VANCOUVER, BC, April 30,
2024 /CNW/ - FPX Nickel Corp. (TSXV: FPX) (OTCQB:
FPOCF) ("FPX" or the "Company") is pleased to
announce that it has successfully completed a large-scale mineral
processing pilot testing campaign for the Baptiste Nickel Project
("Baptiste" or the "Project"), the first significant
component of the ongoing feasibility study ("FS")
metallurgical testwork campaign. Results from this testwork
confirm the 2023 preliminary feasibility study ("PFS")
basis, thereby validating FPX's processing strategy, flowsheet, and
key metallurgical criteria, including estimated recoveries.
The pilot testing campaign was funded in part by a
$725,000 grant from Natural Resources
Canada ("NRCan") under the Government of Canada's Critical Minerals Research,
Development and Demonstration ("CMRDD") program, which is
advancing the commercial readiness of processing technologies that
will support the development Canada's EV battery material supply chain.
Highlights
- Pilot-scale mineral processing testwork is now complete,
with metallurgical performance matching the 2023 PFS basis,
confirming expected recoveries and other key performance
criteria
- Testwork identified multiple opportunities to further optimize
the mineral processing flowsheet through further process
simplification
- Testwork produced sufficient high-grade concentrate (60%
nickel) for pilot-scale testing of the downstream hydrometallurgy
refinery for the production of battery-grade nickel sulphate
- Preparations for the downstream hydrometallurgical
refining pilot plant are underway, with results expected to be
announced in the third quarter of 2024
"These first results from our FS metallurgical testwork program
further validate the processing advantages of awaruite which were
demonstrated in the Baptiste PFS," commented Andrew Osterloh, FPX Nickel's Senior Vice
President, Projects & Operations. "Conducted with support
from NRCan, this large-scale pilot program has demonstrated that
the processing strategy, flowsheet, and metallurgical basis from
the PFS are robust, and has identified further optimization
opportunities to lower capital and operating costs. This is
another positive step as we continue to advance Baptiste as a
potential producer of disruptive quantities of low-carbon,
low-cost, Canadian nickel."
Background
The Baptiste processing strategy leverages awaruite's distinct
properties in a simple, yet robust flowsheet. The front end
of the flowsheet utilizes magnetic separation to create a
"magnetics rich" concentrate of awaruite and magnetite – a process
made effective due to awaruite's intense ferromagnetism and high
density. The back end of the flowsheet then utilizes
conventional froth flotation to separate awaruite from magnetite –
a process made effective due to awaruite's active surface
properties and magnetite's general lack of floatability.
Finally, based on awaruite's very high nickel content, a very
high-grade nickel concentrate (60% nickel) can be produced.
Downstream of the mineral processing plant, awaruite's
properties continue to provide distinct advantages, including
unparalleled downstream market flexibility. Unlike
conventional nickel mineral concentrates which have a high sulphur
content, Baptiste's awaruite concentrate is nearly sulphur-free and
low in deleterious elements, meaning it can bypass intermediate
smelting and be used directly in stainless steel fabrication.
Alternatively, the Baptiste awaruite concentrate is also an
ideal feedstock for the production of high-purity, battery-grade
nickel sulphate for the electric vehicle ("EV") supply
chain. The Company's PFS metallurgical testing programs have
well demonstrated this flexibility, and the FS metallurgical
testing program is expected to confirm these previous findings at
an even larger scale.
Mineral Processing Pilot
Plant
The primary objectives of the FS mineral processing pilot plant
were (1) to further demonstrate the Baptiste concentrator flowsheet
at a larger scale; and (2) to produce sufficient awaruite
concentrate to conduct pilot-scale, continuous testing of the
downstream hydrometallurgy refinery for the production of
battery-grade nickel sulphate.
The testwork reported herein represents the third pilot-scale
mineral processing campaign the Company has completed for Baptiste.
Key parameters from each pilot plant are summarized in Table
1, highlighting that the FS pilot plant was conducted at a
significantly greater scale and run time than previously completed
campaigns, permitting a longer duration of steady-state
operation.
Table 1 – Summary of Baptiste
Pilot-Scale Mineral Processing Testing Campaigns
Pilot
Campaign
|
2021
|
2022
|
2023/24
|
Metallurgical Testwork
Program
|
PFS
|
PFS
|
FS
|
Ore Feed
Rate
|
160 kg/h
|
210 kg/h
|
320 kg/h
|
Feed
Material
|
Life of mine
composite
|
Bulk sample from early
mine plan years
|
Bulk sample from early
mine plan years
|
Run Time
|
0.9 days
|
3.3 days
|
9.9 days
|
Unit Operations
Tested
|
Magnetic
Separation
|
Magnetic Separation and
Flotation
|
Magnetic and Gravity
Separation and Flotation
|
Objective
|
Flowsheet development
and generation of magnetic concentrate for bench-scale flotation
testing
|
Flowsheet validation
and generation of flotation concentrate for bench-scale refinery
testing
|
Further flowsheet
validation and generation of flotation concentrate for pilot-scale
refinery testing
|
The FS pilot plant followed the flowsheet defined in the 2023
PFS, but also tested multiple optimization opportunities. The
tested flowsheet is presented in Figure 1, with blue unit
operations representing continuously-tested PFS flowsheet elements
and green unit operations representing potential flowsheet
optimizations which were also tested.
The Company re-engaged Corem (Quebec, Canada) to conduct the FS pilot plant,
building on their experience with previous piloting and numerous
bench-scale programs for Baptiste. A total of 76 tonnes of
material were processed in the pilot plant, resulting in
approximately 9.9 days of continuous run-time in the primary
grinding and magnetic separation circuits.
When operating under normal conditions, the FS pilot plant
delivered metallurgical performance that closely matched the
metallurgical performance assumed in the PFS. This includes
stage-by-stage recoveries, as well as the ability to produce the
high-grade nickel concentrate (60% nickel) envisioned in the PFS.
While these were expected results, given the quality and
scale of the PFS metallurgical testwork program, the success of the
FS pilot plant nevertheless provides further validation for the
proposed Baptiste processing strategy, flowsheet, and metallurgical
basis. Examples of the awaruite concentrates produced in the pilot
plant are presented in Figures 2 and 3.
Optimization Opportunities
The extended duration of the FS pilot plant also permitted trial
of two flowsheet optimizations, firstly the production and
upgrading of a gravity concentrate, and secondly the elimination of
the second regrind and recleaning magnetic separation stage. As
discussed below, both of these optimization opportunities have the
potential to contribute to flowsheet enhancements that contribute
to lower associated processing costs.
Early Recovery of Coarse, Liberated Awaruite to Final
Concentrate
The second PFS pilot plant noted considerable circulating load
of awaruite in the first regrind circuit due to the high specific
gravity and malleability of awaruite and the use of a hydrocyclone
to close the grinding circuit. Continuous testing during the
FS pilot plant demonstrated the technical viability of using a
centrifugal concentrator to recover coarse, liberated awaruite from
grinding circuit recirculating loads. This approach is
commonly applied in the gold industry to recover coarse gold
particles. Gravity concentrates grading 20-40% nickel were
produced, and then successfully upgraded to the final concentrate
grade of 60% nickel using magnetic separation and flotation steps.
While the PFS envisioned advancing the coarse, liberated
awaruite to the cleaner magnetic separation feed, the early
recovery of this material to a final product reduces the risk of
downstream overgrinding and its potential recovery impact. As
such, FS pilot testwork clearly demonstrates that awaruite's high
density can be effectively managed in an industrial grinding
circuit.
Elimination of Secondary Regrinding and Recleaning Magnetic
Separation
The second optimization trialed the elimination of the second
regrind and recleaner magnetic separation circuits. To test
this, cleaner magnetic separation concentrate was directly fed to
froth flotation. Testwork showed overall recoveries
comparable to the PFS flowsheet. For this approach, rougher
concentrate would then be reground prior to cleaner froth
flotation, but this would require a significantly smaller regrind
circuit, resulting in process simplification, capital cost savings,
and operating costs savings. This opportunity will be further
investigated and validated in upcoming stages of the FS
metallurgical testwork program, with the potential for additional
processing cost benefits for the Project.
Hydrometallurgical Refinery Pilot
Plant
The awaruite concentrate generated during the mineral processing
plant will now be used in the downstream hydrometallurgical
refining pilot plant. FPX has re-engaged Sherritt
Technologies Ltd. to conduct this testwork, building on their
successful completion of the previous batch-scale testing program
in 2023. As noted in the Company's news release dated
May 17, 2023, the 2023 program
successfully demonstrated FPX's proposed refinery flowsheet can
produce battery grade nickel sulphate at the batch-scale, and FS
testwork program will now aim to demonstrate similar findings at
the pilot-scale. Preparations for this pilot plant are
underway and results are expected to be announced in the third
quarter of 2024.
Qualified Person
The metallurgical information in this news release has been
prepared in accordance with Canadian regulatory requirements set
out in National Instrument 43-101: Standards of Disclosures for
Minerals Projects of the Canadian Securities Administrators ("NI
43-101"). Testwork was supervised, reviewed, and verified
by Kyle D. Marte, P.Eng., FPX
Nickel's Principal Metallurgist and a "Qualified Person" as defined
by NI 43-101.
About the Decar Nickel
District
The Company's Baptiste Nickel Project represents a large-scale
greenfield discovery of nickel mineralization in the form of a
sulphur-free, nickel-iron mineral called awaruite
(Ni3Fe) hosted in an ultramafic/ophiolite complex.
The Baptiste mineral claims cover an area of 245 km2
west of Middle River and north of
Trembleur Lake, in central British Columbia. In addition to
the Baptiste Deposit itself, awaruite mineralization has been
confirmed through drilling at several target areas within the same
claims package, most notably at the Van Target which is located 6
km to the north of the Baptiste Deposit. Since 2010,
approximately US $30 million has been
spent on the exploration and development of Baptiste.
The Baptiste Deposit is located within the Baptiste Creek
watershed, on the traditional and unceded territories of the
Tl'azt'en Nation and Binche Whut'en, and within several Tl'azt'enne
and Binche Whut'enne keyohs. FPX has conducted mineral exploration
activities to date subject to the conditions of agreements with
First Nations and keyoh holders.
About FPX Nickel Corp.
FPX Nickel Corp. is focused on the exploration and
development of the Decar Nickel District, located in central
British Columbia, and other
occurrences of the same unique style of naturally occurring
nickel-iron alloy mineralization known as awaruite. For more
information, please view the Company's website at
https://fpxnickel.com/.
On behalf of FPX Nickel Corp.
"Martin Turenne"
Martin Turenne, President, CEO and
Director
Forward-Looking Statements
Certain of the statements made and information contained
herein is considered "forward-looking information" within the
meaning of applicable Canadian securities laws. These statements
address future events and conditions and so involve inherent risks
and uncertainties, as disclosed in the Company's periodic filings
with Canadian securities regulators. Actual results could differ
from those currently projected. The Company does not assume the
obligation to update any forward-looking statement.
Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services
Provider accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of
this release.
SOURCE FPX Nickel Corp.