Average Annual Gold
Production of 101 koz,
After-Tax NPV5% of C$285M, and IRR of 35.2%
Highlights:
- Robust economics with after-tax net present value ("NPV")
(discount rate 5%) of C$285M,
internal rate of return ("IRR") of 35.2% and payback of 1.7 years
estimated with gold price of US$1,650
per ounce
- Average annual gold production of 101,000 ounces over life of
mine ("LOM"), with an average of 122,000 ounces per year in the
first 4 years
- 8.3 year LOM producing 835,000 ounces of gold
- Average cash cost of US$778/oz
and all-in sustaining cost ("AISC") of US$889/oz gold
- Initial capital expenditure of C$234M
- Mill capacity of 7,500 tonnes per day (2.7 Mt per annum) with
average gold recovery of 95.3%
- Over 80% of mineable ounces coming from the Box deposit
HALIFAX,
NS, Nov. 1, 2022 /CNW/ - Fortune Bay
Corp. (TSXV: FOR) (FWB: 5QN) (OTCQX: FTBYF) ("Fortune Bay" or the
"Company") is pleased to announce
positive results from the independent Preliminary Economic Assessment ("PEA") for
its 100% owned Goldfields Project ("Goldfields" or the "Project")
located near Uranium City,
Saskatchewan. The PEA provides a base case assessment for
developing the Goldfields mineral resource by conventional open pit
mining methods, and gold recovery
with a standard free milling
flowsheet, incorporating gravity
and leaching of the gravity tails. The economic
model supports an operation with low capital cost and high rate of
return over an 8.3 year mine life, with average annual production
of 101,000 ounces of gold. The PEA was prepared by Ausenco
Engineering Canada Inc. ("Ausenco") in accordance with National
Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects
("NI 43-101"). The PEA NI-43-101 Technical Report will be filed on
SEDAR (www.sedar.com) within 45 days of this News Release.
Dale Verran, CEO of Fortune Bay,
commented, "Goldfields shows potential to become a highly
profitable gold mine supported by a PEA produced by Ausenco, one of
the most experienced and reputable engineering firms working on
gold projects in Canada.
Goldfields has now established itself as a leading gold development
project in Saskatchewan, which is
significant given it is the top-ranked mining jurisdiction in
Canada and ranked number two
globally. The PEA, based upon 99% of Indicated Mineral Resources,
together with the substantial repository of project data, lays a
solid foundation for the advancement of the Project."
Mr. Verran, further commented, "The Project has numerous
desirable attributes including a low strip ratio, simple mineralogy
and free-milling gold. The robust PEA economics are highlighted by
low initial capital costs, competitive all-in sustaining costs, a
relatively short payback period and a favorable NPV:CAPEX ratio. In
addition, the established infrastructure in a historical mining
area, including a powerline to site, and a valid development permit
is expected to facilitate the timeline towards construction and
operations. The Project continues to present numerous
opportunities, including exploration potential, and additional
mining and processing opportunities to be further investigated
during a pre-feasibility stage."
Description of the Goldfields Project
and PEA
The 100% owned Goldfields Project ("Goldfields" or the
"Project") is located approximately 13 kilometres south of
Uranium City in northern
Saskatchewan, as shown in Figure
1. The Project comprises 12 mineral dispositions, covering
approximately 5,000 hectares, and is host to the Box and Athona
gold deposits and numerous other gold prospects and
occurrences.
The Project is located within a historical mining area and
benefits from established infrastructure, including a road and
hydro-powerline to the Box deposit. Nearby facilities and services
in Uranium City include bulk fuel,
civil contractors, and a commercial airport. The Project has a
history of gold production (64,000 oz produced between 1939 to
1942), numerous exploration drilling campaigns (over 1,000 drill
holes) and historical mining studies by previous owners of the
Project.
The current total gold resource for Box and Athona stands at
979,900 ounces of gold in the Indicated category (23.2 million
tonnes at an average grade of 1.31 g/t gold) and 210,800 ounces of
gold in the Inferred category (7.1 million tonnes at an average
grade of 0.92 g/t gold), as defined in Table 8. The PEA considers
conventional open-pit mining at both the Box and Athona gold
deposits.
Ausenco was appointed as lead consultant in April 2022 to prepare the PEA in accordance with
NI 43-101. The PEA was completed in collaboration with Moose
Mountain Technical Services ("MMTS") for the mine design, and SRK
Consulting (Canada) Inc. ("SRK")
for the updated Mineral Resource Estimate ("MRE") and
Environmental, Permitting and Social aspects of the Project plan.
The PEA comprised a Phase 1 Mine to Mill Optimization to determine
the best business case for the Project, including social and
environmental considerations, followed by a Phase 2 which included
the PEA study based on a 7,500 tpd production case.
Financial Analysis
The economic analysis was performed assuming a 5% discount rate
and a gold price of US$1,650 per ounce based on long-term
consensus pricing. On a pre-tax basis, the NPV5% is
C$401 million, the IRR is 45.5% and
the payback period is 1.4 years. On an after-tax basis, the
NPV5% is C$285 million,
the IRR is 35.2% and the payback period is 1.7 years. A summary of
the Project economics, and the projected annual gold production is
provided in Table 1 and Figure 2, respectively.
Table 1: Summary of Project Economics
|
Units
|
LOM Total /
Avg.
|
General
|
|
|
Gold Price
|
US$/oz
|
$1,650
|
Exchange
Rate
|
US$:C$
|
0.77
|
Mine Life
|
years
|
8.3
|
Total Waste Tonnes
Mined
|
kt
|
69,139
|
Total Mill Feed
Tonnes
|
kt
|
22,708
|
Strip Ratio
|
Waste :
Resource
|
3.0 : 1
|
Production
|
|
|
Mill Head
Grade
|
g/t
|
1.20
|
Mill Recovery
Rate
|
%
|
95.3 %
|
Total Mill Ounces
Recovered
|
koz
|
835
|
Total Average Annual
Production
|
koz
|
101
|
Operating
Costs
|
|
|
Mining Cost
|
C$/t Mined
|
$3.90
|
Mining Cost
|
C$/t Milled
|
$15.27
|
Processing
Cost
|
C$/t Milled
|
$15.02
|
G&A
Cost
|
C$/t Milled
|
$5.07
|
Total Operating
Costs
|
C$/t Milled
|
$35.36
|
Refining &
Transport Cost
|
C$/oz
|
$5.00
|
Royalty NSR
|
%
|
2.0 %
|
Cash Costs
|
US$/oz Au
|
$778
|
AISC
|
US$/oz Au
|
$889
|
Capital
Costs
|
|
|
Initial
Capital
|
C$M
|
$234
|
Sustaining
Capital
|
C$M
|
$129
|
Closure
Costs
|
C$M
|
$9
|
Salvage
Costs
|
C$M
|
$18
|
Financials
Pre-Tax
|
|
|
NPV (5%)
|
C$M
|
$401
|
IRR
|
%
|
45.5 %
|
Payback
|
Years
|
1.4
|
Financials
Post-Tax
|
|
|
NPV (5%)
|
C$M
|
$285
|
IRR
|
%
|
35.2 %
|
Payback
|
Years
|
1.7
|
|
Notes: Cash costs consist of mining costs,
processing costs, mine-level G&A and refining
charges and royalties AISC includes
cash costs plus sustaining capital, closure costs,
and salvage value. Payback is defined as
achieving cumulative positive free cashflow after all cash costs
and capital costs, including sustaining capital costs and is
calculated from the start of production. Refer to
"Non-IFRS Financial Measures" below.
|
Cautionary Statement:
The reader is advised that the PEA summarized in this news release is intended to provide
only an initial, high-level review of the Project potential and
design options. The PEA mine plan and economic model include
numerous assumptions and the use of both indicated and inferred
mineral resources. Inferred mineral resources are considered to be
too speculative to be used in an economic analysis except as
allowed for by NI 43-101 in PEA studies. Mineral resources
are not mineral reserves and do not have demonstrated economic
viability.
The PEA is based upon a subset of the mineral resources which
incorporates 98.6% of indicated mineral resources and 1.4% of
inferred mineral resources.
Projected gold production is 835,000 ounces over the 8.3 year
LOM. Gold production averages 101,000 ounces per year, with an
average of 122,000 ounces per year in the first four years.
Attributable recovered ounces from Box and Athona over LOM are 81%
and 19%, respectively.
Mine Design and Production
Schedule
The PEA considers open-pit mining from the Box and Athona gold
deposits over a project mine life of 8.3 years. Mine planning
is based on conventional open pit methods suited for the Project
location and local site requirements. The subset of Mineral
Resources contained within the designed open pits are summarized in
Table 2, with a 0.30 g/t gold cut-off, and form the basis of the
mine plan and production schedule. A total of 98.6% of the
Mineral Resources subset used in the PEA are classified as
Indicated.
Table 2: PEA Mine Plan Production Summary
PEA Mill
Feed
|
22,708
kt
|
Mill Feed Gold
Grade
|
1.20
g/t
|
Waste Overburden and
Rock
|
69,139
kt
|
Waste : Resource
Ratio
|
3.0 : 1
|
Notes:
|
|
1.
|
The PEA Mine Plan
and Mill Feed estimates are a subset of the September 1, 2022
Mineral Resource estimates and are based on open pit mine
engineering and technical information developed at a Scoping level
for the Box and Athona deposits.
|
2.
|
PEA Mine Plan and
Mill Feed estimates are mined tonnes and grade, the reference point
is the primary crusher.
|
3.
|
Mill Feed tonnages
and grades include open pit mining method modifying factors, such
as dilution and recovery.
|
4.
|
Cut-off grade of
0.30 g/t assumes US$1,650/oz. Au at a currency exchange rate of
0.77 US$ per C$; 99.95% payable gold; C$5/oz offsite costs
(refining, transport and insurance); a 2.0% NSR royalty; and a 95%
metallurgical recovery for gold.
|
5.
|
The cut-off grade
covers processing costs of C$12.00/t, administrative (G&A)
costs of C$6.20/t, and low grade stockpile Rehandle costs of
C$1.00/t.
|
6.
|
Estimates have been
rounded and may result in summation
differences.
|
Optimized ultimate pit limits for each deposit have been split
into phases or pushbacks to target higher economic margin material
earlier in the mine life. The Box deposit is split into three
phases, and the Athona deposit is split into two phases (Figure 3).
Pit designs are configured on five meter bench heights, with eight
meter wide berms placed every four benches, or quadruple
benching.
![Figure 3: Mine Plan Overview (CNW Group/Fortune Bay Corp.) Figure 3: Mine Plan Overview (CNW Group/Fortune Bay Corp.)](https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1934254/Fortune_Bay_Corp__FORTUNE_BAY_ANNOUNCES_POSITIVE_PEA_FOR_GOLDFIE.jpg)
The mill will be fed with material from the pits at an average
rate of 2.7 Mtpa (7.5 ktpd). Waste rock will be placed in one of
three identified waste rock storage facilities ("WRSF"). Waste rock
will also be used for construction of the haul roads and the
tailings dam located north of the process facilities. Topsoil and
overburden encountered at the top of the pits will be placed in a
dedicated area and kept salvageable for closure at the end of the
mine life. Cut-off grade optimization is employed, stockpiling
lower grade material in the initial years and rehandling this
material to the mill towards the end of mine life.
Mining cost estimates are built up from first principles based
on the selected mining methods, assuming an owner managed
operation. Mining operations will be based on 365 operating days
per year with two twelve- hour shifts per day. An allowance
of twelve days of no mine production per year has been built into
the mine schedule to allow for adverse weather
conditions.
The mine production schedule is summarized in Figure 4.
Metallurgy and Mineral
Processing
Goldfields has been the subject of extensive metallurgical
testwork programs and previous studies, dating back to 1939. This
work has determined that there are no significant metallurgical or
environmental hindrances associated with the mineralization. Based
on the latest test work conducted by SGS Canada Inc. ("SGS") in
2015, gold can be effectively recovered from the mineralization at
both Box and Athona by gravity and leaching methods.
The Goldfields process flowsheet was designed based on previous
testwork and preliminary financial evaluations, with key process
design criteria derived from testwork conducted at SGS in 2015. The
process plant employs gravity concentration, and standard leaching
with carbon-in-pulp ("CIP") technology for gold recovery. The plant
includes three stages of crushing followed by ball milling,
classification, gravity concentration, leach and CIP. Tailings will
be subjected to cyanide detoxification before being pumped to the
tailings storage facility.
The process plant will treat 2.7 Mt of material per year at an
average throughput of 7.5 ktpd based on mill availability of 92%.
The crusher plant circuit design is set at 65% availability and the
gold room availability is set at 52 weeks per year. The plant will
operate two shifts per day, 365 days per year and will produce doré
bars.
The plant has been designed to realize an average recovery of
95.3% of the gold (95.9% Box and 93.5% Athona) over LOM. Of this,
24.5% of the gold will be extracted by gravity and a further 70.8%
by the leach/CIP process. The proposed process flowsheet is shown
in Figure 5.
Site Infrastructure
Goldfields benefits from an existing gravel road from
Uranium City (Highway 962) and
high-voltage powerline to the Box site from hydropower stations
located approximately 40 kilometres to the northwest. Both the
gravel road and powerline will require minor upgrades and
refurbishment. Stoney Rapids, the regional business hub, is located
approximately 150 kilometres to the east and is accessible along
Lake Athabasca by boat or barge during the summer, and by an
ice-road during winter, built and maintained by the Provincial
Government.
Figure 6 shows the site layout, including pits for Box and
Athona, stockpiles, waste rock storage facility ("WRSF"), Tailings
Storage Facility ("TSF"), onsite roads, processing plant and mining
infrastructure areas such as offices and truck shops. This
infrastructure has been kept at least 30 meters from the surveyed
edge of Lake Athabasca and located to minimize disturbance to
existing waterbodies and watercourses.
The site location selection for the WRSF, TSF, processing plant
and other mining infrastructure considered various factors
including social, environmental, topographic, accessibility,
proximity to existing infrastructure and overall flow of the mining
operation. Administration facilities, truck shop, wash bay, tire
store, fuel storage, assay laboratory and warehousing are
centralized near the process plant. Accommodations are planned for
Uranium City in a permanent camp
with personnel transport to the mine on a shift basis.
The primary design objectives of the TSF are the secure
confinement of tailings and the protection of the regional
groundwater and surface water during mine operations and closure.
Based on preliminary environmental characterization and the geology
of the two deposits, it can be considered that the waste rock,
mineralized material and tailings are not acid-generating nor metal
leaching. These desirable characteristics for the Project
(simplified operation, easier water management and reduced closure
risks) were incorporated into the Project design.
Tailings at Goldfields will be pumped from the process plant to
the TSF and will be stored behind a tailings dam. The TSF has been
designed in accordance with CDA guidelines (2013, 2019) to safely
accommodate the life of mine tailings production as described in
the PEA.
Topsoil and overburden encountered during site excavations will
be placed in a dedicated area and kept salvageable for closure at
the end of the mine life to facilitate revegetation of the TSF and
WRSF.
Capital Costs
Initial capital costs are estimated at C$234M with allowances for indirect costs,
including a contingency of C$34M.
Sustaining capital costs are estimated at C$129M which includes cost of mine expansion,
payments of mining fleet, expansion of TSF, financing of the
permanent camp facilities and associated indirect costs. The down
payment and initial financing payments for the mining fleet and
camp are included in the initial capital period whereas the balance
of payments are included in the sustaining capital period. The
capital costs for the Project are built using a combination of
vendor quotations for all major equipment and benchmark information
in the region. The project uses a contingency of 7.4% for initial
mining capital, 25% for all process plant and infrastructure costs,
for both initial and sustaining capital. An owner's cost of 5% is
applied on the total direct costs excluding mining costs. A summary
of capital costs is provided in Table 3.
Table 3: Summary of Capital Costs
Description
|
Initial
Capital
|
Sustaining
Capital
|
Total Capital
Cost
|
|
(C$M)
|
(C$M)
|
(C$M)
|
Mine
|
40.2
|
69.0
|
109.2
|
Process
Plant
|
72.0
|
-
|
72.0
|
On Site
Infrastructure
|
22.1
|
24.7
|
46.8
|
Off Site
Infrastructure
|
5.7
|
-
|
5.7
|
Tailings Storage
Facility
|
20.8
|
16.0
|
36.8
|
Total
Direct
|
160.7
|
109.7
|
270.5
|
Project
Indirects
|
10.3
|
2.9
|
13.1
|
Project
Delivery
|
22.1
|
6.6
|
28.8
|
Owner's
Costs
|
6.3
|
-
|
6.3
|
Contingency
|
34.0
|
9.5
|
43.5
|
Total
Indirect
|
72.8
|
19.0
|
91.8
|
Totals
|
233.5
|
128.7
|
362.2
|
|
Note: Numbers may not
add due to rounding
|
Operating Costs
Operating costs were derived using benchmark information in the
region and are estimated at C$35.36/t
milled (Table 4). The mine and process operating costs are built up
from first principles. Cost inputs are derived from benchmarked
prices.
Table 4: Summary of Operating Costs
Cost
Centre
|
LOM
|
Annual Average
Cost
|
LOM Total /
Avg.
|
Average
LOM
|
OPEX
|
|
(C$M)
|
(C$M)
|
(C$/t
Milled)
|
(C$/oz)
|
( %)
|
Mining Cost
|
346.82
|
41.81
|
15.27
|
415.32
|
43 %
|
Processing
Cost
|
341.08
|
41.12
|
15.02
|
408.44
|
43 %
|
G&A Cost
|
115.12
|
13.88
|
5.07
|
137.86
|
14 %
|
Total Operating
Costs
|
803.02
|
96.81
|
35.36
|
961.62
|
100 %
|
Cash Flow Analysis
The projected cash flow for the Project is provided in Figure 7.
Cumulative after-tax unlevered free cash flow totals C$435M. Payback for the Project is 1.7 years.
Sensitivities
A sensitivity analysis was conducted on the base case pre-tax
and after-tax NPV, IRR and payback of the Project, using the
following variables: gold price, initial capex, total operating
costs, discount rate, foreign exchange rate, mill recovery and head
grade. The after-tax sensitivity analysis results for a range of
gold prices are summarized in Table 5. Tables 6 and 7 provide a
summary of after-tax NPV and IRR sensitivities for initial capex,
total opex and foreign exchange rate ("FX"). The Project is most
sensitive to changes in gold prices and less sensitive to initial
capex and operating costs.
Table 5: After-Tax Sensitivity Summary
Gold
Price
(US$/oz)
|
US$1,300
|
US$1,450
|
Base Case
US$1,650
|
US$1,750
|
US$1,950
|
NPV5%
|
C$81M
|
C$168M
|
C$285M
|
C$343M
|
C$459M
|
IRR
|
14.6 %
|
23.9 %
|
35.2 %
|
40.5 %
|
50.5 %
|
NPV5%/CAPEX
|
0.35
|
0.72
|
1.22
|
1.47
|
1.96
|
Payback
(Years)
|
5.2
|
2.4
|
1.7
|
1.6
|
1.3
|
Table 6: After-Tax NPV5% Sensitivity
Gold
Price
(US$/oz)
|
After-Tax
NPV5%
Base Case
|
Initial
CAPEX
|
Total
OPEX
|
FX
|
|
|
-20 %
|
+20 %
|
-20 %
|
+20 %
|
-20 %
|
+20 %
|
US$1,300
|
C$81M
|
C$142M
|
C$21M
|
C$168M
|
(C$7M)
|
(C$81M)
|
C$232M
|
US$1,450
|
C$168M
|
C$229M
|
C$108M
|
C$255M
|
C$81M
|
(C$1M)
|
C$337M
|
US$1,650
|
C$285M
|
C$345M
|
C$224M
|
C$371M
|
C$198M
|
C$93M
|
C$476M
|
US$1,750
|
C$343M
|
C$402M
|
C$283M
|
C$429M
|
C$256M
|
C$139M
|
C$545M
|
US$1,950
|
C$459M
|
C$518M
|
C$399M
|
C$545M
|
C$372M
|
C$232M
|
C$684M
|
Table 7: After-Tax IRR Sensitivity
Gold
Price
(US$/oz)
|
After-Tax
IRR
Base
Case
|
Initial
CAPEX
|
Total
OPEX
|
FX
|
|
|
-20 %
|
+20 %
|
-20 %
|
+20 %
|
-20 %
|
+20 %
|
US$1,300
|
14.6 %
|
25.5 %
|
7.1 %
|
23.4 %
|
4.1 %
|
0.0 %
|
30.2 %
|
US$1,450
|
23.9 %
|
36.4 %
|
15.3 %
|
31.8 %
|
14.8 %
|
4.9 %
|
40.0 %
|
US$1,650
|
35.2 %
|
49.6 %
|
25.2 %
|
42.3 %
|
27.4 %
|
15.8 %
|
52.0 %
|
US$1,750
|
40.5 %
|
55.8 %
|
29.9 %
|
47.3 %
|
33.1 %
|
20.9 %
|
57.7 %
|
US$1,950
|
50.5 %
|
67.4 %
|
38.8 %
|
56.8 %
|
43.9 %
|
30.2 %
|
68.6 %
|
Key Opportunities for Project
Improvement
Detailed metallurgical testing, including variability sampling
across the deposits, is recommended during a prefeasibility study
which has the potential to improve gold recoveries. Further testing
for the gravity circuit could support further refinement of the
equipment sizing and costs. Confirmatory testing could lead to
capital and operating cost reductions in other areas of the process
plant.
A preliminary pre-concentration (ore sorting) analysis was
completed in early 2022 by SRK which showed potential to improve
Project economics based on a scoping level assessment. Additional
upside could be created by a decrease in tailings volume as a
result of sorting. SRK recommended that preliminary mineral sensing
testwork be conducted such that more accurate predictions of
sorting could be derived, which could form part of a future
prefeasibility study.
Future investigation and trade-off of alternative onsite
material transport options that differ from the planned diesel
driven haul truck fleet, with the goals of improving the project
economics and minimizing the Project's carbon footprint. These
options could include crushing and conveying, hauler trolley
systems, and a battery electrical mining fleet. This, combined with
the use of hydropower, has the potential to make the Project highly
sustainable and climate-friendly.
The Project has exploration potential which could enable longer
mine life beyond 8.3 years or increased annual production volumes.
The mineralization at Box and Athona remains open and numerous
other gold prospects on the Property require more detailed
re-evaluation. At Box, initial assessment of underground mining
below the extents of the open-pit showed limited potential, however
additional drilling to target high-grade zones along structural
trends is recommended with the goal of increasing mineral resources
for inclusion in future mining studies. This potential is
demonstrated by the Phase 1 drilling completed in 2021 which
produced intercepts below the current MRE of 8.00 g/t over 4.0
metres (drill hole B21-334), 8.00 g/t over 12.0 metres (drill hole
B21-336), 8.74 g/t over 5.0 metres (drill hole B21-339) and 13.22
g/t over 8 metres (drill hole B21-340) (For further details see
News Release dated September 14, 2021
and March 7, 2022).
Mineral Resource Estimate
An updated MRE was completed as part of the PEA. The mineral
resources have been estimated in accordance with the CIM
"Estimation of Mineral Resource and Mineral Reserves Best
Practices" guidelines (November 2019)
and NI 43-101. The updated MRE was prepared by SRK, an independent
consulting firm with significant experience in the estimation of
gold deposits, both in Canada and
internationally.
This updated MRE replaces the previous MRE with an effective
date of March 15, 2021, also
completed by SRK, who used the same resource estimation procedures
to update the MRE based on additional drilling completed during
2021. SRK is also responsible for the development of the supporting
mineralization models which were based upon structural and
petrographic studies conducted by SRK during late 2020.
The updated MRE is provided in Table 8 with an effective date of
September 1, 2022. Mineral resources
are constrained within a conceptual open-pit shell. The MRE
reconciles to within 1% of historical mine production at Box when
the historically reported process plant recovery of 96% is applied,
providing additional confidence in the estimate.
Table 8: Goldfields Mineral Resource Statement,
effective date September 1,
2022.
Deposit
|
Category
|
Tonnes
|
Au
Grade
|
Total
Au
|
(Mt)
|
(g/t)
|
(000's
oz)
|
Box
|
Indicated
|
15.8
|
1.44
|
729.7
|
Athona
|
Indicated
|
7.4
|
1.06
|
250.2
|
|
Total
Indicated
|
23.2
|
1.31
|
979.9
|
Box
|
Inferred
|
3.3
|
1.08
|
112.8
|
Athona
|
Inferred
|
3.8
|
0.80
|
98.0
|
|
Total
Inferred
|
7.1
|
0.92
|
210.8
|
Notes:
|
1) Mineral resources
are not mineral reserves and do not have demonstrated economic
viability.
|
2) Mineral resources
are reported at a cut-off grade of 0.3 g/t gold, constrained within
a conceptual open-pit shell.
|
3) Mineral resources
are reported using a gold price of US$1800/oz.
|
4) All figures are
rounded to reflect the relative accuracy of the
estimate.
|
The mineral resource model considers a total of 838 boreholes of
which 494 are located within the Box deposit and 344 within the
Athona deposit.
Indicated Mineral Resources comprise 82% of the estimate, with
the remaining 18% classified at an Inferred level of confidence.
Comparison of the March 15, 2021 and
September 1, 2022 mineral resource
statements show an increase in tonnage and contained gold content
within the current Indicated mineral resource statement of
approximately 2.7% and 0.5%, respectively, and an increase in the
Inferred mineral resource tonnes and contained gold content of
approximately 18% and 20%, respectively. The increases
observed in the September 2022
mineral resources are related to the additional drilling completed
in 2021 which expanded the footprint of the classified mineral
resources at both the Box and Athona deposits, as well as the
incorporation of a higher gold price which increased the size of
the constraining pit shells used for mineral resource
reporting.
Environmental, Permitting and Social
Considerations
The Project completed a federal screening and a provincial
Environmental Assessment and received Ministerial Approval to
proceed to licensing in 2008. Updates to the environmental baseline
will be required and changes to the Project, to that which was
assessed, will require some additional assessment. Approvals to
these changes would be required through an application submitted in
accordance with Section 16 of the Provincial Assessment Act.
Doing so should significantly reduce the schedule and cost required
to advance the Project into construction and operations.
There is a risk that both the federal and provincial regulators
deem the changes to the Project, from that which was approved in
2008, are too great to allow the gaps to be addressed under a
Section 16 (Saskatchewan Assessment Act) application. A decision of
this nature would require a new federal screening and possibly a
federal assessment coupled with a new provincial assessment as
well. This would increase the schedule and cost required to advance
the Project to construction.
Fortune Bay is committed to working with Indigenous Rights
Holders declaring the Project area as part of their traditional
territory. Engagement efforts with these Rights Holders,
specifically First Nation representatives, to date have established
the foundation of a relationship based on trust and honesty.
No environmental and/or social risks have been identified that
cannot be reasonably mitigated through the implementation of good
engineering and social practices.
Qualified Persons
The PEA has been prepared by the following "Qualified Persons",
all of whom are considered to be independent consultants of Fortune
Bay for the purposes of section 1.5 of NI 43-101, and all of whom
have reviewed the information in this press release that is
summarized from the PEA in their areas of expertise:
- Kevin Murray, P. Eng.,
Metallurgy and Mineral Processing (Ausenco)
- Scott Elfen, P.E., Tailings Storage Facility (Ausenco)
- Davood Hasanloo, P.Eng., Water Management (Ausenco)
- Marc Schulte, P. Eng., Mining
(MMTS)
- Cliff Revering, P. Eng., Mineral
Resource Estimation (SRK)
- Mark Liskowich, P. Geo.,
Environmental, Permitting and Social Considerations (SRK)
The technical and scientific information in this news release
has been reviewed and approved by Dale
Verran, M.Sc., P.Geo., Chief Executive Officer of the
Company, who is a Qualified Person as defined by NI 43-101. Mr.
Verran is an employee of Fortune Bay and is not independent of the
Company under NI 43–101.
Non-International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS")
Financial Measures
The Company has included certain non-IFRS
financial measures in this news release, such as initial capital
cost, sustaining capital cost, total capital cost, AISC, and
capital intensity, which are not measures recognized under IFRS and
do not have a standardized meaning prescribed by IFRS. As a result,
these measures may not be comparable to similar measures reported
by other corporations. Each of these measures used are intended to
provide additional information to the user and should not be
considered in isolation or as a substitute for measures prepared in
accordance with IFRS. Non-IFRS financial measures used in this news
release and common to the gold mining industry are defined
below.
Total Cash Costs and Total Cash Costs per Ounce
Total
cash costs are reflective of the cost of production. Total cash
costs reported in the PEA include mining costs, processing and
water treatment costs, general and administrative costs of the
mine, off-site costs, refining costs, transportation costs and
royalties. Total cash costs per ounce is calculated as total cash
costs divided by payable gold ounces.
AISC and AISC per Ounce
AISC is reflective of all of
the expenditures that are required to produce an ounce of gold from
operations. AISC reported in the PEA includes total cash costs,
sustaining capital, closure costs and salvage, but excludes
corporate general and administrative costs. AISC per ounce is
calculated as AISC divided by payable gold ounces.
About Ausenco
Ausenco is a global company
based across 26 offices in 14 countries, with projects in over 80
locations
worldwide. Combining deep technical expertise with a 30-year
track record, Ausenco
delivers innovative, value- add consulting studies,
project delivery, asset operations and maintenance
solutions to the mining and metals, oil & gas and
industrial sectors.
About Fortune Bay
Fortune Bay Corp. (TSXV:FOR, FWB: 5QN, OTCQX: FTBYF) is an
exploration and development company with 100% ownership in two
advanced gold exploration projects in Canada, Saskatchewan (Goldfields Project) and
Mexico, Chiapas (Ixhuatán Project), both with
exploration and development potential. The Company is also
advancing the 100% owned Strike and Murmac uranium exploration
projects, located near the Goldfields Project, which have
high-grade potential typical of the Athabasca Basin. The Company has a goal of
building a mid-tier exploration and development Company through the
advancement of its existing projects and the strategic acquisition
of new projects to create a pipeline of growth opportunities. The
Company's corporate strategy is driven by a Board and Management
team with a proven track record of discovery, project development
and value creation. Further information on Fortune Bay and its
assets can be found on the Company's website at
www.fortunebaycorp.com or by contacting us as
info@fortunebaycorp.com or by telephone at
902-334-1919.
On behalf of Fortune Bay Corp.
"Dale Verran"
Chief Executive Officer
902-334-1919
Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking
Information
Information set forth in this news release contains
forward-looking statements that are based on assumptions as of the
date of this news release. These statements reflect management's
current estimates, beliefs, intentions, and expectations. They are
not guarantees of future performance. Words such as "expects",
"aims", "anticipates", "targets", "goals", "projects", "intends",
"plans", "believes", "seeks", "estimates", "continues", "may",
variations of such words, and similar expressions and references to
future periods, are intended to identify such forward-looking
statements, and include, but are not limited to, statements with
respect to: the results of the PEA, including future Project
opportunities, future operating and capital costs, closure costs,
AISC, the projected NPV, IRR, timelines, permit timelines, and the
ability to obtain the requisite permits, economics and associated
returns of the Project, the technical viability of the Project, the
market and future price of and demand for gold, the environmental
impact of the Project, and the ongoing ability to work
cooperatively with stakeholders, including the local levels of
government. Since forward-looking statements are based on
assumptions and address future events and conditions, by their very
nature they involve inherent risks and uncertainties. Although
these statements are based on information currently available to
the Company, the Company provides no assurance that actual results
will meet management's expectations. Risks, uncertainties and other
factors involved with forward- looking information could cause
actual events, results, performance, prospects and opportunities to
differ materially from those expressed or implied by such
forward-looking information. Forward looking information in this
news release includes, but is not limited to, the Company's
objectives, goals or future plans, statements, exploration results,
potential mineralization, the estimation of mineral resources,
exploration and mine development plans, timing of the commencement
of operations and estimates of market conditions. Factors that
could cause actual results to differ materially from such
forward-looking information include, but are not limited to failure
to identify mineral resources, failure to convert estimated mineral
resources to reserves, the inability to complete a feasibility
study which recommends a production decision, the preliminary
nature of metallurgical test results, delays in obtaining or
failures to obtain required governmental, environmental or other
project approvals, political risks, inability to fulfill the duty
to accommodate First Nations and other indigenous peoples,
uncertainties relating to the availability and costs of financing
needed in the future, changes in equity markets, inflation, changes
in exchange rates, fluctuations in commodity prices, delays in the
development of projects, capital and operating costs varying
significantly from estimates and the other risks involved in the
mineral exploration and development industry, and those risks set
out in the Company's public documents filed on SEDAR. Although the
Company believes that the assumptions and factors used in preparing
the forward-looking information in this news release are
reasonable, undue reliance should not be placed on such
information, which only applies as of the date of this news
release, and no assurance can be given that such events will occur
in the disclosed time frames or at all. The Company disclaims any
intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking
information, whether as a result of new information, future events
or otherwise, other than as required by law. For more information
on Fortune Bay, readers should refer to Fortune Bay's website
at www.fortunebaycorp.com.
Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services
Provider (as that term is defined in policies of TSX Venture
Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of
this release.
SOURCE Fortune Bay Corp.