2nd UPDATE: ERA Books Large Loss; To Expand Uranium Mine
August 04 2011 - 4:19AM
Dow Jones News
Uranium miner Energy Resources of Australia Ltd. (ERA.AU)
approved Thursday the exploration of an untapped deposit that could
extend the life of one of the world's biggest uranium mines.
The company also shelved plans to build a facility that would
improve the mine's lower-grade ore, contributing to a reserves
downgrade, related writedown and steeper annual loss than expected.
Shares in the company plunged 9.7%.
Bordering Australia's pristine Kadadu National Park, ERA's
Ranger mine was the world's second biggest by output in 2010 behind
Cameco's McArthur River pit in Canada.
Ranger, however, is close to running out of ore and ERA,
majority owned by Rio Tinto Ltd. (RIO), has been mulling expansion
options, partly because development of the nearby Jabiluka deposit
hasn't received the blessing of the land's traditional owners.
ERA's decision to work on an expansion of the mine shows it's
confident the economics could stack up despite Japan's ongoing
nuclear power crisis sparking a global re-think of the
controversial energy source.
In a historically important day for the company's development,
ERA also said Thursday that it has decided not to proceed with
construction of a heap leach facility, which would have used acid
filtration to process lower-grade ore, because it would be too
costly. Construction of the facility was one of two options ERA was
mulling to keep Ranger alive. It has instead decided to proceed
only with the Ranger 3 Deeps project.
Construction of a A$120 million exploration 'decline'--a tunnel
bored through the resource to facilitate closely spaced drilling
and a geotechnical assessment--at Ranger 3 Deeps is expected to
commence in May next year, subject to regulatory approvals. The
deposit is estimated to contain 34,000 metric tons of uranium
oxide.
ERA reported a A$121.7 million first-half loss after heavy rains
shut Ranger for months, and the shelving of the heap leach facility
triggered a A$99 million writedown. An underlying loss of A$22
million was in-line with recent guidance of A$20 million-A$30
million.
Analysts at Macquarie weren't even including a heap leach
facility in their ERA valuation. Still, the broker said ERA remains
a "structural avoid" due to its uncertain outlook and may have to
issue new shares to fund its growth. "The shape of the future ERA
remains opaque," Macquarie said.
ERA on Thursday also upped the expected cost for the looming
closure and rehabilitation of Ranger.
-By Ross Kelly, Dow Jones Newswires; 61-2-8272-4692;
Ross.Kelly@dowjones.com
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