Date: Dec 20, 2018
Northern Cobalt (ASX: N27) has shouldered into the vanadium space after pegging up the Snettisham project in Alaska’s south-west.
The project comprises 48 mineral claims and is close to existing key infrastructure including the Snettisham hydroelectric power plant and an adjacent deep-water channel for shipments.
Alaska’s capital city Junea is only 50km from the project with an experienced local workforce due to the numerous gold and base metal mines in the region.
According to Northern Cobalt, the Snettisham project was appealing due to its proximity to infrastructure, large-scale potential and the climate, which makes the project amenable to year-round exploration.
“Not only is the company placing itself as a potential supplier of cobalt to the electric vehicle markets, it has now acquired a significant vanadium project that gives it exposure to the demand for the metal in vanadium flow batteries and the increasing demand for use in high-strength steel in the building industry,” Northern Cobalt managing director Michael Schwarz said.
The acquisition was low-cost because Snettisham was not subject to an existing mineral claim. As a result, Northern Cobalt was able to simply peg-up the ground.
Snettisham vanadium project
Since the 1950s, exploration at Snettisham has focused on iron ore mineralisation, with the most recent owner Arrowstar Resources relinquishing the property when the iron ore market plunged in 2013.
“After reviewing data from historic iron ore exploration, we identified high levels of vanadium at Snettisham, which combined with magnetic surveys and analysis of regional geology, suggest there is significant mineralisation at a depth of 50m to 100m,” Mr Schwarz told Small Caps.
“The mineralisation of this vanadium bearing magnetite system is consistent with many of the economic vanadium deposits currently in production,” Mr Schwarz added.
Preliminary exploration will involve a drone-based, low-level magnetic survey across the entire project.
Northern Cobalt anticipates it will have the data in the new year and will then carry out detailed modelling to identify primary targets.
The company plans to undertake a maiden drilling campaign before mid-2019.