SGMET SGMET is the essential metallurgical consulting service provider and equipment supplier for the Minerals Processing, Mining, Metallurgy & Aggregate industries.

SGMET offers a comprehensive range of consulting services in Mining Operation and Minerals Processing. Our team members provide a strategic plan and tactical advice independently to our clients and as well as personalised professional services to mining companies, engineering firms, financial institutions and investors. The SGMET consulting team is highly skilled specialists in sulfide and oxide o

res flotation and comprises with expertise in flotation modelling, simulation, and optimisation of flotation circuits. We are available to discuss how we might able helping you in consultation sectors and create testworks programme that suits your need and help you stay onward in your valuable projects. SGMET consulting capabilities:

Comminution – Crushing, Screening, Classification, SAG and Ball milling. Flotation – Base metals, Precious and Non-precious group metals. Aspects of electrochemistry applied to sulfide minerals flotation. Aspects of electrochemistry applied to oxide minerals flotation. Characterisation measurements of big industrial flotation cells. Methods of collecting metallurgical data in processing plants. Designing and optimising the metallurgical processes. Pulp chemistry measurements and interpretation. Surface chemistry and its application to flotation. Mineralogical methods and data interpretation. Advice grade control and mine reconciliation. Design and statistical analysis of plant trials. Mass balancing flotation circuit data. Economics and communication. Laboratory flotation testing. Advice on sampling.

Aussie nickel miners receive a major boost - by A Eastwood:  The US Government has blocked Indonesia’s bid to become a n...
01/12/2023

Aussie nickel miners receive a major boost - by A Eastwood:

The US Government has blocked Indonesia’s bid to become a nickel free-trade partner in a move that has been applauded by Australian nickel miners.

While Indonesian President Joko Widodo lobbied for access to the US Government’s $US500 billion Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), The Australian Financial Review (AFR) has reported Widodo and US President Joe Biden have not been able to come to an agreement.

Under the Act, for EV buyers to achieve a tax credit they must purchase a vehicle whereby 40 per cent of the materials used in the vehicle’s battery are sourced from the US or from a free-trade partner such as Australia.

There are 21 countries on the US free-trade agreement list, including Canada, Mexico and Korea, but Indonesia does not feature.

As Indonesia began its petition to join, several Australian players sounded the alarm, including BHP, Chalice Mining and Wyloo Metals.

“If the world wants batteries and EVs to be both affordable and environmentally sustainable, investment in Australian and Canadian production must be encouraged,” Wyloo Metals chief executive Luca Giacovazzi told The AFR in October.

“A free-trade agreement on nickel with Indonesia would significantly reduce the attractiveness of investing in countries with higher ESG standards and leave consumers with no choice but to use dirty nickel.”

Some of the biggest concerns came from Indonesia’s weaker labor and environmental control laws.

“It’s pleasing to see that the US has made it clear in its discussions with Indonesia that any possible free trade agreement must factor in strict ESG requirements,” Giacovazzi said.

Saudi Arabia studies graphite, rare earths trading platform - by  Saudi Arabia is exploring the potential launch of a ne...
01/12/2023

Saudi Arabia studies graphite, rare earths trading platform - by

Saudi Arabia is exploring the potential launch of a new commodity trading platform for battery materials, including graphite and rare earths, its vice minister of industry and mineral resources said.

Riyadh’s efforts to build an economy that is not dependent on oil include a shift towards mining the country’s untapped mineral resources – worth about $1.33 trillion including copper, lithium, phosphate and gold, but investing in overseas assets.

“To be a minerals hub you have to have it all and we are studying a future minerals commodity exchange for graphite, rare earths, lithium, cobalt and even nickel, as there is no efficient commodity exchange nor price-finding mechanism for some,” Khalid bin Saleh Al-Mudaifer told Reuters in an interview.

The Kingdom has been studying setting up the trading platform for the past three months and it does not expect a decision to be made before the next six, Al-Mudaifer said.

“We don’t yet know if it would be feasible … because the quantities are small and the specifications differ, it’s not as easy as aluminium or crude oil.”

There are currently no exchanges offering contracts for graphite or rare earth metals, both important materials for electric vehicles and the energy transition.

Lithium and cobalt can be traded on the London Metal Exchange and Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME).

“We are working with several consultants and with the people who trade the commodities,” he said.

Saudi Arabia’s investment fund Manara Minerals, a joint venture between state-owned miner Ma’aden and the Public Investment Fund (PIF), was set up in January to buy assets overseas. It will prioritise copper, nickel, iron ore and lithium.

Its first major foray abroad was a deal to become a 10% shareholder in Vale’s $26 billion copper and nickel unit last July.

First Quantum starts international arbitration on Cobre Panama mine:  First Quantum Minerals will suspend its current-ye...
01/12/2023

First Quantum starts international arbitration on Cobre Panama mine:

First Quantum Minerals will suspend its current-year production outlook for the Cobre mine in Panama and has initiated international arbitration over a contested contract with the country's government, the miner said on Friday.

The lucrative Cobre Panama copper mine has sparked public anger in the country, starting as small, environmental protests that have morphed into bigger demonstrations against the government on charges that the contract was too generous.

The contract, agreed between the company and the Panama government in October, provided First Quantum a 20-year mining right with an option to extend for another 20 years, in return for $375 million in annual revenue to Panama.

On Tuesday, Panama President Laurentino Cortizo said the Cobre Panama mine would be shut down, hours after the country's Supreme Court declared its contract unconstitutional.

First Quantum said on Friday its unit had started arbitration before the International Court of Arbitration to protect its rights under the 2023 concession agreement that the government of Panama agreed to earlier this year. It provides for arbitration in Miami, Florida.

Lab at an underground mine in Australia receives first cosmic radiation signals:  The Stawell Underground Physics Labora...
03/11/2023

Lab at an underground mine in Australia receives first cosmic radiation signals:

The Stawell Underground Physics Laboratory, located at Arete Capital’s Stawell Gold Mine in Western Victoria, Australia, has received the first transmissions from a muon detector placed 1 kilometre underground.

The muon detector records the amount of cosmic radiation that reaches the lab. Muons are heavier versions of electrons made from the collision of cosmic rays with atoms in Earth’s atmosphere.

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At this point, low levels of radiation must be recorded to ensure that the environment surrounding the SABRE South experiment, which will be transported to the laboratory in 2024, is as pristine as possible in order to detect dark matter particles.

In its first few days, the muon detector recorded about five signals per day, far lower than the more than 1.8 million interactions that would be expected above ground.

The SABRE South experiment mirrors an experiment in the Northern Hemisphere and will determine whether readings taken by Italian researchers are a result of seasonal fluctuations or dark matter.

“Our first data collections showed that by building the laboratory 1 kilometre underground in the Stawell Gold Mine, we have managed to reduce the cosmic radiation that will reach our dark matter detector,” Elisabetta Barberio, director of the ARC Center of Excellence for Dark Matter Particle Physics (CDM), said in a media statement.

“Our scientists in Melbourne and around Australia will be able to continue to monitor muon levels to ensure cosmic radiation remains low. It is a very significant step in the project that scientists around the world are watching very closely.”

Bears bet big that nickel can close the product gap:  The bears are out in force on the London Metal Exchange (LME) nick...
03/11/2023

Bears bet big that nickel can close the product gap:

The bears are out in force on the London Metal Exchange (LME) nickel market.

Fund players have lifted their bets on lower prices to levels last seen in 2019, or even earlier if expressed as a percentage of open interest. It’s not hard to understand why.

The LME three-month nickel price has been on the slide for most of the year, sucking in momentum-tracking technical funds. Currently trading around $18,000 per metric ton, nickel is down by 42% on the start of January and challenging chart support levels dating back to late 2021.

The technical weakness is a mirror of an overwhelmingly bearish fundamental picture. The global nickel market is entering a period of massive oversupply thanks to an Indonesian production boom.

Everything is pointing to still lower prices.

However, this being devilish nickel, things are not that simple.

The big short is a bet on the speed with which the market can convert the growing surplus in the lower-grade intermediate products part of the market to LME-deliverable Class I refined metal.

Investment funds were net short of the LME nickel contract to the tune of 17,678 contracts as of last Friday, a slight reduction from the previous week’s 18,550 which was the biggest short in four years.

Allowing for the drop in activity since the LME’s nickel blow-out in March last year, the collective short position relative to open interest is the largest since the LME started publishing its Commitments of Traders Report at the start of 2018.

It would probably be bigger still were it not for the fact that many funds are still keeping clear of the London market after last year’s turbulence.

The shift in fund positioning over the last two years has still been huge. Investment funds were holding record long positions in February 2022 and the net long was still a substantial 7,000 contracts at the start of this year.

The swing in investment fund net positioning this year alone has been equivalent to around 154,000 tons of selling.

The big short is a bet on a big surplus.

The global nickel market moved into supply-demand surplus in May last year and has been there ever since, according to the International Nickel Study Group. (INSG)

The Group’s latest forecast is that supply will exceed demand by 223,000 metric tons this year after a 104,000-metric ton surplus in 2022. The gap is expected to widen to 239,000 metric tons next year.

The cumulative supply excess is huge relative to the size of the global market. Global consumption was 2.95 million tons last year, the INSG calculates.

Nickel demand is expected to grow strongly over the coming years thanks to the metal’s usage in electric vehicle (EV) batteries.

It’s just that supply is going to grow even faster as Indonesia builds out ever more processing capacity in its bid to become a global hub for EV battery materials.

Indonesia’s mined nickel production surged by 48% last year and has grown another 31% so far this year, according to the INSG. The country’s output of 1.3 million tons in January-August accounted for more than half of global production.

The wave of new Indonesian supply has until now come in forms of metal such as matte and hydroxide that aren’t accepted as good delivery by the LME or the Shanghai Futures Exchange.

Nickel bears are betting that’s about to change.

Indonesia has become a giant laboratory test of nickel’s singular chemistry with multiple players working on new ways of processing the country’s relatively low-grade ore into higher-purity forms.

As the technology gap between so-called Class II intermediate products and high-purity Class I refined metal closes, so too has the market’s price disconnect narrowed.

There is a consensus view among analysts that nickel’s building surplus is increasingly spilling over into the refined metal section of the market as Indonesia’s product mix changes.

The LME is itself an accelerator of this process. The exchange’s nickel recovery plan includes fast-tracking brand applications by Chinese producers who are bringing online new refined metal capacity.

Huayou Cobalt’s full-plate nickel has already been approved with applications by Jingmen Gem and CNGR New Energy Science in the LME’s in-tray. The three new brands come with the combined annual production capacity of 29,000 metric tons.

It’s worth noting that there were 1,236 metric tons of Chinese-brand nickel in the LME system at the end of September, the first time Chinese metal has shown up in the LME’s monthly report since it started publishing stocks origin figures in January.

Estimated arrival time?
Although the direction of travel seems clear in the nickel market, the timing remains uncertain.

LME headline stocks have rebuilt from under 37,000 metric tons at the end of August to a current 44,784 but it’s still a low figure by historical standards and flatters to deceive.

A recent flurry of cancellations in preparation for physical load-out has left available stocks at just 37,062 metric tons, little changed since August.

It’s clear that the process of changing nickel’s supply-chain mix hasn’t yet evolved to the point that LME stocks can rebuild to levels reflective of the size of the global surplus.

The exact timing of that tipping-point is still unknown, which means the big short is still a big bet that the supply chain can close the nickel product gap sooner rather than later.

US optimistic it will reach critical minerals deal with EU:    The United States is optimistic it will conclude an agree...
02/10/2023

US optimistic it will reach critical minerals deal with EU:

The United States is optimistic it will conclude an agreement with the European Union to allow critical minerals mined or processed in Europe to qualify for US clean vehicle tax breaks, a senior U.S. official said on Monday.

The transatlantic partners are negotiating whether and how EU critical minerals, such as lithium and nickel, can qualify for green subsidies under the US Inflation Reduction Act, which promotes products manufactured in North America.

Jose Fernandez, undersecretary for economic growth, energy and the environment at the State Department, told a briefing in Brussels that both sides were in intense negotiations.

"I'm hopeful, optimistic. Negotiations are good. We realise that we need to work together and I am confident that we will have an agreement," he said.

He added there was no plan to tie an agreement on critical minerals to the result of separate transatlantic negotiations to resolve a bilateral dispute over US import tariffs on EU steel.

The United States signed a minerals deal with Japan in March. Now, both the EU and Britain are looking for the same.

Fernandez also said he was meeting EU officials to discuss an agenda for the next joint Trade and Technology Council, which the United States will host before the end of the year.

He said both sides aimed to work on establishing safeguards for artificial intelligence, which they agree should support democratic values, human rights and individual freedoms.

"I think there's a desire to get beyond those kinds of general statements and to have more concrete," he said, adding there was no specific timetable to reach an agreement, but a sense this needed to occur sooner rather than later.

Australia and France sign critical minerals agreement - by K Harford:   Australia and France have signed an agreement to...
02/10/2023

Australia and France sign critical minerals agreement - by K Harford:

Australia and France have signed an agreement to pursue stronger cooperation on critical mineral supply chains.

Minister for Resources and Northern Australia Madeleine King travelled to Europe and the United Kingdom last week to promote Australia as a consistent critical minerals supplier that will help the world reach its net-zero targets.

During the visit, the Bilateral Dialogue on Critical Minerals agreement was signed by King and France’s Minister for the energy transition Agnès Pannier-Runacher in Paris.

Under the agreement, France and Australia will cooperate on a joint study into critical minerals supply chains.

The aim is to identify the specific needs of both countries in relation to batteries and rare earth magnets which are needed for clean energy technology, as well as high-technology medical and defence applications.

“The joint study will also look at what the governments of France and Australia can do to overcome obstacles to secure stable supply chains for critical minerals,” King said.

“Australia has abundant reserves of critical minerals and our Critical Minerals Strategy sets out the pathway for Australia to diversify global supply chains and become a globally significant supplier by 2030.

“Australia also has a reputation as a reliable export partner, has strong environmental and social standards and corporate governance frameworks and is an attractive place for foreign investment, particularly in the resources sector.”

Minister King said Australia and France are both committed to lowering emissions and achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.

“The world’s clean energy transition will ride on the back of Australia’s critical minerals,” King said.

The joint study is due to be completed by the end of 2023.

Gold Road back on track with De Grey - by A Eastwood:     Gold Road has returned to 19.9 per cent shareholding in De Gre...
02/10/2023

Gold Road back on track with De Grey - by A Eastwood:

Gold Road has returned to 19.9 per cent shareholding in De Grey Mining after subscribing to the two-tranche institutional placement by De Grey at $1.05 per share.

De Grey announced the launch of a fully underwritten two-tranche placement to raise $300 million on September 28, with proceeds allocated toward various mining activities.

These activities include the finalisation of detailed engineering, refining the contracting strategy and continuing exploration drilling across both the Greater Hemi gold project and regional areas in WA.

According to De Grey, the placement will provide the company with significant balance sheet strength and flexibility to progress activities to support the Hemi project ex*****on schedule.

“Delivery of the Hemi DFS (definitive feasibility study) is a major milestone for the company and sets a solid foundation from which the company can proceed with confidence to the next stage of development of the Hemi gold project,” De Grey managing director Glenn Jardine said.

“This placement is instrumental to the company’s focus on de-risking further the construction through the above activities in support of an updated capital estimate, project funding and FID (final investment decision) in mid-2024.”

Gold Road has committed to 49,438,097 new shares under Tranche 1 of the placement and said it was pleased to return to 19.9 per cent shareholding.

Philippines seeks more sites for critical minerals in govt-led exploration:   The Philippine government will step up sup...
20/09/2023

Philippines seeks more sites for critical minerals in govt-led exploration:

The Philippine government will step up support for the local mining industry via exploration activities starting next year to identify more areas where critical minerals such as nickel and chromium can be extracted, a senior official said on Tuesday.

The government-led exploration, which should help minimize risks for investors and provide necessary data for investment decisions, is the latest government measure to revitalize the Southeast Asian country’s still vastly undeveloped mining sector.

“We want to help the industry with this critical step in the process,” said Carlos Primo David, undersecretary at the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.

“We want to give some guidance on where to explore, what to explore, and it will be covered in a new regulation,” David told reporters on the sidelines of an industry conference.

The Philippines, one of the main nickel ore suppliers to top metals consumer China and which also produces copper, gold and other minerals, is seeking to attract more investment in mining to support economic growth.

The government has removed restrictive mining policies, including a ban on open-pit mining, and is working to draw investment into its domestic nickel processing sector to squeeze value out of its metals and minerals industry.

“Our intention is to be able to identify (more) mineralized areas…for the purpose of being able to declare an area a mineral reservation. For any mining development in a mineral reservation, it goes with an extra royalty for the government,” David said.

On domestic nickel ore processing, David said the government aims to add hopefully one more facility before the term of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. expires in 2028.

There are only two nickel ore processing facilities in the Philippines currently, both partly owned by the country’s top nickel ore producer and exporter Nickel Asia Corp.

NSW Mining reacts to budget - by A Eastwood:   NSW Minerals Council chief executive officer Stephen Galilee has reacted ...
20/09/2023

NSW Mining reacts to budget - by A Eastwood:

NSW Minerals Council chief executive officer Stephen Galilee has reacted to the newly announced New South Wales Budget, saying that regional mining communities will be “hit hard” by the cutting of several mining-related funding programs.

The Budget has cut three programs, including the Resources for Regions program, the Critical Minerals Activation program and the Coal Innovation program.

“The abolition of the ‘Resources for Regions’ program will directly affect the quality of life of all people living in the 26 local government areas previously eligible for program funding,” Galilee said.

“This was an important program that delivered funding worth hundreds of millions over many years to local councils representing mining communities, helping to provide improved local infrastructure and services.

“It is therefore extremely disappointing that despite the extra billions to be delivered in mining royalties, the Budget cuts several key mining-related funding programs

“These cuts will negatively impact mining communities, and hinder the development of further long-term regional economic opportunities.”

According to Galilee, mining royalties are forecasted to deliver $13.2 billion to the NSW Government over the next four years, which will include $2.7 billion from higher royalty rates which are set to be introduced from July 1 2024.

“This is the single biggest revenue decision taken by the NSW Government in this budget, confirming the important role mining is playing in repairing the NSW budget position,” Galilee said.

“The billions delivered in royalty revenue are only possible due to the contribution of the hard working people of our regional mining communities.

“Without our mining workers, their families and their communities, there would be no mining, and no royalties.”

Newmont draws on Goldcorp integration lessons as it nears closing of Newcrest deal - by M Webb:    Leading gold mining c...
20/09/2023

Newmont draws on Goldcorp integration lessons as it nears closing of Newcrest deal - by M Webb:

Leading gold mining company Newmont is confident it will achieve yearly synergies worth $500 million within the first two years of closing its acquisition of Australian miner Newcrest, CEO Tom Palmer affirmed on Tuesday.

During his address at the Denver Gold Forum, Palmer highlighted how Newmont is leveraging valuable insights gained from successfully integrating Goldcorp just over four years ago.

When Newmont acquired Goldcorp in 2019, the group committed to delivering yearly synergies of $ 165 million through its ‘full potential’ programme, which improves costs and productivity through the rapid replication of leading processes and advanced technology.

At Peñasquito in Mexico, Newmont had “blown that target out of the water”, Palmer said, noting that the group had delivered more than $700 million in yearly synergies, with over 80% of this value coming from mining and processing improvements.

He explained that in the processing plant, Newmont had ironed out bottlenecks in crushing, grinding and floating to deliver more than $ 300 million in synergies. In the two openpits, the average payload on its fleet of 85 Komatsu 930E has been increased by 10%, translating to an additional 12 million tonnes a year of material moved at “next to zero cost”.

Combined with other load and haul improvements, Newmont has increased the total material moved by more than 20% compared with 2020, with no additional equipment.

Palmer also referenced the turnaround of Tanami, in Australia’s Northern Territory. The mine joined the Newmont portfolio through the acquisition of Normandy in 2002.

“We have transformed the operation from being on the divestment table in 2013 to a core member of Newmont’s portfolio and one of Australia’s great gold mines. It is a prime example of how we apply our full potential programme to deliver value and earn the right to grow,” he said.

The Normandy acquisition also added the Ahafo operation to Newmont's portfolio. The Ghana operations had little value assigned to them in 2002, but over the last decade, the Ahafo district has been massively expanded. Once the new Ahafo North mine is completed, combined with the underground potential of Subika, Apensu and Awonsu, the district will be capable of producing 850 000 oz/y beyond 2050.

Newmont expects the implementation of its full-potential programme to deliver at least $ 200 million of the targeted $ 500 million a year in synergies from the Newcrest transaction. The balance will be derived from general and administrative synergies ($ 100 million a year) and supply chain synergies ($ 200 million a year).

Newmont aims to close the Newcrest transaction in the fourth quarter. Earlier this week, it received clearance from Australia's Foreign Investment Review Board to proceed with its takeover of Newcrest.

It also received a clearance from Japan's Fair Trade Commission last week, allowing the transaction to be closed anytime post September-end.

The deal still awaits the Newcrest shareholder vote, scheduled for October 13, as well as nods from regulators in the Philippines and Papua New Guinea.

If the deal goes through, Newcrest shareholders would receive 0.400 of a Newmont share for each share, with an implied value of A$29.27 a share.

London gold body aims to create secure global database:    The London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) on Thursday call...
15/09/2023

London gold body aims to create secure global database:

The London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) on Thursday called for proposals from service firms to create a secure global database that would improve trust in the gold market’s value chain.

Gold refineries must source gold responsibly under the industry body’s accreditation requirements, allowing them access to London’s bullion market, the world’s largest.

The group’s database of Russian gold bars held by banks in London helps to prevent sanctions evasion by Russian companies.

“Our goal is to establish an efficient platform combining information about the sources of LBMA Good Delivery metal, refinery production, vault holdings, and other key intelligence all within the context of enhanced standards for responsible and sustainable sourcing,” LBMA chief executive Ruth Crowell said in a statement. Proposals should be submitted by the end of September.

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