Great Basin Gold to Obtain $35 Million Loan Consequent upon CCAA Court Order
September 19 2012 - 8:13AM
PR Newswire (Canada)
JOHANNESBURG, SA, Sept. 20, 2012 /CNW/ - Great Basin Gold Ltd.
("Great Basin Gold"), announces that it has agreed to a
comprehensive term sheet from its existing bank lenders for a $35
million working capital loan which was approved as a
debtor-in-possession ("DIP") loan by order of the British Columbia
Supreme Court pursuant to a Companies Creditors Arrangement Act
("CCAA") filing made on September 19(th), 2012 (Vancouver Registry
126583) . The DIP Loan will be a post-commencement financing under
the previously announced business rescue ("BR") provisions of the
South African Companies Act which were commenced September 14,
2012. CCAA is a Canadian insolvency statute which will allow the
Company a period of time to seek buyers and partners for its two
gold mining projects and/or corporate level financiers in an effort
to return Great Basin Gold to solvency. The DIP Loan has a term of
6 months, extendable for up to 3 months, and is subject to certain
fees, interest and costs. It contemplates that the Company
will dispose or sell down its interest in its two gold projects or
otherwise refinance or recapitalize over certain periods within the
term of the DIP Loan. The DIP loan will be subject to a
super-priority lien on the assets of Great Basin Gold, and will
also have the benefit of liens and claims over the assets of its
Nevada and South African subsidiaries. As part of their
security package for the DIP loan, the DIP lenders will also
receive from Great Basin Gold's U.S. holding company a guarantee of
the obligations of its South African subsidiaries' obligations
under an existing South African credit facility. The DIP Loan has
received lenders' credit committee approval and it is now
principally subject to negotiation and execution of definitive
documentation and other customary closing conditions. The DIP Loan
proceeds will be used, subject to the concurrence of a business
rescue practitioner in South Africa and KPMG LLP, the
CCAA-appointed monitor in Canada, to affect an orderly suspension
of operations at Burnstone, ongoing care and maintenance of
Burnstone assets, and for working capital at Hollister. Hollister
is expected to continue profitably producing gold at the rate of
6,000-7,000 ounces per month for the foreseeable future and no
insolvency filings are currently expected for the Nevada
operations. Lou van Vuuren, interim CEO, commented on the recent
developments, "We believe the DIP loan will be in the best interest
of our workforce and other key stakeholders, as its proceeds will
be use to ensure the proper treatment of our Burnstone employees
and the responsible care and maintenance of this valuable project
while Hollister operations will be enhanced by some additional
working capital. We are confident that given the industry interest
we are seeing in these two assets we will see one or more
realization or recapitalization transactions complete within the
term of the DIP Loan." Lou van Vuuren CEO (interim) Cautionary and
Forward Looking Statement Information This document contains
"forward-looking statements" that were based on Great Basin's
expectations, estimates and projections as of the dates as of which
those statements were made. Generally, these forward-looking
statements can be identified by the use of forward-looking
terminology such as "outlook", "anticipate", "project", "target",
"believe", "estimate", "expect", "intend", "should" and similar
expressions. Forward-looking statements are subject to known and
unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the
Company's actual results, level of activity, performance or
achievements to be materially different from those expressed or
implied by such forward-looking statements. These include but are
not limited to: -- uncertainties related to the Company's liquidity
challenges and need for near term financing -- uncertainties
related to project realization values -- uncertainties and costs
related to the Company's exploration and development activities,
such as those associated with determining whether mineral resources
or reserves exist on a property; -- uncertainties related to
feasibility studies that provide estimates of expected or
anticipated costs, expenditures and economic returns from a mining
project; uncertainties related to expected production rates, timing
of production and the cash and total costs of production and
milling; -- uncertainties related to the ability to obtain
necessary licenses, permits, electricity, surface rights and title
for development projects; -- operating and technical difficulties
in connection with mining development activities; -- uncertainties
related to the accuracy of our mineral reserve and mineral resource
estimates and our estimates of future production and future cash
and total costs of production, and the geotechnical or
hydrogeological nature of ore deposits, and diminishing quantities
or grades of mineral reserves; -- uncertainties related to
unexpected judicial or regulatory proceedings; -- changes in, and
the effects of, the laws, regulations and government policies
affecting our mining operations, particularly laws, regulations and
policies relating to o mine expansions, environmental protection
and associated compliance costs arising from exploration, mine
development, mine operations and mine closures; o expected
effective future tax rates in jurisdictions in which our operations
are located; o the protection of the health and safety of mine
workers; and o mineral rights ownership in countries where our
mineral deposits are located, including the effect of the Mineral
and Petroleum Resources Development Act (South Africa); -- changes
in general economic conditions, the financial markets and in the
demand and market price for gold, silver and other minerals and
commodities, such as diesel fuel, coal, petroleum coke, steel,
concrete, electricity and other forms of energy, mining equipment,
and fluctuations in exchange rates, particularly with respect to
the value of the U.S. dollar, Canadian dollar and South African
rand; -- unusual or unexpected formation, cave-ins, flooding,
pressures, and precious metals losses (and the risk of inadequate
insurance or inability to obtain insurance to cover these risks);
-- changes in accounting policies and methods we use to report our
financial condition, including uncertainties associated with
critical accounting assumptions and estimates; -- environmental
issues and liabilities associated with mining including processing
and stock piling ore; -- geopolitical uncertainty and political and
economic instability in countries which we operate; and -- labour
strikes, work stoppages, or other interruptions to, or difficulties
in, the employment of labour in markets in which we operate mines,
or environmental hazards, industrial accidents or other events or
occurrences, including third party interference that interrupt the
production of minerals in our mines. -- There is currently no
certainty that Southgold Exploration (Pty) Ltd will successfully
emerge from business rescue proceedings and thereby prevent
liquidation. For further information on Great Basin Gold, investors
should review the Company's annual Form 40-F filing with the United
States Securities and Exchange Commission www.sec.com and home
jurisdiction filings that are available at www.sedar.com.
Great Basin Gold Ltd. CONTACT: For additional details on Great
Basin Gold Ltd. and its goldproperties, please visit the Company's
website at www.grtbasin.com orcontact Michael Curlook, Head of
Investor Services at 1-888-633-9332.
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