VANCOUVER, BC, June 26,
2024 /CNW/ - New Pacific Metals Corp.
(TSX: NUAG) (NYSE-A: NEWP) ("New Pacific"
or the "Company") is pleased to report
the results of its pre-feasibility study ("PFS") for the
Silver Sand project (the "Project") in Potosi Department,
Bolivia. The PFS is based on the
Mineral Resource Estimate (the "MRE") for the Project, which was
reported on November 28, 2022 and is
reported in accordance with National Instrument 43‐101-
Standards of Disclosure for Mineral
Projects ("NI 43‐101").
Highlights from the PFS are as follows (all figures in US
Dollars):
- Post-tax net present value ("NPV") (5%) of $740 million and internal rate of return ("IRR")
of 37% at a base case price of $24.00/oz silver,
- Post-Tax NPV (5%) of $638
million and IRR of 33% at the PEA1 comparative
price of $22.50/oz silver,
- 13-year mine life, excluding the 2-year pre-production period,
producing approximately 157 million oz ("Moz") of silver,
- Annual silver production exceeds 15 Moz in years one
through three, with life of mine ("LOM") average annual silver
production exceeding 12 Moz,
- Initial capital costs of $358
million and a post-tax payback of 1.9 years (from the start
of production) at $24.00/oz silver,
and
- Average LOM all-in sustaining cost ("AISC") of $10.69/oz silver.
"We are excited to share the results of the PFS for Silver Sand,
a significant milestone for our Company. These strong results
confirm that Silver Sand has the potential to become a high-grade,
low-cost, pure silver producer, setting it apart as a rare and
valuable asset in our industry. The next step along our journey
will be reaching an agreement with local communities to secure
surface rights for the project area. Furthermore, our team will
continue to collaborate with local communities and authorities to
ensure that the mineral wealth at Silver Sand benefits all
Bolivians and stakeholders," stated Andrew
Williams, CEO and President. "We are very pleased with the
progress and look forward to the next phases of development."
______________________________________
1 Silver Sand Deposit Preliminary Economic Assessment,
effective date of November 30, 2022, available
at www.newpacificmetals.com or SEDAR+, for further
information see below
|
AMC Mining Consultants (Canada)
Ltd. (mineral resource and reserves, mining, infrastructure and
financial analysis) was contracted to conduct the PFS in
cooperation with Halyard Inc. (metallurgy and processing), and
NewFields Canada Mining & Environment ULC (tailings, water and
waste management). The taxation calculations were based on the
guidance and expertise of Bolivian local experts engaged by the
Company.
Economic Results and Sensitivities
Table 1 shows key assumptions and summarizes the projected
production and economic results of the PFS. Tables 2 and 3 show
sensitivities to silver prices and operating and capital costs.
Table 1: Silver Sand Project Open Pit
Mining – Key Economic Assumptions and Results
Item
|
Unit
|
Value
|
Total Ore
Mined
|
Kt
|
52,014
|
Open Pit Strip
Ratio1
|
t:t
|
3.3:1
|
Annual Processing
Rate
|
Ktpa
|
4,000
|
Average Silver
Grade2
|
g/t
|
105
|
Silver
Recovery2
|
%
|
90 %
|
Silver Price
|
$/oz
|
24.00
|
Payable Silver
Metal
|
Moz
|
157
|
Gross
Revenue
|
$M
|
3,770
|
Total All-In
Sustaining Cost3
|
$/oz
|
10.69
|
Initial Capital
Costs
|
$M
|
358
|
Mine
Life4
|
Yrs
|
13
|
Payback Period
(post-tax)5
|
Yrs
|
1.9
|
Cumulative Net Cash
Flow (pre-tax)
|
$M
|
1,733
|
Cumulative Net Cash
Flow (post-tax)
|
$M
|
1,162
|
Post-tax NPV
(5%)
|
$M
|
740
|
Post-tax
IRR
|
%
|
37 %
|
NPV (5%) to Initial
Capex Ratio
|
$:$
|
2.1:1
|
1. LOM average strip
ratio. Does not consider material mined during the pre-production
period.
|
2. LOM
average.
|
3. Includes operating
costs, selling costs, royalties, sustaining capital costs, and
closure costs. Calculated on a pre-tax basis.
|
4. Excludes
pre-production period.
|
5. The payback period
is measured from the beginning of production after construction is
completed.
|
Table 2: Silver Sand Project Economic
Sensitivity Analysis for Silver Prices – Post-Tax
|
Silver Price
Sensitivity
|
Silver Price
(US$/oz)
|
$18.00
|
$21.00
|
$24.00
(Base Case)
|
$27.00
|
$30.00
|
Results
(post-tax NPV $M / IRR)
|
329 / 22%
|
535 / 30%
|
740 / 37%
|
936 / 43%
|
1,124
/ 48%
|
Note: Inputs for the base case (100%) are
listed in Table 1. This table presents how the project's post-tax
NPV and IRR are affected by varying the selling price of silver.
For example, if the silver price increases by $3/oz (from $24.00 to
$27.00/oz) while other Inputs remain as the "Base Case", then the
NPV becomes $936 M and the IRR is 43%. NPV values are discounted at
a rate of 5% per annum.
|
Table 3: Silver Sand Project Economic
Sensitivity Analysis for Costs – Post-Tax
|
Cost
Sensitivity
|
Sensitivity
Items
|
-20 %
|
-10 %
|
100%
(Base Case)
|
+10 %
|
+20 %
|
Mine Operating
Cost (post-tax NPV $M / IRR)
|
784 / 38%
|
762 / 37%
|
740 / 37%
|
719 / 36%
|
697 / 36%
|
Process Operating
Cost (post-tax NPV $M / IRR)
|
803 / 39%
|
773 / 38%
|
740 / 37%
|
708 / 36%
|
676 / 35%
|
Life-of-Mine
CAPEX (post-tax NPV $M / IRR)
|
797 / 46%
|
770 / 41%
|
740 / 37%
|
711 / 33%
|
682 / 30%
|
Note: Inputs for
the base case (100%) are listed in Table 1.Table 3 lists
sensitivity analysis for three "Input" variables. For example,
if LOM CAPEX increases by 20% (+20%), while silver price, mine
operating cost, and process operating cost remain the same as the
"Base Case" input, the NPV becomes $682 M and IRR is 30%. NPV
values are discounted at a rate of 5% per annum.
|
Capital and Operating Costs
The Project, as outlined in the PFS, is an open-pit mining
operation with mining anticipated to be completed by a contract
mining company. The open-pit mine is anticipated to provide ore to
a mineral processing plant, producing silver doré on site.
Silver Sand has several advantages that we anticipate will
benefit capital and operating costs:
- The mine is expected to be operated by a contractor with
current operations in Bolivia.
This will eliminate procurement of a mining fleet by the Company
and sustaining capital for fleet replacement,
- The mine is expected to be connected to the national
electricity grid to provide low-cost power to the processing plant
and other on-site infrastructure, and
- The site can be accessed via government highways and
high-quality local roads. The access road is currently being
upgraded and widened by the government.
Costs used in the PFS were estimated based on quotes from
multiple contractors, and vendors, as well as internal cost
databases from the Company's consultants and indications from local
firms.
A summary of capital costs is shown in Table 4. The majority of
initial capital costs are related to constructing the mineral
processing plant, followed by mine pre-production and development
costs, and site infrastructure. Mine pre-production and development
costs are primarily composed of waste mining and construction of
the tailings storage facility ("TSF") embankment. In comparison to
the PEA published on January 9, 2023,
the $50 million increase in initial
capital costs is primarily due to:
- Reallocating 10Mt of waste material, that was mined in the
production phase of the PEA, to the pre-production phase, as
further engineering revealed the need for additional material for
the TSF embankment (approximately $30
million), and
- A larger silver leach circuit to extend the leach time, based
on the results of the PFS metallurgical test work and further
engineering (approximately $20
million).
Table 4: Total Capital Cost Estimate
Item1
|
Cost
($M)
|
Mine pre-production and
development costs
|
76
|
Processing
plant
|
207
|
TSF2 and
site infrastructure
|
54
|
Owner's cost
|
21
|
Initial
capital
|
358
|
Life of mine sustaining
capital3
|
85
|
1.
|
Includes direct,
indirect, and contingency costs.
|
2.
|
Tailings capital
includes initial earthworks, liners/membranes, and a water
management facility. The cost of transporting and placement of
material to build the tailings embankment is included in mine
pre-production and development costs. Ongoing tailings embankment
costs are included in mine operating costs and sustaining
capital.
|
3.
|
Sustaining capital
costs include expansion of the TSF, refurbishment and replacement
of processing equipment, and mine closure.
|
A summary of operating costs is presented in Table 5.
Table 5: Total Operating Cost Estimate
Item1
|
Cost ($/t
milled)
|
Mining
cost2
|
9.28
|
Processing &
tailings cost
|
13.71
|
General and
Administration cost
|
1.65
|
Total operating
cost
|
24.63
|
1.
|
Totals may not add up
exactly due to rounding.
|
2.
|
Mining costs includes a
credit for 3.8 Mt of ore mined during the pre-production phase and
is based on a mining cost $2.34/t mined.
|
Mining
It is anticipated that the deposit will be mined using a
conventional open pit approach. This entails drilling and
blasting, with loading by hydraulic excavators and haulage by
off-highway rear dump haul trucks. Ore is expected to be hauled to
a crusher or to run-of-mine (ROM) stockpiles. Waste is anticipated
to be hauled to external and in-pit waste rock dumps. Open-pit
mining is anticipated to commence in Year 2, with 28.0 million
tonnes of pre-production mining occurring over a two-year
pre-production period. Peak open-pit production is expected to be
18.0 Mt of total material mined in Year 8. A total of 52.0 Mt
of ore is anticipated to be mined from open pit operations over the
life of mine.
Processing & Metallurgy
Three additional metallurgical programs, building on earlier
test work, were completed during 2022 and 2023 and focused on
cyanidation and tank leaching. They included bottle roll
tests, column leach tests and gravity concentration, in addition to
further grindability and sample characterization. The selected PFS
flowsheet consists of comminution by crushing, followed by
semi-autogenous and ball milling, tank leaching with cyanidation
over 72 hours, counter current decantation ("CCD") and zinc
precipitation (Merrill Crowe). Zinc
precipitate from Merrill Crowe will
be treated for copper removal, and then smelted to produce silver
doré.
Thickened tailings from the CCD circuit are anticipated to be
filtered with pressure filters before being conveyed to the nearby
TSF. Upon mine closure, it is anticipated that the TSF will be
capped with rock and reclaimed topsoil to provide a secure
facility.
Process water is expected to be sourced from the water
reservoir adjacent to the process plant and from recycled
water from the TSF, supplemented by site runoff as required. A
site-wide water balance model has been developed to maximize water
recycling over the life of mine.
Mineral Resource Estimate
The MRE, which used conceptual open pit mining constraints for
reporting purposes, was previously reported in a news release dated
November 28, 2022. The Mineral
Resource, stated at a 30 g/t silver cut‐off grade, is shown in
Table 6.
Table 6: Mineral Resource as of October 31, 2022
|
Tonnes (Mt)
|
Ag (g/t)
|
Ag (Moz)
|
Measured
|
14.9
|
131
|
62.6
|
Indicated
|
39.4
|
110
|
139.2
|
Measured &
Indicated
|
54.3
|
116
|
201.8
|
Inferred
|
4.6
|
88
|
13.0
|
Notes:
|
- CIM Definition
Standards (2014) were used for reporting the Mineral
Resources.
- The qualified
person (as defined in NI 43-101) is Dinara Nussipakynova, P.Geo. of
BBA, formerly employed with AMC Consultants (Canada) Ltd. ("AMC
Consultants).
- Mineral Resources
are constrained by optimized pit shells at a metal price of
US$22.50/oz Ag, recovery of 91% Ag and cut-off grade of 30 g/t
Ag.
- Drilling results up
to July 25 2022.
- The numbers may not
compute exactly due to rounding.
- Mineral Resources
that are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic
viability.
|
Source: AMC Mining
Consultants (Canada) Ltd.
|
Mineral Reserve Estimate
The open pit Mineral Reserves
are reported within an optimized pit design. The Mineral Reserves
represent the economically mineable part of the Measured and
Indicated Mineral Resource and are presented in Table 7 below.
Table 7: Mineral Reserve estimate as of
June 19, 2024
|
Tonnes
(Mt)
|
Ag
(g/t)
|
Ag
(Moz)
|
Proven
|
15.1
|
121
|
58.8
|
Probable
|
36.9
|
98
|
116.6
|
Proven &
Probable
|
52.0
|
105
|
175.4
|
Notes:
|
- CIM Definition
Standards (2014) were used for reporting the Mineral
Reserves.
- The qualified
person is Wayne Rogers, P.Eng. of AMC Consultants
- Cut-off grade of 27
g/t Ag for material inside the administrative mining contract
("AMC"), and 29 g/t Ag outside the AMC limit based on operating
costs of 16.71 US$/t of ore, 91% Ag metallurgical recovery, 0.50
US$/oz Ag treatment and selling costs, 6% royalty within AMC, 12%
royalty outside AMC, and 99.00% payable silver
- Ag price assumed is
US$23.00 per oz.
- Mineral Reserves
include dilution and mining recovery.
- Mineral Reserves
are converted from Mineral Resources through the process of pit
optimization, pit design, production schedule and supported by a
positive cash flow model.
- The totals may not
sum due to rounding.
- Probable Mineral
Reserves are based on Indicated Mineral Resources only
- Proven Mineral
Reserves are based on Measured Mineral Resources only.
- Ag metal (Moz)
represents contained metal.
|
Source: AMC Mining
Consultants (Canada) Ltd.
|
Permitting
The Company continues to progress with
community engagement efforts with those individuals located within
the Project's area of influence. To finalize the Environmental
Impact Assessment Study ("EEIA") for submission to Bolivia's Ministry of Environment and Water,
as disclosed in the Company's news release dated January 31, 2024, the Company must obtain surface
rights for the Project through long-term land lease agreements,
finalize a resettlement and compensation plan for impacted
community members and implement measures to safeguard cultural and
historical heritage. Discussions are ongoing with local communities
to reach these agreements.
Progress towards these agreements has been disrupted by a
minority group of artisanal and small-scale miners ("ASMs")
operating illegally within our mineral rights whose activities do
not align with the development objectives of the Project. Through
its extensive community engagement efforts, the Company believes
that the interests of this minority group of ASMs do not align with
those of the broader communities. These communities have formally
acknowledged the Company's mining rights and they have indicated
that they expect the cessation of these ASM activities.
The Company has taken steps to address the presence of these
ASMs, including the commencement of formal legal proceedings in
December 2023. These legal
proceedings are led by one of the leading law firms in Bolivia. In addition, on May 7, 2024, the Company successfully obtained an
execution order (the "Order") from the Mining Jurisdictional
Administrative Authority (the "AJAM") for the reinstatement of its
mining rights and is working closely with government authorities to
enforce the Order. As efforts to resolve the presence of this
minority group of ASMs have intensified over the past several
months, our site access for certain activities has been temporarily
limited, as expected.
The Company remains optimistic about achieving a favorable
resolution, bolstered by community and governmental support to
uphold our mining rights and drive positive development outcomes
for the Project, benefiting local communities, the Plurinational
State of Bolivia, and the Company's shareholders over the next two
decades, and beyond, pending positive exploration success.
Regarding the extent of the impact of the illegal ASM activities on
the Project's Mineral Resources, the Company believes the
mineralized material extracted is not significant.
Mining Production Contract
The Company continues to
engage with the Bolivia state
mining corporation, Corporación Minera de Bolivia ("COMIBOL"), to obtain the
ratification and approval of the signed Mining Production Contract
(the "MPC") at the Project by the Plurinational Legislative
Assembly of Bolivia. As noted in
the Company's January 31, 2024 news
release, the Company acknowledges the significant role of Mining
Cooperatives ("CoOps") in the region's economic and political
landscape in areas of the Project that do not encroach on our
mineral rights.
The Company is committed to ensuring that the proposed Project
delivers shared benefits, including access to milling capacity,
technology, infrastructure, capital, and underutilized mining
areas. Establishing a framework for coexistence with CoOps in
non-encroaching areas of Silver Sand is crucial for securing the
necessary support for the ratification and approval of the signed
MPC. In light of this, over the past several months the Company has
extensively engaged with the relevant CoOps, their affiliate
groups, and COMIBOL.
Qualified Persons
The qualified persons for the PFS
are Mr. Wayne Rogers P.Eng and Mr.
Mo Molavi P.Eng both Principal
Mining Engineers with AMC Mining Consultants (Canada) Ltd, Mr. Andy Holloway P.Eng,
Process Director with Halyard Inc., and Mr. Leon Botham P.Eng., Principal Engineer with
NewFields Canada Mining & Environment ULC. This is in addition
to Ms. Dinara Nussipakynova, P.Geo., Principal Geologist formerly
with AMC Consultants who estimated the Mineral Resource. All such
qualified persons have reviewed the technical content of this news
release for the deposit at the Project and have approved its
dissemination.
Further details supporting the PFS will be available in an NI
43‐101 Technical Report which will be posted under the Company's
profile at sedarplus.com within 45 days of this news release.
This news release has been reviewed and approved by Alex Zhang, P.Geo., Vice President of
Exploration of New Pacific Metals Corp. who is the designated
qualified person for the Company.
Conference Call and Webcast Details
The Company will
host a conference call and presentation webcast at 8:00 am Pacific Time / 11:00 am Eastern Time on Wednesday, June 26th,
2024 to provide further information. Participants are advised to
dial in five minutes prior to the scheduled start time of the call.
A presentation will be made available on the Company's website
prior to the webcast. Webcast details:
Date: Wednesday, June
26th, 2024, 8:00 am Pacific Time /
11:00 am Eastern Time
Toll-free: Canada/USA
1-844-763-8274
International 1-647-484-8814
Webcast: https://event.choruscall.com/mediaframe/webcast.html?webcastid=gYWmvNR5
About New Pacific Metals
New Pacific is a Canadian
exploration and development company with three precious metal
projects in Bolivia. The Company's
flagship Silver Sand project has the potential to be developed into
one of the world's largest silver mines. The Company is also
rapidly advancing its Carangas project towards a Preliminary
Economic Assessment. For the Silverstrike project, the Company
completed a discovery drill program in 2022.
On behalf of New Pacific Metals Corp.
Andrew Williams
Director and CEO
For Further Information
New Pacific Metals Corp.
Phone: (604) 633‐1368 Ext. 223
U.S. & Canada toll-free:
1-877-631-0593
E-mail: invest@newpacificmetals.com
For additional information and to receive company news by
e-mail, please register using New Pacific's website at
www.newpacificmetals.com.
CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING RESULTS OF PRELIMINARY ECONOMIC
ASSESSMENT
The results of the PEA prepared in accordance with NI 43-101
titled "Technical Report – Silver Sand Deposit Preliminary Economic
Assessment" dated February 16, 2023
and with an effective date of November 30,
2022 and prepared by certain qualified persons associated
with AMC Consultants are preliminary in nature and are intended to
provide an initial assessment of the Project's economic potential
and development options of the Project. The PEA mine schedule and
economic assessment includes numerous assumptions and is based on
both indicated and Inferred Mineral Resources. Inferred resources
are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic
considerations applied to them that would enable them to be
categorized as Mineral Reserves, and there is no certainty that the
project economic assessments described herein will be achieved or
that the PEA results will be realized. The estimate of Mineral
Resources may be materially affected by geology, environmental,
permitting, legal, title, socio-political, marketing or other
relevant issues. Mineral resources are not Mineral Reserves and do
not have demonstrated economic viability. Additional exploration
will be required to potentially upgrade the classification of the
Inferred Mineral Resources to be considered in future advanced
studies. AMC Consultants (mineral resource, mining, infrastructure
and financial analysis) was contracted to conduct the PEA in
cooperation with Halyard Inc. (metallurgy and processing), and
NewFields Canada Mining & Environment ULC (tailings, water and
waste management). The qualified persons for the PEA for the
purposes of NI 43-101 are Mr. John Morton
Shannon, P.Geo, General Manager and Principal Geologist at
AMC Consultants, Mr. Wayne Rogers,
P.Eng, and Mr. Mo Molavi, P.Eng,
both Principal Mining Engineers with AMC Consultants, Mr.
Andrew Holloway P.Eng, Process
Director with Halyard Inc., and Mr. Leon
Botham P.Eng., Principal Engineer with NewFields Canada
Mining & Environment ULC, in addition to Ms. Dinara
Nussipakynova, P.Geo., Principal Geologist formerly with AMC
Consultants, who estimated the Mineral Resources (collectively, the
"Technical Report Authors"). All qualified persons for the PEA have
reviewed the disclosure of the PEA herein. The PEA is based on the
MRE, which was reported on November 28,
2022. The effective date of the MRE is October 31, 2022. The cut-off applied for
reporting the pit-constrained Mineral Resources is 30 g/t silver.
Assumptions made to derive a cut-off grade included mining costs,
processing costs and recoveries and were obtained from comparable
industry situations. The model is depleted for historical mining
activities. Mineral resources are constrained by optimized pit
shells at a silver price of US$22.50
per ounce, silver metallurgical recovery of 91%, silver payability
of 99%, open pit mining cost of US$2.6/t, processing cost of US$16/t, G&A cost of US$2/t, and slope angle of 44-47 degrees. Key
assumptions used for pit optimization for the PEA mining pit
include silver price of US$22.50 per
ounce, silver metallurgical recovery of 91%, silver payability of
99%, open pit mining cost of US$2.6/t, incremental mining cost of US$0.04/t (per 10 m
bench), processing cost of US$16/t,
tailing storage facility operating cost of US$0.7/t, G&A cost of US$2/t, royalty of 6.00%, mining recovery of 92%,
dilution of 8%, and cut‐off grade of 30 g/t silver.
CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING
FORWARD‐LOOKING INFORMATION
Certain of the statements and information in this news release
constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the
United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and
"forward-looking information" within the meaning of applicable
Canadian provincial securities laws. Any statements or information
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", "is expected", "anticipates",
"believes", "plans", "projects", "estimates", "assumes", "intends",
"strategies", "targets", "goals", "forecasts", "objectives",
"budgets", "schedules", "potential" 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
or information. Such statements include, but are not limited to
statements regarding: the results of the PEA; the results of the
PFS, including, but not limited to, the anticipated
post-tax NPV and IRR at the Project, the anticipated annual
payable metal production at the Project, the anticipated capital
costs at the Project, the anticipated pre-tax all-in sustaining
cost at the Project and the anticipated capital and operating costs
at the Project; expectations regarding the Project, including, but
not limited to, the anticipation that the Project will be an
open-pit mining operation, the anticipation that mining at the
Project will be completed by a contract mining company, the
anticipation that there will be a mineral processing plant
producing silver doré on site at the Project, the anticipation that
the mine at the Project will be connected to the national
electricity grid, the anticipation that ore will be hauled to a
crusher or to ROM stockpiles, the anticipation that waste will be
hauled to external and in-pit waste rock dumps, the anticipation
that 28.0 million tonnes of pre-production mining will occur
over a two-year pre-production period, the anticipation that mining
will commence in Year 2, the anticipation that peak open-pit
production will be 18.0 Mt of total material mined in Year 8,
the anticipation that 52.0 Mt of ore will be mined from open pit
operations over the life of mine, the anticipation that thickened
tailings from the CCD circuit will be filtered with pressure
filters before being conveyed to the nearby waste storage (waste
rock and tailings) facility, the anticipation that a waste storage
facility will be built up using mine waste, the anticipation that,
upon mine closure, the tailings disposal area will be capped with
mine rock, the anticipation that process water will be primarily
sourced from dammed water reservoir adjacent to the process
plant and recycled water from the dry stack tailings supplemented
by runoff from the waste storage facility, plant site and open
pits, the expectation of broader communities that ASM activities
will cease, the anticipation that the Company will achieve a
favorable resolution with respect to ASM activities, the
anticipation of positive development outcomes for the Project,
benefiting local communities, the Plurinational State of Bolivia,
and the Company's shareholders over the next two decades, and
beyond, pending positive exploration success, the anticipation of
signing a coexistence agreement with CoOps and the anticipation of
obtaining the ratification and approval of the signed MPC;
estimates regarding Mineral Reserves and Mineral
Resources; anticipated exploration, drilling, development,
construction, and other activities or achievements of the Company;
timing of receipt of permits and regulatory approvals; timing and
content of the PFS; and estimates of the Company's revenues and
capital expenditures; and other future plans, objectives or
expectations of the Company.
Forward-looking statements or information are subject to a
variety of known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors
that could cause actual events or results to differ from those
reflected in the forward-looking statements or information,
including, without limitation, risks relating to: global economic
and social impact of public health crises (such as a resurgence of
the COVID-19 novel coronavirus); fluctuating equity prices, bond
prices, commodity prices; calculation of resources, reserves and
mineralization, general economic conditions, foreign exchange
risks, interest rate risk, foreign investment risk; loss of key
personnel; conflicts of interest; dependence on management,
uncertainties relating to the availability and costs of financing
needed in the future, environmental risks, operations and political
conditions, the regulatory environment in Bolivia and Canada, risks associated with community
relations and corporate social responsibility, and other factors
described under the heading "Risk Factors" in the Company's annual
information form for the year ended June 30,
2023 (the "AIF"). This list is not exhaustive of the factors
that may affect any of the Company's forward-looking statements or
information.
The forward-looking statements are necessarily based on a number
of estimates, assumptions, beliefs, expectations and opinions of
management as of the date of this news release that, while
considered reasonable by management, are inherently subject to
significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and
contingencies. These estimates, assumptions, beliefs, expectations
and options include, but are not limited to, those related to the
Company's ability to carry on current and future operations,
including: :global economic and social impact of public health
crises on our operations and workforce; development and exploration
activities; the timing, extent, duration and economic viability of
such operations; the accuracy and reliability of estimates,
projections, forecasts, studies and assessments; the Company's
ability to meet or achieve estimates, projections and forecasts;
the stabilization of the political climate in Bolivia; the Company's ability to obtain and
maintain social license at its mineral properties; the availability
and cost of inputs; the price and market for outputs; foreign
exchange rates; taxation levels; the timely receipt of necessary
approvals or permits, including the ratification and approval of
the MPC with the COMIBOL, the Bolivian state mining corporation, by
the Plurinational Legislative Assembly of Bolivia; the ability to meet current and
future obligations; the ability to obtain timely financing on
reasonable terms when required; the current and future social,
economic and political conditions; and other assumptions and
factors generally associated with the mining industry.
Although the forward-looking statements contained in this news
release are based upon what management believes are reasonable
assumptions, there can be no assurance that actual results will be
consistent with these forward-looking statements. All
forward-looking statements in this news release are qualified by
these cautionary statements. Accordingly, readers should not place
undue reliance on such statements. Other than specifically required
by applicable laws, the Company is under no obligation and
expressly disclaims any such obligation to update or alter the
forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information,
future events or otherwise except as may be required by law. These
forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this news
release.
CAUTIONARY NOTE TO US
INVESTORS
This news release has been prepared in accordance with the
requirements of the securities laws in effect in Canada which differ from the requirements of
United States securities laws. The
technical and scientific information contained herein has been
prepared in accordance with NI 43-101, which differs from the
standards adopted by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
(the "SEC"). Accordingly, the technical and scientific information
contained herein, including any estimates of Mineral Reserves and
Mineral Resources, may not be comparable to similar information
disclosed by United States
companies subject to the disclosure requirements of the SEC.
Additional information relating to the Company, including the
AIF, can be obtained under the Company's profile on SEDAR+ at
www.sedarplus.ca, on EDGAR at www.sec.gov, and on the Company's
website at www.newpacificmetals.com.
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SOURCE New Pacific Metals Corp.