Trading Symbol
LSE: AYM
30 September 2021
Anglesey Mining plc
(“Anglesey” or “the Company”)
Chairman’s AGM Statement – Outlook remains positive for metal prices
Anglesey Mining plc (LSE:AYM), the UK minerals exploration and development
company, is pleased to release the Chairman’s Statement at the Annual
General Meeting of Shareholders held in London today, which highlights the
drivers behind the Company’s positive outlook for metals prices.
Highlights
* Strength in metal prices over the last 12-months has been driven by
electrification, decarbonisation and global commitments to build new, or
replace, critical infrastructure
* Metals and minerals are essential for addressing climate change and are
critical components for governments around the world to hit their green
economy targets
* The current environment provides a unique opportunity for the Company’s
Parys Mountain project, with work to commence shortly on feasibility study
activities including infill drilling the White Rock Zone and completing
geotechnical and metallurgical testwork
* The results of these work programmes will flow into the updated mine plan
and permitting activities
Jo Battershill, the CEO & Managing Director of Anglesey Mining, commented:
“With today’s AGM Statement, the Chairman of Anglesey Mining has explained
very clearly why the Parys Mountain and Grängesberg assets will most
definitely play a part in the supply of minerals for adapting to a green
economy.
We have recently hosted visits to Parys Mountain with the Ynys Môn MP, Mrs
Virginia Crosbie and a senior member of the North Wales Minerals and Waste
Planning Service to discuss and promote our plans for the project and the
broader community. We continue to believe Parys Mountain is positioned very
strongly and has all the hallmarks of a highly cash generative mine
development with a long life.
Initial work programmes are now being planned and will include infill drilling
to convert inferred resources within the White Rock and Engine Zones into the
higher confidence indicated category together with geotechnical drilling to
assist with mine optimisation planning and provide bulk samples for
confirmatory metallurgical testwork. We are also targeting a start to the
environmental baseline studies as soon as possible.
As disclosed in the recently published Annual Report, our current financial
resources are sufficient to undertake these important workstreams and the
proposed PEA for Grängesberg. As additional funding becomes available these
programmes will be accelerated. Options for additional funding remain open and
the Board of Anglesey will pursue all relevant opportunities including
strategic investors, partners and consideration to moving the listing to AIM,
which could potentially enhance investor interest and provide increased
financing flexibility.
As previously stated, the Company will maintain a continued focus on the
sustainable development of our resource projects with the use of appropriate
environmentally friendly solutions where possible.”
Anglesey Mining plc (“Anglesey”) is pleased to release the Statement of
Anglesey’s Chairman, John Kearney, to Shareholders at the AGM held in London
today.
Positive Metal Price Outlook
The strength of metal prices to date in 2021 is very encouraging. Over the
past year, base metal prices have posted strong gains, driven by resilience in
the global economy, investment speculation, supply disruptions and inventory
depletion.
In 2021, continued fiscal and monetary policy support is providing additional
momentum to prices against a backdrop of multi-year low exchange stocks.
Because China accounts for more than half of global base metal demand and a
significant share of global metal supply, economic developments in China will
continue to be a major factor in metal markets and prices over the long term.
Notwithstanding a mid-summer slowdown and negativity surrounding property
developer Evergrande, Chinese demand is expected to remain strong in 2021.
The principal reason for our positive outlook for metal prices, as discussed
in our recent 2021 Annual Report, is the growing recognition that metals and
minerals are essential for addressing climate change and adapting to a green
economy. Metals are essential for electrification: copper for power
generation, transmission and energy storage; nickel and lead for energy
storage; and zinc for extending the lifespan of products. The two key metals
for Parys Mountain are copper and zinc.
At current mid 2021 metal prices, copper production from a Parys Mountain mine
would represent a little over 50% of the net smelter revenue under the
expanded Case C of the 2021 PEA, while zinc and lead would represent 28% and
12% respectively. The PEA indicates production of 103,500 tonnes of copper
over the project’s 12-year mine life, equivalent to an average production of
8,500 tonnes of copper per year.
The need for metals and minerals – Minerals are essential for a green
economy
It is expected that post-pandemic global stimulus plans and the challenging
targets of the Paris Agreement to achieve climate neutrality by 2050 will
provide long term demand and support for critical and strategic minerals and
thus for metal prices, including in particular copper, and indeed lead and
zinc.
Amid resurging demand and as the world recovers from the pandemic, trillions
of dollars being invested to rebuild infrastructure as well as transitioning
to a green economy, the outlook for copper is extremely bullish. Governments
around the world are launching huge stimulus programmes focused on job
creation and environmental stability, leading to the potential for a
multi-decade commodity cycle ahead driven by decarbonisation of the global
economy and a shift to cleaner energy.
The International Energy Agency (IEA), in its May 2021 report, The Role of
Critical Minerals in Clean Energy Transitions, states that the rapid
deployment of clean energy technologies as part of energy transitions implies
a significant increase in demand for minerals. The IEA report suggests that an
energy system powered by clean energy technologies differs profoundly from one
fuelled by traditional hydrocarbon resources. It concludes that solar
photovoltaic plants, wind farms, and battery-electric vehicles (BEVs)
generally require more minerals to build than their fossil fuel-based
counterparts.
According to the IEA, a typical electric car requires six times the mineral
inputs of a conventional car and an onshore wind plant requires nine times
more mineral resources than a gas-fired plant.
Internal combustion engine vehicles (ICEVs) are the greatest contributors to
carbon emissions in the UK. As recognized by the Committee on Climate
Change, for transport to hit ‘net zero’, the internal combustion engine
needs to be eliminated from cars. To switch the UK’s fleet of 31.5 million
ICEVs to BEVs it would take an estimated 2,362,500 tonnes of copper, plus
other critical minerals. In addition, the energy revolution towards
renewables, that is, wind, solar, wave, tidal, hydro, geothermal and nuclear,
together with the newly built infrastructure for delivery, are highly reliant
on mineral-based technologies.
A letter authored by Natural History Museum Head of Earth Sciences, Prof.
Richard Herrington, delivered to the Committee on Climate Change, explains
that to meet UK electric car targets for 2050 the UK would require at least
half of the world’s copper production, as well as other minerals, and to
replace all UK-based vehicles today with electric vehicles would take 2.36
million tonnes of copper, representing approximately half of the world’s
annual copper production.
The focus on the renewable energy transition has continued to intensify since
March 2020, with the world's major economies — the U.S., China and Europe
— establishing carbon-neutrality goals through to 2060. As policymakers
injected unprecedented amounts of stimulus into the global economy toward
recovery from the COVID-19-induced downturn, some of this investment was
directed toward boosting the rollout of green energy technologies to reduce
global carbon emissions.
Based on S&P Global projections for the rollout of solar, wind and EVs to
2025, together with analysis of metals intensities in these use cases, S&P
Global Market Intelligence forecasts demand to grow by a CAGR of 15% for
copper, 35% for lithium, 28% for cobalt and 35% for nickel.
Copper is a major component of EVs; it is used in the anode current collector
of lithium-ion batteries, in the stator and rotor of induction motors, in
inverters and wiring. Pure battery electric vehicles, or BEVs, which are
powered exclusively by the electricity stored in their battery, are more
copper-intensive than plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, or PHEVs, which have
both a battery-powered motor and an internal combustion engine.
Global copper demand will be positively impacted by an expansion in
electrification infrastructure to support growth in energy demand, as well as
from the expansion and upgrade of telecommunications and EV charging networks,
particularly in China and the U.S.
Copper demand from solar and wind energy and from EVs, including e-buses, is
projected to account for 2.8 Mt in 2025, which represents approximately 10.8%
of the total forecast global copper demand. The wide variation in copper usage
intensity in the renewable energy sector, however, simultaneously poses
significant upside and downside risks to copper demand to 2025.
Mineral resources are the key to a more sustainable future.
To quote Prof. Richard Herrington, “Mineral resources are the lifeblood of
our modern society and the key to a more sustainable future. Today, we are in
the middle of disruptive innovation in emerging green energy, e-mobility and
clean technology, triggered by pressing societal challenges. The growing need
for carbon-neutral technology creates a strong demand for minerals, metals and
advanced materials”.
Development of a new mine at Parys Mountain, producing copper, zinc and lead
with gold and silver credits, can deliver economic growth in the UK, regional
jobs for the community and business opportunities for local service providers.
Hardly any of these critical and strategic metals, essential for reduction in
our carbon footprint and transition to a green economy, are currently produced
in the UK leaving the country entirely dependent on imports.
This creates a unique and timely opportunity, both for Anglesey Mining and for
the UK, to develop a new, modern, mine at Parys Mountain in an environmentally
sustainable manner.
About Anglesey Mining plc
Anglesey Mining is listed on the London Stock Exchange and currently has
225,475,732 ordinary shares in issue.
Anglesey is developing its 100% owned Parys Mountain copper-zinc-lead deposit
in North Wales, UK with a 2020 reported resource of 5.2 million tonnes at 4.3%
combined base metals in the Indicated category and 11.7 million tonnes at 2.8%
combined base metals in the Inferred category.
Anglesey holds an almost 20% interest, and management rights to the
Grangesberg Iron project in Sweden, together with a right of first refusal to
increase its interest by a further 50.1%. Anglesey also holds 12% of
Labrador Iron Mines Holdings Limited which holds direct shipping iron ore
deposits in Labrador and Quebec.
For further information, please contact:
Jo Battershill, CEO/MD +44 (0)7540 366000
John Kearney, Chairman + 1 416 362 6686
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