VANCOUVER,
April 15, 2013 /PRNewswire/ - Bear
Creek Mining (TSX Venture: BCM / BVL: BCM) ("Bear Creek" or the
"Company") is pleased to announce that the public hearing required
for Environmental and Social Impact Assessment ("ESIA")
approval has been successfully completed with strong community
support for the project and its benefits. The hearing, run by
representatives of the Ministry of Energy and Mines ("MEM")
and attended by Company representatives and its consultant, AMEC,
was attended by approximately 800 people representing all directly
and indirectly affected communities. Following completion of
the hearing, MEM comments on the ESIA (submitted by the Company in
December 2012) are required within 90
days.
This milestone maintains the Company's guidance
for ESIA approval by the end of 2013. Earlier approval is
possible given the strength of the study, the surrounding community
support, and the successful completion of a life of mine, community
investment and support agreement.
Andrew Swarthout,
CEO, states "The positive outcome of the public hearing process,
held constructively and with strong participation by all parties,
met all of our expectations. The strong support for the
project reflects the transparency and mutual respect held between
Bear Creek and the communities with whom we have worked for over 8
years. Concurrently, the completion of a life of mine
investment and support agreement places the project on a solid path
for development with predictable social license costs and
commitments. This agreement, which establishes an innovative
foundation structure for approval and deployment of community
investment, exemplifies the trust developed between our communities
and Bear Creek."
Life of Mine ("LOM") Investment
Agreement- The Company entered into a life of mine
agreement with the District of Carabaya, five surrounding
communities, and relevant, ancillary organizations specifying
investment commitments over the 23 year project life, including the
pre-production period. The agreement and a resolution by the
communities stating their agreement to the terms has been duly
signed and registered by the required elected officials.
Under the agreement, annual payments are to be made into a trust
designed to fund community projects totaling S/4M nuevos soles per
year (approximately US$1.6M per
year), beginning with installments payable in 2013. Payments will
remain constant throughout the pre-development phase and during
production. Cessation or interruptions of operations will
cause a pro-rata decrease in the annual disbursements.
Investment Trust- As an integral
part of the agreement described above, a trust or foundation
structure is established for approval of investments and
disbursement of funds. Each of the five communities (Corani
(Aconsaya), Chacaconiza, Quelcaya, Isivilla, and Aymana) has agreed
to the formation of committees which will consider and approve
investment projects for the benefit of the communities, such as
schools, medical facilities, roads, or other
infrastructure. The amounts of the total annual
investment to be directed towards each community is agreed to and
defined in the agreement. Bear Creek is an oversight member
of the trust and will assist in every way towards the success of
the projects; however, the Company will have no voting
powers. In this transparent structure, Bear Creek's intent is
to appoint independent members with community social responsibility
experience and credibility in order to provide oversight of the
foundation's functions in meeting its commitments to the
communities and all of its members.
Mr. Elsiario Antunez de Mayolo, Vice president
of Operations and Peru General
Manager states, "We are very pleased that Bear Creek has reached
such a comprehensive agreement addressing the long-term social
license with our communities. We wish to thank our
communities for the confidence and trust placed in Bear Creek as we
formalized this mutually beneficial agreement. Additionally, we
acknowledge our professionals who made it possible to establish the
strong bonds necessary in order to build a project which will
provide benefits to our communities for decades to come."
Edmundo Caceres,
Mayor of Corani states, "This agreement will provide our
communities the opportunity to implement long needed social
investment projects, which will be used for the development of our
entire district. Projects such as education, health and the
improvement of alpaca wool (our most important business activity)
will become a reality thanks to the use of the proceeds of this
agreement. We look forward to working with Bear Creek in
partnership as the project advances."
The ESIA is based upon the feasibility study
("FS" or "Feasibility Study") SEDAR filed on December 22, 2011 entitled "Corani Project, Form
43-101F1 Technical Report, Feasibility Study following the
completion of the Corani FS (see News Release dated November 9, 2011) which establishes Corani as
having 270 million ounces silver plus 4.8 billion pounds of
combined lead and zinc in Proven plus Probable reserves contained
within an open pit mine having a 1.69:1 stripping ratio and 22,500
tonnes per day processing rate. The project will produce an
average of 13.4 million ounces of silver and 250 million pounds of
combined lead and zinc per year during the first 5 years at a
silver cash cost (net of base metal credits) of negative
45 cents per ounce. At this time
Corani remains on schedule for production in 2015 which, according
to many industry analysts is a time at which the global supply of
high-quality lead-silver and zinc concentrates will be in short
supply. Over the life of mine, Corani will produce an average of 8
million ounces silver per year making it one of the largest
undeveloped silver mines in the world.
Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its
Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the
policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for
the adequacy or accuracy of this release.
Regulatory footnotes:
All of Bear Creek's exploration programs and
pertinent disclosure of a technical or scientific nature are
prepared by or prepared under the direct supervision of
Marc Leduc, P. Eng., President and
COO and Andrew Swarthout, P.Geo.,
CEO, who serve as the Qualified Persons under the definitions of NI
43-101. The block model estimate, mine design and schedules
were prepared by Independent Mining Consultants of Tucson Arizona. John Marek P.E. acted as the independent
qualified person as defined by Canada's National Instrument 43-101.
Additionally the methods used in determining and reporting the
mineral reserves and resources are consistent with the CIM Best
Practices Guidelines. The method used in the resource calculation
is equivalent to the method used in the resource calculation shown
in our August 23, 2006 Press
Release. For this resource estimate we have used metal prices
based on a 3-year backward average and a 2-year forward price based
on the metal markets in August
2011.
Assumptions used in the mineral reserve and FS
model by IMC are: Silver Price=$18.00/oz; Zinc Price=$0.85/lb; Lead Price=$0.85/lb; Mixed Sulfide Material Silver Recovery
is fixed at 62% to lead con and an additional14% to the zinc con
when zinc head grade is greater than 0.7%, 10.4% Ag recovery when
zinc head grade is from 0.7% to 0.5%, 6.3% recovery of silver to
the zinc con when zinc head grade is from 0.5% to 0.3% and no
silver recovery to the zinc con when zinc head grades are less than
0.3%. Zinc Recovery=67.5% to zinc con when the zinc head
grade is greater than 0.7%, 50% Zn recovery when zinc head grade is
from 0.7% to 0.5%, 30% recovery of zinc to the zinc con when zinc
head grade is from 0.5% to 0.3% and no zinc recovery to the zinc
con when zinc head grades are less than 0.3%. Lead Recovery=75% to
lead con. For Transitional Material Silver Recovery=
38.5%+.2*Ag Grade (g/t) (Maximum 70%
recovery) to lead con and 0% to the zinc con, Zinc Recovery= 0% to
zinc con and Lead Recovery= 38%+10.9*Lead Grade (%) (Maximum 65%
recovery) to lead con. Average smelter charges including Treatment
Charges and Refining Charges ("TCRC") and metal deducts
against saleable metal: Silver= $1.52
per ounce; Zinc= $0.62 per pound;
Lead= $0.41 per pound; Mining Costs
per tonne= $1.34; Process cost per
tonne= $8.00; G&A per processed
tonne= $1.20; Pit Slopes= 42 degrees
in mineralized tuff and 46 degrees in post-mineralized tuff.
The resulting mineral reserve cutoff is $10.54/tonne ore NSR. The mineral reserves
are contained within a practical mining plan that utilized the
'floating-cone" method as an initial guide for design.
The mineral resource portion of the project is
contained in a larger pit than the FS design pit, which was a
floating cone using the following input assumptions: Silver
Price=$30.00/oz; Zinc
Price=$1.00/lb; Lead
Price=$1.00/lb; Mixed oxide material
that was given 0% recovery for the reserves was assumed to have an
85% recovery of silver, all other recoveries remained the
same. The Mineral Resource cut-off was $9.20/tonne which represents the internal process
cutoff. All metallurgical material types were included in the
resource.
All diamond drilling has been performed using HQ
diameter core with recoveries averaging greater than 95%.
Core is logged and split on site under the supervision of Bear
Creek geologists. Sampling is done on two-meter intervals and
samples are transported by Company staff to Juliaca, Peru for direct shipping to ALS Chemex,
Laboratories in Lima, Peru.
ALS Chemex is an ISO 9001:2000-registered laboratory and is
preparing for ISO 17025 certification. Silver, lead, and zinc
assays utilize a multi-acid digestion with atomic absorption
("ore-grade assay method"). The QC/QA program includes the
insertion every 20th sample of known standards prepared by SGS
Laboratories, Lima. A
section in Bear Creek's website is dedicated to sampling, assay and
quality control procedures.
The FS was prepared by a team of independent
engineering consultants. The mining and block model portion
was prepared by Independent Mining Consultants of Tucson Arizona, John Marek, PE acting as QP.
The process plant design was prepared by M3 Engineering, Dan Neff,
PE acting as QP. Metallurgy and Process design criteria developed
by Blue Coast Metallurgy Ltd. Chris
Martin, CEng acting as QP. And geotechnical,
environmental, infrastructure, waste stockpile and tailings designs
were prepared by Global Resource Engineering Ltd., Chris Chapman,
PE acting as the QP. Each of these individuals has read and
approves the respective scientific and technical disclosure
contained in this news release. Silver Equivalency
calculation represents the contained equivalent silver ounces
contained in the ground and is based on the resource metal prices
assumptions of $18.00/oz Ag, 0.85/lb
Pb and 0.85/lb Zn and recoveries to concentrate of 64.2% for silver
and 71.1% for lead and 51.6% for zinc. The calculation does
not take into account the net smelter payment terms for the
different metals in the two separate concentrates. The
resulting equivalency is 1 oz Ag = 19.1 lb Pb and 1 oz Ag = 26.3 lb
Zn.
Total cash cost per ounce of silver is
calculated in accordance with a standard approved by The Silver
Institute, a nonprofit international association that draws its
membership from across the breadth of the silver industry.
Adoption of the standard is voluntary and the cost measures
presented may not be comparable to other similarly titled measures
of other companies. Total cash cost includes mine site
operating costs such as mining, processing, administration, and
treatment and refining charges, but is exclusive of amortization,
reclamation, capital, exploration costs and taxes on income. Total
cash costs are reduced by lead and zinc by-product revenues, and
then divided by silver ounces sold to arrive at total cash cost of
per ounce of silver, net of by-product revenues. Previously,
the Company included reclamation costs as a component of its total
cash cost per ounce of silver.
The Company has elected to follow the Silver Institute's cash cost
standard, and has therefore excluded reclamation costs from its
calculation of total cash cost per ounce of silver.
This document contains "forward-looking
information" within the meaning of Canadian securities legislation
and "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the United
States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. This
information and these statements, referred to herein as
"forward-looking statements" are made as of the date of this news
release or as of the date of the effective date of information
described in this news release, as applicable.
Forward-looking statements relate to future events or future
performance and reflect current estimates, predictions,
expectations or beliefs regarding future events and include,
without limitation, statements with respect to: (i) the amount of
mineral reserves and mineral resources; (ii) the amount of future
production over any period; (iii) net present value and internal
rates of return of the proposed mining operation; (iv) capital
costs, including start-up, sustaining capital and
reclamation/closure costs; (v) operating costs, including credits
from the sale of silver, lead and zinc; (vi) strip ratios and and
mining rates; (vii) expected grades and payable ounces and pounds
of metals and minerals; (viii) expected processing recoveries; (ix)
expected time frames; * prices of metals and minerals; and (xi)
mine life. Any statements that express or involve discussions
with respect to predictions, expectations, beliefs, plans,
projections, objectives, assumptions or future events or
performance (often, but not always, using words or phrases such as
"expects", "anticipates", "plans", "projects", "estimates",
"envisages", "assumes", "intends", "strategy", "goals",
"objectives" or variations thereof or stating that certain actions,
events or results "may", "could", "would", "might" or "will" be
taken, occur or be achieved, or the negative of any of these terms
and similar expressions) are not statements of historical fact and
may be forward-looking statements.
All forward-looking statements are based on
the Company's or its consultants' current beliefs as well as
various assumptions made by and information currently available to
them. These assumptions include, without limitation: (i) the
presence of and continuity of metals at the project at modeled
grades; (ii) the capacities of various machinery and equipment;
(iii) the availability of personnel, machinery and equipment at
estimated prices; (iv) exchange rates; (v) metals and minerals
sales prices; (vi) appropriate discount rates; (vii) tax rates and
royalty rates applicable to the proposed mining operation; (viii)
financing structure and costs; (ix) anticipated mining losses and
dilution; * metals recovery rates, (xi) reasonable contingency
requirements; and (xiii) receipt of regulatory approvals on
acceptable terms. Although management considers these assumptions
to be reasonable based on information currently available to it,
they may prove to be incorrect. Many forward-looking
statements are made assuming the correctness of other forward
looking statements, such as statements of net present value and
internal rate of return, which are based on most of the other
forward-looking statements and assumptions herein. The cost
information is also prepared using current values, but the time for
incurring the costs will be in the future and it is assumed costs
will remain stable over the relevant period.
By their very nature, forward-looking
statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties, both general
and specific, and risks exist that estimates, forecasts,
projections and other forward-looking statements will not be
achieved or that assumptions do not reflect future
experience. We caution readers not to place undue reliance on
these forward-looking statements as a number of important factors
could cause the actual outcomes to differ materially from the
beliefs, plans, objectives, expectations, anticipations, estimates
assumptions and intentions expressed in such forward-looking
statements. These risk factors may be generally stated as the
risk that the assumptions and estimates expressed above do not
occur, but specifically include, without limitation, risks relating
to variations in the mineral content within the material identified
as mineral reserves and mineral resources from that predicted;
variations in rates of recovery and extraction; developments in
world metals and minerals markets; risks relating to fluctuations
in the Canadian dollar relative to other currencies; increases in
the estimated capital and operating costs or unanticipated costs;
difficulties attracting the necessary work force; increases in
financing costs or adverse changes to the terms of available
financing, if any; tax rates or royalties being greater than
assumed; changes in development or mining plans due to changes in
logistical, technical or other factors, changes in project
parameters as plans continue to be refined; risks relating to
receipt of regulatory approvals; the effects of competition in the
markets in which the Company operates; operational and
infrastructure risks; and the additional risks described in the
Company's Annual Information Form, annual financial statements and
management's discussion and analysis for the year ended
December 31, 2011 and in the PFS and
FS filed on the SEDAR website in Canada (available at www.sedar.com). The
foregoing list of factors that may affect future results is not
exhaustive.
When relying on our forward-looking
statements, investors and others should carefully consider the
foregoing factors and other uncertainties and potential
events. The Company does not undertake to update any
forward-looking statement, whether written or oral, that may be
made from time to time by the Company or on behalf of the Company,
except as required by law.
SOURCE Bear Creek Mining Corporation