adopted, nuclear reactors are built in China, and if fuel cells and graphene patents become products.

-China, which produces about 70 per cent of the world’s graphite, is seeing production and export growth leveling, and export taxes and a licensing system have been instituted.

-Europe and the USA have both indicated graphite is of economic importance and has a supply risk (Critical Raw Materials for the EU, July 2010).

Graphite Facts

-Natural graphite comes in several forms: flake, amorphous and lump.

-Southwestern Quebec is host to some of the most favorable geological terrain for graphite exploration in Canada and is known to host graphite resources, including the nearby Lac Des Iles mine operated by Timcal.

-Graphite has many important new applications such as lithium-ion batteries, fuel cells, and nuclear and solar power that have the potential to create significant incremental demand growth.

-There is roughly 20-30 times more graphite by weight needed to produce a lithium-ion battery than there is lithium.

-Of the 1.2 million tonnes of graphite produced annually, approximately 40 per cent is of the most desirable flake type.

-High-growth, high-value graphite applications require large-flake and high-purity graphite which is the prime exploration and development target at the Quatre Milles Property.

Near-Term Strategy

Lomiko plans to mount an aggressive exploration campaign on the Quatre Milles Graphite Property commencing with a complete compilation of historic geologic work followed by surface mapping, prospecting and follow-up diamond drilling.

Jean-Sebastien Lavallee (OGQ #773), geologist, a Qualified Person as defined by National Instrument 43-101, has reviewed and approved the technical content of this release.

For more information, review the website at www.lomiko.com, or contact A. Paul Gill at 604-729-5312 or by email at: [email protected].

On Behalf of the Board

“A. Paul Gill”

Chief Executive Officer

We seek safe harbor. Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Atocha Begins Work on Montpellier Graphite Property, Quebec

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:00 AM on Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

Mar 27, 2012 (ACCESSWIRE-TNW via COMTEX) — March 27, 2012 – Vancouver, British Columbia, CANADA – Atocha Resources (the Company), TSX.V – ATT reports it has engaged the services of Dany Boilard Inc. to begin work on the newly purchased 25 claim (1,475 ha) Montpellier block located in the Grenville sub-province of the Precambrian Shield in Quebec. The Grenville sub-province is considered to be highly favourable for graphite plus gold, silver, copper, nickel, PGE (platinum group element) and REE (rare earth element) mineralization.

Atocha has hired Dany Boilard Inc. to carry out detailed exploration through GIS compilation, site visits and a mass mailing to the landowners in the Montpellier property area. All property data on the MRNF E-Sigeom database will be compiled to prepare a comprehensive exploration plan for the 2012 exploration season. The location and address of the private landowners will also be determined by a mass mailing and compilation of answers to build a data base of land ownership that can be accessed for exploration, as required under articles 235 and 236 of the Quebec mining act.

The Montpellier Property is situated approximately 90km to the northwest of Montreal, Quebec in Ripon-Hartwell-Suffolk townships with good road access. Historic diamond drilling in 1965 is reported in the Ripon township portion of the property. The Suffolk township claims have reported graphite occurrences in drill core from the latter part of the 1960′s.

Shareholders and Investors are encouraged to sign on to the Company mail list in order to receive timely updates. Please visit www.atocharesources.com   or email [email protected] to add your contact details.

ABOUT ATOCHA

Atocha is a natural resources company engaged in the acquisition and exploration of mining/exploration properties, mainly for copper and precious metals. The Company has a 100% undivided interest in the McGillivray Property, located in the Kamloops Mining Division of British Columbia. The Company has an option to acquire a 100% undivided interest in the Atkinson (Detour Lake) gold project in Ontario. Atocha owns the Sol Riche and Tresor Nord/Sud REE properties in Montviel Township of Quebec, the Trove, Descouverte and Bijou gold properties in the Abitibi of Quebec and the Strike 101-114 gold claims near Dawson City, Yukon.

For further information on Atocha, please refer to www.sedar.com   .

For further information, please contact:

Marcy Kiesman, Chief Executive Officer

Telephone: 604.696.1111

Facsimile: 888.266.3983

E-mail: [email protected]

Website: www.atocharesources.com 

Forward-Looking Statement

This document may contain or refer to forward-looking information based on current expectations, including, but not limited to timing of mineral resource estimates, future exploration or project development programs and the impact on the Company of these events. Forward-looking information is subject to significant risks and uncertainties, as actual results may differ materially from forecasted results. Forward-looking information is provided as of the date hereof and we assume no responsibility to update or revise them to reflect new events or circumstances. For a detailed list of risks and uncertainties, as it relates to Atocha Resources Inc., please refer to the Company’s Prospectus filed with SEDAR.

More Flake Graphite Needed to Keep Pace With Surging Battery Demand

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 7:32 AM on Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

Consumer appetite for electronic gadgets such as laptops, iPhones, cell phones, and MP3 players is fueling demand for lithium-ion batteries, which contain twenty times more graphite than lithium. In addition, mankind’s quest for cleaner vehicles – such as electric cars, which also require lithium-ion batteries – is increasing demand for graphite, a metal once seen as a staple for the steel industry.

Brent Nykoliation, Vice President of Business Development at Energizer Resources Inc.  (TSX:EGZ ,OTCBB:ENZR,FWB:YE5), said that electric vehicles, which are already being developed, hold one of the biggest and most immediate potential offtakes for graphite in the coming years. China, for example, is reportedly  preparing to stock up on enough graphite to put one million vehicles a year on the road starting in 2015. At an average of 130 pounds of graphite needed per electric car battery, the net requirement per year will be 300,000 tons of graphite.

“Now multiply that by five million cars and you see the demand potential,” Nykoliation told Graphite Investing News in an interview. “And that’s just China. Morgan Stanley predicts electric vehicles and hybrid electric vehicles to have a 25 percent penetration level globally by 2025 from just 0.1 percent today. While many would think this is an overly aggressive estimate, just taking a five percent penetration of the 850 million vehicles globally today equals more than 40 million vehicles by 2025. Industry analysts agree that the big producers making graphite are concerned because they are not prepared to meet that level of demand.”

Global demand for graphite is currently about 1.2 million tons a year, and most of that comes from the steel industry. In 2008, according to GeoMega  (TSXV:GMA ), a Montreal-based exploration company, graphite demand for lithium-ion batteries was approximately 44,000 tonnes, or about ten percent of the flake market.

“Currently batteries account for roughly five percent of global graphite demand,” Chris Berry, founder of House Mountain Partners , told Graphite Investing News in an interview. “However, demand for lithium-ion batteries for use in various applications is growing by 20 percent per year. As you need 20 times more graphite in a lithium-ion battery than you do lithium, it is clear that there is potentially strong demand for large-flake, high-purity graphite in the future.”

3,000 tons of graphite to start nuclear reactor

Energizer’s Nykoliation added that there are several new applications that are entirely reliant on graphite, such as pebble-bed nuclear reactors. A one gigawatt pebble-bed nuclear reactor needs about 3,000 tons of graphite to start and up to 1,000 tons a year to operate. “A lot is happening, and these developments are going to create a huge demand for graphite.” Energizer is fast-tracking its Green Giant  project in Madagascar, with plans to mine large-flake graphite in 2014. The Toronto-headquartered company is developing what it believes is one of the largest graphite deposits in the world.

Canaccord  (TSX:CF ) estimated in a recent research report that lithium carbonate demand from lithium-ion batteries will reach 286,000 tonnes by 2020, requiring a six-fold increase  in annual flake graphite production to cater to the production of so many batteries. Northern Graphite Corp.  (TSX:NGC ) said that only flake graphite, which can be upgraded to 99.9 percent purity, can be used to make the spherical or potato-shaped graphite used in lithium-ion batteries. “The process is expensive and wastes 70% of the feedstock flake graphite. As a result, spherical graphite currently sells for $4-6,000/tonne, or twice the price of high quality flake graphite.”

Ryan Fletcher , a director at Zimtu Capital Corp. (TSXV:ZC ,OTC Pink:ZTMUF,FWB:ZCT1), a Vancouver-based firm that invests in resource companies, told Mineweb  in a recent interview that the steel industry and other historic applications of graphite use amorphous graphite, but these new emerging technologies use flake graphite. “About 40 percent of that 1.2-Mt market is flake and 60 percent amorphous, so the flake graphite market is just over 400,000 tons per year. Some of the players in the industry anticipate that just one application alone, the lithium-ion battery, could use well over 1.6 Mt of flake graphite per year by 2020, which is more than threefold the entire current market. Even if the market doubles, that’s 800,000 tons of graphite per year by 2020. A large-scale producer puts out only about 20,000 to 40,000 tons per year, which means a lot of new mines and a lot of opportunity.”

House Mountain’s Berry said “there are dozens of companies involved in the lithium-ion battery business for both technology and storage.” LG Chem  and A123 Systems (NASDAQ:AONE ,FWB:ALC) are two companies involved in producing lithium-ion batteries.

Considering the fact that a large-scale producer’s upper end of graphite production is 40,000 tons of flake graphite per year, and that there is an estimated additional demand of one million tons by 2020, about 25 new mines are needed by that time. WithChina  controlling more than 70 percent of the globe’s graphite production and calling for rare earth-style quotas on its export, there will be a premium placed on graphite mines in countries that are seen as more stable and less prone to resource nationalism.