Low-Cost Uranium Project In Argentina To Meet Domestic Supply Demand

April 27, 2021 (Investorideas.com Newswire) Blue Sky’s Amarillo Grande Uranium-Vanadium Project in the Rio Negro province includes the flagship Ivana project, which boasts Argentina’s largest NI 43-101 resource estimate for uranium, with a significant vanadium credit.
Blue Sky Uranium Corp. (BSK:TSX.V; BKUCF:OTCQB; MAL2:FSE) controls a district-scale (300,000-hectare) uranium and vanadium exploration project in southern Argentina.
Uranium is required for nuclear power plants. Like aeroplanes, when something goes wrong with nuclear – it’s dramatic – it makes headlines and burns into everyone’s brain.
[A DYI home-owner in Oregon keeled off his garage roof while installing a solar panel—and it skewed the data].
Nuclear energy now supplies 10% of the world’s electricity and is responsible for one-third of global carbon-free electricity.
Vanadium is used as a steel additive in crankshafts, gears, tools and knives. Brain surgeons typically use vanadium scalpels.
After a series of deadly building collapses, the Standardization Administration for the People’s Republic of China announced a new rebar standardr—requiring the use of vanadium.
BSK is part of the Grosso Group, led by Joe Grosso. The group has a vast network of local and regional contacts in Argentina. Joe Grosso is in the Argentina Mining Hall of Fame.
“Joe Grosso can get a meeting with anybody in Argentina at any time,” confirms Niko Cacos, president and CEO of Blue Sky.
We asked Cacos to explain the difference between a “district” and a deposit.
“A single deposit, could occupy a footprint, maybe 10 kilometers wide,” explained Cacos. “We have 300,000 hectares of tenements. A corridor that is 145 kilometers in length by 50 kilometers wide, almost the distance from Vancouver to Seattle.”
A Preliminary Economic Assessment (PEA) on the Ivana deposit confirmed an Inferred mineral resource estimate of just under 23 million pounds of uranium and 11.5 million pounds of vanadium.
“The PEA numbers indicate that if the project was in production today, it would rank amongst the lowest operating costs on the planet,” stated Cacos.
At a typical uranium long-term contract of $50/lb, and a vanadium spot price of $8/lb, the minerals have a current market value of about $1.2 billion.
Recovery of uranium oxide is 84.6%, and of vanadium pentoxide 52.5%, so the value of recovered minerals will be less than that.
BSK has a current market cap of $42 million.
“The drill program that’s currently underway on the Amarillo Grande district is testing the scalability of our asset,” stated Cacos. “How big can this project get? 100 million, 200 million pounds of uranium?”
BSK has the same kind of grades you find in Kazakhstan—the world’s biggest uranium producer.
“The metallurgy is simple, cost effective and environmentally friendly,” confirmed Cacos. “It’s cheap to extract. And we announced recently that we’re further refining that.”
Electricity generated by nuclear reactors is becoming more accepted as a safe, reliable and secure way to generate electricity,” stated Cacos. “And because of that, we’re seeing more reactors being built.”
An example of the shifting nuclear landscape: Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba are making small modular reactors, to power off-the-grid Industrial projects.
“Argentina is a nuclear country,” stated Cacos, “They’ve been in the nuclear business since the 1950s. They have a pilot enrichment plant not far away from our project. They also having three nuclear plants, with more coming on line.”
If Argentina was a country with no nuclear infrastructure, it would take a decade to implement the legal framework to transport nuclear materials.
That legal framework is already in place.
“The only thing Argentina does not do is mine uranium,” explained Cacos, “they have to import it and they’re paying a long-term contract price of about $85/lb to Kazakhstan.”
That contract expires in the next couple years. Blue Sky’s objective is to supply Argentina with a domestic source of uranium, and export whatever is left over.
Politically, that would make any BSK problem, an Argentina government problem, which—from BSK’s point of view—would turn a good jurisdiction into a great one.
There is a law in Argentina that stipulates that if there is a domestic uranium supply, Argentine nuclear reactors must purchase from domestic producers at prevailing world prices.
Part of the reason for The Grosso Group’s success in international mine development is its history of strong community relations.
The Grosso Group has been practicing “Social Responsibility” before it was a thing.
“The business of mining carries great responsibility for the well being of communities that surround our operations and to the protection of the environment,” states the Grosso Group.
Grosso Group’s commitment encompasses:
Respect and preservation of local customs, traditions, heritage
Timely and frequent consultation and transparent communication
Environmental protection and risk management
Health, safety and education
Sustainable economic development that ensures the welfare of all
Accountability and fulfillment of commitments
Foster long term relationships with communities, local governments and all stakeholders through responsible sustainable practices.
“In Argentina, we have a very few farmers on our land package,” confirms Cacos, “You can probably count them on fingers of both hands. We’ve signed formal agreements. Blue Sky has permission to do drill work on the farmer’s land. We’re on good terms with everybody.”
The PEA anticipates an open pit mine with a 13-year life-of-mine (LOM).
The PEA also reveals attractive economics. At USD $50/lb U3O8 and USD $15/lb V2O5, the post-tax NPV is USD $135.2M, internal rate of return is 29.3% and capex is USD $128.05M.
“The $128 million capex includes a $28 million contingency,” stated Cacos. “If we add more pounds of uranium, the capex is not going to increase much. Whatever pounds we add will be gravy.”
“With all in sustaining costs of $18 a pound, if this project were in production today with current prices, it would make money,” added Cacos.
Blue Sky has 162 million shares outstanding, 95 million warrants priced at $0.28 and 16 million options priced at $0.26. The stock is currently trading at $0.26—up 160% in the last six months.
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