THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CONTAINS INSIDE INFORMATION FOR THE PURPOSES
OF THE MARKET ABUSE REGULATION (EU) NO. 596/2014 (INCLUDING AS IT
FORMS PART OF THE LAWS OF ENGLAND AND WALES BY VIRTUE OF THE
EUROPEAN UNION (WITHDRAWAL) ACT 2018 ("MAR").
21 November 2024
Ferro-Alloy Resources
Limited
("Ferro-Alloy" or the "Group" or the "Company")
Study Confirms Commercial
Potential of Carbon Black Substitute
Ferro-Alloy Resources Limited
(LSE:FAR), the vanadium producer and
developer of the large Balasausqandiq vanadium deposit in Southern
Kazakhstan, is pleased to announce an
update on its carbon black substitute ("CBS") product following the
completion of a new marketing study.
Summary
· A
new marketing study by Smithers (the "Study") estimates the price
of the Company's CBS product at US$500 per tonne in the tyre market
and between US$550 - US$600 per tonne in the non-tyre market
(excluding any value attributable to the product's strong
sustainability credentials)
· The
Study follows a test programme undertaken by Smithers' materials
science and engineering division which, by substituting standard
carbon black with the Company's CBS product in a typical rubber
formulation for passenger vehicle tyre side walls, demonstrated
that the Company's CBS product can be used in the manufacture of
vehicle tyre sidewalls and other rubber uses
·
Previous test work performed by SGS Canada Inc indicated that
the CBS product can be recovered from the vanadium process plant
tailings by simple flotation methods, giving approximately 220,000
tonnes of CBS product per year and potential gross revenue
generation in excess of US$110 million per year for Phase 1 of the
Balasausqandiq project
· The
Company estimates that the CBS product can be shipped to either
Western Europe or China economically; markets closer to the project
will also be investigated
· The
Company also estimates the combined Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions,
based on current preliminary desktop research, to be between 0.36
tonnes and 0.6 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent
("CO2e") per tonne of CBS product produced in comparison
with between two tonnes and five tonnes of CO2e per
tonne of standard carbon black production, giving a strong
marketing advantage and potential future savings in carbon
credits
· The
Company has commenced marketing activities for commercial
opportunities for the CBS product
Commenting on the update, Nick Bridgen, CEO of Ferro-Alloy
Resources, said:
"This marketing study confirms the enormous value of the
Company's CBS revenue stream that is now expected to be comparable
in size with the Company's main vanadium product. With relatively
small production costs, it adds hugely to the anticipated project
NPV."
"The Company has since commenced marketing activities for the
CBS product and is assessing the opportunities to secure an offtake
agreement for future production."
"Ferro-Alloy's Balasausqandiq
deposit is already expected to be
the world's lowest cost primary producer of vanadium, and this
co-product, recovered from the tailings from the vanadium
operation, will enhance that competitive position even
further."
Background
As previously announced, the ore-resource at
the Balasausqandiq deposit contains over 8% carbon in a form
similar to carbon black. Carbon black is a high value form of
carbon predominantly used as a reinforcing filler in the making of
rubber, particularly for the manufacture of vehicle
tyres.
The Company's CBS product is produced through
concentration to a level of around 40% of the carbon contained in
the tailings (waste) of the vanadium circuit, followed by drying
and further milling.
Marketing
study
The marketing study has been completed by the
market reports division of Smithers, the global consultancy firm
with rubber expertise, to estimate a market price for the product
in both tyre and non-tyre markets.
The Study has estimated the price of the
Company's CBS product in the tyre market to be around US$500 per
tonne and between US$550 and US$600 per tonne in the non-tyre
market.
The Study took into account the successful test
work conducted by Smithers' materials science and engineering
division, the price being determined in relation to other,
similarly performing reinforcing fillers available in the market.
It did not factor in any value for the expected vastly reduced
Scope 1 and Scope 2 CO2e emissions (direct and indirect
emissions generated by a company's own operating activities)
resulting from the production of the CBS product, in comparison
with the manufacture of standard carbon black (see
below).
The Company believes that the expected low
CO2e emissions generated from the production of the CBS
product will facilitate favourable marketing and may produce an
additional price advantage (see below).
Technical
studies
As previously announced on 26 September 2024,
significant test work has been completed to determine the methods
for concentrating the carbon in the ore to create the CBS product,
and into the performance of the CBS product compared with standard
N660 grade carbon black commonly used to make passenger vehicle
tyre sidewalls.
Production
Work carried out independently by SGS Canada
Inc during the feasibility study programme has confirmed that a 40%
carbon concentrate can be recovered from the tailings of the
vanadium circuit using flotation to concentrate the carbon. A
recovery of around 72% of the original carbon content is obtained,
producing approximately 220,000 tonnes of CBS product per year at
the revised mining rate of 1.65 million tonnes of ore per year.
This product is then milled and dried in preparation for
shipment.
Capital costs are expected to be relatively
low, involving a simple flotation plant, milling, pelletising and
drying equipment. Operating costs are expected to be
modest.
Product
technical performance
After initial test work was carried out at
universities in the CIS, a test programme was conducted in the UK
by Smithers' materials science and engineering division. In this
programme, the Company's CBS product was substituted at various
levels for standard carbon black in a typical rubber formulation
for passenger vehicle tyre side walls. The results of testing the
manufactured rubber confirmed that the CBS product was performing
as a reinforcing filler and, at lower substitution levels, had no
significant diminution in performance and had some advantages.
Higher levels of substitution are likely to be possible in
agricultural and truck tyres.
Logistics
The Company estimates, based on research
conducted on current available global logistics rates, that the CBS
product can be shipped to either Western Europe or China
economically. Closer markets will also be investigated.
Sustainability
/ costing credentials
The production of standard carbon black is
usually made by the incomplete combustion of oil or gas in an
oxygen depleted atmosphere where, typically, the resulting product
amounts to only 40% of the original carbon input. The production of
standard carbon black is, therefore, both expensive and high in
CO2 emissions.
The Company's CBS product is made by the
concentration of naturally occurring carbon from the waste produced
by the treatment of the Balasausqandiq ore, and not from the
combustion of hydrocarbons, resulting in much lower production
costs and significantly fewer emissions - an important
consideration for tyre and other rubber producers.
Based on preliminary desktop research, the
Company currently estimates that the combined Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions per tonne of CBS product produced will be between 0.36
tonnes and 0.6 tonnes of CO2e. By way of comparison, the
production of a tonne of standard carbon black ranges from around
two to five tonnes of CO2e*.
In the European Union, amendments to the Carbon
Border Adjustment Mechanism ("CBAM"), approved in 2022, indicate
the potential inclusion of organic chemicals, including carbon
black, in the future as part of a broader effort to integrate the
chemical sector into CBAM, with a final decision due by the end of
2025 or early 2026. If adopted, importers of carbon black
will have to buy carbon credits, currently costing around US$72 per
tonne of CO2e emitted, for the emissions embedded in
their imports of carbon black. This would lead to CBAM costs
of between US$144 per tonne and US$360 per tonne for importers of
standard carbon black depending on the emissions of the actual
producer. The far lower emissions generated from the production of
the Company's CBS product would attract much lower CBAM costs,
giving a further potential price advantage, not taken account
of in the Study. Even in the absence of legislation, market forces
are likely to incentivise the use of materials which have been
produced with lower carbon emissions.
The carbon
black market
The worldwide carbon black market amounts to
approximately US$20 billion per annum, with approximately 70% going
into tyre manufacture. Many tyre manufacturers have stated their
aims of reducing the CO2e emissions associated with
their products and some are experimenting with the use of recovered
carbon black, produced by pyrolysis from used tyres which is energy
intensive. The sourcing of lower carbon substitutes for carbon
black is an ongoing issue for tyre manufacturers.
ENDS
* Fabian Rosner, Trisha Bhagde,
Daniel S. Slaughter, Vassilia Zorba, Jennifer
Stokes-Draut,Techno-economic and carbon dioxide emission assessment
of carbon black production, Journal of Cleaner Production, Volume
436, 2024, 140224, ISSN 0959-6526:
www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652623043822
For further
information, visit www.ferro-alloy.com or contact:
Ferro-Alloy Resources Limited
|
Nick Bridgen (CEO) / William
Callewaert (CFO)
|
info@ferro-alloy.com
|
Shore Capital
(Joint Corporate
Broker)
Panmure Liberum Limited
(Joint Corporate Broker)
BlytheRay (Financial
PR)
|
Toby Gibbs/Lucy Bowden
Scott Mathieson/John More
Tim Blythe/Will Jones
|
+44 207 408 4090
+44 20 3100 2000
+44 20 7138 3204
|
Notes to
Editors
About
Ferro-Alloy Resources Limited:
The Company's operations are all located at the
Balasausqandiq deposit in Kyzylordinskoye Oblast in the South of
Kazakhstan. Currently the Company has two main business
activities:
a) the high grade Balasausqandiq vanadium
project (the "Project"); and
b) an existing vanadium concentrate processing
operation (the "Existing
Operation")
Balasausqandiq is a very large deposit, with
vanadium as the principal product together with several
by-products. Owing to the nature of the ore, the capital and
operating costs of development are very much lower than for other
vanadium projects.
The most recent mineral resource estimate for
ore-body one (of seven) provided an Indicated Mineral Resource of
32.9 million tonnes at a mean grade of 0.62%
V2O5 equating to 203,364 contained tonnes of
vanadium pentoxide ("V2O5"). In the system of
reserve estimation used in Kazakhstan the reserves are estimated to
be over 70m tonnes in ore-bodies 1 to 5 but this does not include
the full depth of ore-bodies 2 to 5 or the remaining ore-bodies
which remain substantially unexplored.
The Project will be developed in two phases,
Phase 1 and Phase 2, with Phase 1 treating 1.65m tonnes per
year.
There is an existing concentrate processing
operation at the site of the Balasausqandiq deposit. The production
facilities were originally created from a 15,000 tonnes per year
pilot plant which was then expanded and adapted to recover
vanadium, molybdenum and nickel from purchased
concentrates.
The existing operation is located on the same
site and uses some of the same infrastructure as the Project, but
is a separate operation which will continue in parallel with the
development and operation of the Project.