11 September 2024
Updated Production Target
improves economics at Tiris Uranium Project
KEY
POINTS:
·
The February 2024
Front End Engineering Design ("FEED")[1]
study production target and economics has been updated using
the recently expanded 91.3Mlbs U3O8 Mineral
Resource[2] at the Tiris Uranium
Project in Mauritania
·
Production Target
Update increased the total Project U3O8 life
of mine production by 44% to 43.5Mlbs U3O8
and extended the mine life from 17 years to 25
years
·
Project economics
have also significantly improved:
·
NPV8%
of US$499 million (A$734 million) an increase of
29%
·
IRR of 39% post
tax and payback only 2.25 years
·
Life of Mine post
tax cash flows of US$1,509 million an increase of
42%
|
|
|
|
|
Units
|
Update
Sept
24
|
FEED
Feb 24
|
%
Change
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Uranium Price
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
$80
|
$80
|
0%
|
|
|
|
|
Valuations and Returns
|
|
|
|
Post-tax NPV8
|
US$M
|
499
|
388
|
29%
|
|
|
|
|
Post-tax IRR
|
%
|
39%
|
36%
|
8%
|
|
|
|
|
Payback period
|
Years
|
2.25
|
2.5
|
-10%
|
|
|
|
|
Cashflow Summary
|
|
|
|
Initial Life of Mine
|
Years
|
25
|
17
|
43%
|
|
|
|
|
LOM
Production
|
Mlbspa
U3O8
|
43.5
|
30.1
|
44%
|
|
|
|
|
Annual Production
|
Mlbspa
U3O8
|
1.8
|
1.9
|
-5%
|
|
|
|
|
Gross Revenue (LOM)
|
US$M
|
3,467
|
2,257
|
54%
|
|
|
|
|
Free Cashflow pre-tax (LOM)
|
US$M
|
1,922
|
1,327
|
45%
|
|
|
|
|
Free Cashflow post tax (LOM)
|
US$M
|
1,509
|
1,061
|
42%
|
|
|
|
|
Unit Operating Costs
|
|
|
|
All
in Cost
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
41.0
|
41.8
|
-2%
|
|
|
|
|
All-in Sustaining Costs
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
35.7
|
34.5
|
3%
|
|
|
|
|
C1
Cash Cost
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
31.4
|
30.1
|
4%
|
|
|
|
|
Capital Cost
|
|
|
|
Development Capital
|
US$M
|
230
|
230
|
0%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Aura's Managing Director and CEO, Andrew Grove
commented:
"The updated
economics from the Production Target Update clearly show the very
significant value inherent at Tiris as Aura Energy rapidly progress
towards the funding and development of the Project. The US$4.5
million drilling program undertaken earlier this year not only
delivered a 55% increase In Mineral Resources[3] but has also demonstrated over US$100 million of
additional Project NPV, now standing at US$499 million. It is
our strong belief that there is still very significant potential to
continue to add to the Mineral Resource and Reserve inventory
around Tiris East and across the whole northern Mauritanian region,
within the 13,000km2 of tenements that Aura has under
application[4].
With the
current large scale of the Mineral Resource Estimate inventory and
future resource growth potential, the prospect for significant
increase in the uranium production rate from Tiris once in
production is very real and we are working on assessing, analysing
and shortly presenting the results from the work currently being
undertaken.
The updated
Production Target study has not only increased the mine life and
significantly improved the project economics but has simplified and
de-risked the early mining sequence and brought forward some
uranium production by 21% in the first year, and by 9% over the
first five years compared to the FEED study[5]. These improved metrics will further support the
funding process which is currently underway with indicative offers
due this quarter.
The Company
is rapidly working towards achieving the Final Investment Decision
by the end of the current quarter with many activities underway
including water drilling, engagement with EPCM contractors and
operational readiness preparations. And we look forward to
providing further updates on progress."
Key
highlights and outcomes of the updated Production
Target:
The update to the production target for the
FEED study5 has allowed revenue to be moved forward in
the mining schedule and also increased the overall life of
mine.
·
Robust base case project financial economics demonstrated by
post-tax NPV8 of US$499M (A$734M)
with IRR of 39%, and a 2.25-year payback at realised
uranium price of US$80/lb U3O8
· At
uranium prices of US$100/lb U3O8 the
economics increase to post-tax NPV8 of US$779M
(A$1,145M) with IRR of 55%
·
Initial mine life increased from 17 years to 25 years,
producing an average 1.8Mlbspa U3O8 from the
2.0Mlbspa U3O8 capacity process
plant
·
Life of Mine ("LOM") uranium production increased from
30.1Mlbs U3O8to 43.5Mlbs
U3O8
· 93%
Measured and Indicated Mineral Resources in mining schedule during
the first four years, LOM Inferred material totals 33% mostly
beyond ten years in the mining schedule
· The
open pit mining is a simple, low-risk, shallow, free digging
operation without the need for crushing and grinding
·
Beneficiation delivers a high-grade leach feed averaging
2,217ppm U3O8 increasing from 1,997ppm
U3O8 (over first 5 years) and overall remains
approximately the same at 1,752ppm U3O8 from
1,743ppm U3O8 (LOM) at a very low average
cost of US$9.16/lb U3O8
·
AISC has increased to US$35.7/lb U3O8,
an escalation of 3% on the 2024 FEED estimate5, largely
due to a minor increase in waste to ore strip ratio from
0.7 to 0.8 waste to ore tonnes
·
CAPEX of US$230M, was not re-evaluated in this update and
remained unchanged from the FEED study7
·
Uranium production planned within 18 months of Final
Investment Decision
·
Modular design provides opportunities for further capital
efficient expansion and scalability
· The
construction and operation of the Tiris Uranium Project will
deliver significant and ongoing benefits to the people of
Mauritania
Modular design
provides opportunities for further capital efficient expansion and
scalability
The update to the Production Target based on
the successful exploration drilling program to update the Mineral
Resource Estimate[6] confirms the value in
continued growth of the Tiris Project. The modular circuit
design shown in Figure 1
allows flexibility in production scheduling and
potential for rapid and simple expansion of production
capacity.
Figure 1 - Tiris Uranium Project key
operational parameters and systems
There is significant potential to expand
production capacity early in the Project life cycle to more
efficiently utilise the existing Mineral Resource Estimate.
The modular configuration of the processing plant is well suited to
capital efficient and simple expansion to accommodate accelerated
processing of the MRE as outlined in the FEED Study[7] and summarised below.
·
2.0Mlbspa U3O8 production capacity =
US$230M development capital (Base Case)
·
2.8Mlbspa U3O8 production capacity =
US$83M expansion capital (from 2 to 2.8Mlbpa)
·
3.5Mlbspa U3O8 production capacity =
US$166M expansion capital (from 2 to 3.5Mlbpa)
Aura sees additional potential for growth of
uranium resources in Mauritania, both within the Tiris East region
and more widely in the Tiris Zemmour province. The Company
has applied for 29 additional exploration tenements, covering
13,000 km2 that show very strong uranium
potential[8], Figure 2, across the region and
will continue to work to build northern Mauritania as a significant
global uranium province.
Figure 2 - Aura tenements
including granted and applications also showing geology and
radiometric targets

Next Steps
The next steps in progressing
towards the construction and development of the Project planned for
2024 and early 2025 include:
•
Project funding inclusive of debt, strategic
investors and equity
•
Securing further offtake contracts for future
production
•
Confirming water infrastructure to support future
operations - drilling commenced
•
Engagement with qualified EPCM contractors for
Project development
•
Additional engineering and design work to support
development activities
•
Update of Ore Reserve Estimate
•
Option analysis for future project
growth
•
Completion of Project Execution Plan
•
Final Investment Decision aimed for Q1
2025
ENDS
The Board of Aura Energy Ltd has approved this
announcement.
This Announcement contains inside information
for the purposes of the UK version of the market abuse regulation
(EU No. 596/2014) as it forms part of United Kingdom domestic law
by virtue of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 ("UK
MAR").
For
further information, please contact:
Andrew Grove
Managing Director and CEO
Aura Energy Limited
agrove@auraee.com
+61 414 011 383
|
Paul Ryan
Sodali & Co
Investor & Media
Relations
paul.ryan@sodali.com
+61 409 296 511
|
SP
Angel Corporate Finance LLP
Nominated Advisor and
Broker
David Hignell
Adam Cowl
Devik Mehta
Grant Barker
+44 203 470 0470
|
About Aura Energy (ASX: AEE, AIM:
AURA)
Aura Energy is an Australian-based
mineral company with major uranium and polymetallic projects in
Africa and Europe.
The Company is focused on developing
a uranium mine at the Tiris Uranium Project, a major greenfield
uranium discovery in Mauritania. 2024 FEED Study[9] and this release demonstrated Tiris to be a
near-term low-cost 2Mlbs U3O8 pa near term
uranium mine with a 25-year mine life with excellent economics and
optionality to expand to accommodate future resource
growth.
Aura plans to transition from a
uranium explorer to a uranium producer to capitalise on the rapidly
growing demand for nuclear power as the world shifts towards a
decarbonised energy sector.
Beyond the Tiris Project, Aura owns
100% of the Häggån Project in Sweden. Häggån contains a
global-scale 2.5Bt vanadium, sulphate of potash ("SOP")[10] and uranium[11] resource.
Utilising only 3% of the resource, a 2023 Scoping Study[12] outlined a 17-year mine life based on mining
3.5Mtpa.
Disclaimer Regarding Forward-Looking
Statements
This ASX announcement (Announcement)
contains various forward-looking statements. All statements other
than statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements are inherently subject to uncertainties
in that they may be affected by a variety of known and unknown
risks, variables and factors which could cause actual values or
results, performance or achievements to differ materially
from the expectations described in such forward-looking
statements. The Company does not give any assurance or
guarantee that the anticipated results, performance or
achievements expressed or implied in those forward-looking
statements will be achieved.
The Company has concluded that it
has a reasonable basis for providing the forward-looking statements
and production targets included in this announcement and that
material assumptions remain unchanged. The detailed reasons for
this conclusion are outlined throughout this announcement, and in
the ASX Releases, "Scoping Study Confirms Scale and Optionality of
Häggån", 5 September 2023; "Aura's Tiris FEED Study returns
Excellent Economics" 28 February 2024; "Tiris Uranium Project
Enhanced Definitive Feasibility Study", 29 March 2023 and this
release.
TIRIS Production Target Update
Summary
The Tiris Uranium Project is a greenfield
calcrete uranium project located in Mauritania that was first
discovered by Aura Energy in 2008. It represents the first planned
development in a significant new global uranium province in
Mauritania with an updated Mineral Resource Estimate of 91.3Mlbs
U3O8[13] and
considerable exploration upside and project growth opportunities.
The mineralisation is naturally suited to low capital cost
development and low operating cost extraction of uranium,
presenting an opportunity for near term development of the
Project.
The FEED Study[14]
was completed in February 2024 with focus on improving engineering
definition for each of the three modular circuit components of the
Tiris Uranium Project, including the Beneficiation, Concentrate
Processing and Precipitation and Packaging Circuits. The scope was
defined in this manner to provide scalability to fully utilise
additional Resources as they were defined.
The FEED study defined the project
configuration outlined in Table 1.
Full details of the FEED study can be found in ASX Release: 'Aura's
Tiris FEED Study returns excellent economics', 28th
February 2024.
Table 1 - FEED
configuration parameters with comparison of variations between FEED
production target and updated production target.
Parameter
|
Unit
|
Update
Sep-24
|
FEED
Feb-2414
|
% Change
|
Beneficiation modules
|
#
|
4
|
4
|
|
Processing modules
|
#
|
2
|
2
|
|
Precipitation and packaging modules
|
#
|
1
|
1
|
|
Beneficiation design capacity
|
Mtpa
|
5
|
5
|
|
Processing design capacity
|
Mtpa
|
0.5
|
0.5
|
|
Total ore mined
|
Mt
|
94.4
|
63.7
|
48%
|
Avg
Strip ratio
|
W:O
|
0.8
|
0.7
|
21%
|
Avg
mined grade
|
ppm
U3O8
|
246
|
255
|
-4%
|
Contained U3O8
|
Mlb
U3O8
|
51.2
|
35.8
|
43%
|
Avg
concentrate grade
|
ppm
U3O8
|
1,752
|
1,743
|
0.5%
|
Total Product U3O8
|
Mlb
U3O8
|
43.5
|
30.1
|
44%
|
Life of Mine
|
years
|
25
|
17
|
43%
|
Resource utilisation
|
|
77%
|
75%
|
2%
|
June 2024 Mineral Resource Estimate Increases
Production Target
The material assumptions for the FEED
study17 capital and operating cost estimates, outlined
in ASX release: "Aura's Tiris FEED Study Returns Excellent
Economics", 28th February 2024, remained unchanged in
the development of an updated production target utilising the
updated June 2024 Mineral Resource Estimate ("MRE")[15]. All updates relating to the Material
Assumptions for inputs to the updated Production Target are
outlined in the following sections.
Tiris Project
Background
The Tiris Uranium Project is 100% owned by
Tiris Ressources SA, which is 85% owned by Aura Energy Ltd and 15%
by the Mauritanian Government's Agence Nationale de Recherches
Géologiques et du Patrimoine Minier ("ANARPAM").
A Scoping Study was completed in 2014. This was
updated into a Feasibility Study ("FS") document in May 2017, to
support an application for exploitation licences. FS and an
extensive Environmental and Social Impact Assessment ("ESIA") were
submitted on 24 May 2017 to the Mauritanian Ministry of Petroleum,
Energy and Mines, and formally approved by the Mauritanian
Government on 5th October 2017.
A Definitive Feasibility Study ("DFS") for a
1.25Mtpa mine and 230ktpa process plant was completed in
2019[16]. The process plant has been
designed to take full advantage of the characteristics of the
material which responds well to concentration of uranium by
scrubbing and screening, whilst providing a low capital cost and
rapid project development and construction.
The Capital Estimate for the DFS was updated in
August 2021[17]. In March 2023 an Enhanced
Definitive Feasibility Study ("EFS") was published including
additional Ore Reserves and Mineral Resources defined in ASX and
AIM releases, "Major Resource Upgrade at Aura Energy's Tiris
Project", 14 February 2023 and ASX Release, "Tiris
Uranium Project Enhanced Definitive Feasibility Study", 29 March
2023. The EFS presented a staged development approach,
including a 2-year ramp up at 1.25Mtpa mined ore, expanding to
4.1Mtpa mined ore in year three to produce an average of 2Mlbspa
U3O8.
In February 2024 the results of a FEED study
were published in ASX and AIM Release: Aura's Tiris
FEED Study Returns Excellent Economics, 28th February
2024. This study updated capital and operating
cost assumptions and accelerated production to a base case capacity
of 2Mlbpa U3O8 from the beginning of the
project.
Exploitation licences (2491C4 and 2492C4) for
the Ain Sder and Oued El Foude permits, were granted on the 8 of
February 2019[18], Mining Conventions for
these permits were signed in January 2023[19]
and the final permits for mining and processing uranium were
granted in July 2024[20].
Updated Mineral Resource
Estimate
In June 2024 an updated Mineral Resource
Estimate (MRE) was published based on the aircore drilling program
completed in the first half of 2024. The updated Tiris
Mineral Resource Estimate has been detailed in ASX and AIM Release:
"Aura Increases Tiris Mineral Resources By 55% to 91.3Mlbs",
12th June 2024 and is summarised in Table 2
Table 2 - Tiris Global Mineral Resource Estimate
as of June 2024
Tiris Global Mineral Resource
Estimate as at June 2024
|
Area
|
Class
|
Mt
|
Grade ppm
U3O8
|
Mlbs
U3O8
|
Tiris
East
|
Measured
|
34
|
230
|
17.3
|
Indicated
|
48
|
212
|
22.6
|
Inferred
|
79
|
210
|
36.7
|
Total
|
162
|
215
|
76.6
|
Oum Ferkik
|
Inferred
|
22
|
294
|
14.6
|
Total Mineral
Resources
|
Measured
|
34
|
230
|
17.3
|
Indicated
|
48
|
212
|
22.6
|
Inferred
|
102
|
229
|
51.4
|
Total
|
184
|
225
|
91.3
|
The information in this announcement is extracted from ASX and
AIM Release: "Aura Increases Tiris Mineral Resources by 55% to
91.3Mlbs", 12th June 2024 and is available to download
from asx.com.au ASX:AEE.
The Mineral Resource Estimates underpinning this Production
Target Update have been prepared by Competent Persons in accordance
with the requirements in ASX Listing Rules Appendix 5A (JORC
Code).
The Company is not aware of any new information or data that
materially affects the information included in the original market
announcement and, in the case of estimates of Mineral Resources
that all material assumptions and technical parameters underpinning
the estimates in the relevant market announcement continue to apply
and have not materially changed. The Company confirms that the form
and context in which the Competent Person's findings are presented
have not been materially modified from the original market
announcement
Information from the MRE was assessed using Material
Assumptions outlined in the following Updated Mining Assumptions
section of this announcement, to establish an updated Production
Target for the Tiris Uranium Project. For this assessment,
the Ore Reserve Estimate published with the 2023 Enhanced
Feasibility Study ("EFS")[21] was not
updated. Work continues to define the updated Ore Reserve
Estimate using the updated MRE, with a detailed review of modifying
factors. The Company expects that the updated Ore Reserve
Estimate will be completed in Q4 2024.
Updated Mining Assumptions
1.
INTRODUCTION
An updated mine planning study was undertaken on the
June 2024 update to the Mineral Resource Estimate for the
Tiris Uranium Project of 184Mt @ 225ppm U3O8
for 91.3Mlbs U3O8[22].
The tasks completed included open pit optimisations, mine layouts
and production scheduling.
The mining method is similar to that proposed in
previous studies and is a small-scale open pit 'strip' mine which
will commence with the excavation of numerous discrete pits, with
the waste placed in a surface landforms. As mining continues,
the resulting pit voids are available to take the waste from the
next mining area, beneficiation plant rejects and leach plant
tailings, which allows progressive backfilling and
rehabilitation. This mining method will result in 'real-time
rehabilitation' including a smaller environmental footprint at any
given time and significant savings in waste movement and
rehabilitation costs.
Mining has been costed using an owner mining model,
the same as was used in the 2024 FEED Study, refer ASX and AIM
release "FEED study confirms excellent economics for the Tiris
Uranium Project" 28 February 2024.
2.
MINERAL RESOURCE BLOCK MODELS
The Mineral Resource block models were supplied as
regularized, diluted models as Multiple Indicator Kriged ("MIK")
with a block size of 50 mE x 50 mN x 1.0 mRL. The models have an
average diluted uranium grade for the regularised block. In
addition, the models report the proportion of the block above a
range of cut off grades ("COG") and the diluted uranium grade of
those proportions. The COG reported are 25, 50, 100, 110, 125, 150,
175, 200, 250, 300, 400 and 500 ppm U3O8.
The proportional COG used for reporting of the MRE is
the 100 ppm U3O8 proportion and grade fields
(GR100 and PR_100). The 100 ppm U3O8
proportion and grade fields have also been used for this study. The
MIK proportional block model implies that a level of mining
selectivity can be achieved to separately mine these portions
within the 50 mE x 50 mN x 1.0 mRL block. This block size
represents an appropriate Selective Mining Unit ("SMU") block size
for the assumed mining methods of the ore/waste contact and
underlying ore zones and is unchanged from the 2019 Tiris Uranium
DFS Study[23]. To achieve this selectivity a
grade control program of drilling and probe measurements on a
spacing of 10 mE x 10 mN was proposed.
The block models include an interpretation of sand
dune material above the Lazare North, Sadi and Hippolyte North
deposits. The proportional field SAND was used to estimate sand
mining physicals, a second sand field, SAND2, is present in these
models and estimates a lower quantity of sand, this field was not
used in this study.
3.
OPEN PIT SHELL OPTIMISATION PARAMETERS
The parameters used in the pit shell optimisation are
as follows:
Revenue
The base revenue selected by Aura Energy for the pit
shell optimisation is US$80/lb. U3O8. In the
pit shell optimisation process revenue factors 0.6 to 1.5 were
evaluated, covering a range of US$48/lb U3O8
to US$120/lb. U3O8. No revenue was attributed
to Vanadium.
A royalty cost of 3.5% of U3O8
revenue was applied in the optimisation process.
Process
Recovery
The processing on site is undertaken in two distinct
stages. The mined feed is processed through a beneficiation plant
and then a slurry is pumped to a leach / precipitation plant. The
beneficiation metal recovery and mass rejection vary by deposit
(see Table 3) and the leach / precipitation recovery is 92.2%.
Table 3 - Processing parameters used in
pit shell optimization and LOM averages from financial model
Mineral Resource
Area
|
Beneficiation Mass rejection
%
|
Beneficiation Metal Recovery
%
|
Overall Process Recovery
%
|
Lazare North
|
89.3
|
95.5
|
88.1
|
Lazare South
|
88.2
|
90.8
|
83.7
|
Sadi
|
89.3
|
95.5
|
88.4
|
Hippolyte (N, S, E, W)
|
83.0
|
86.0
|
79.3
|
Marie (E, F, G, H)
|
89.0
|
95.0
|
87.6
|
LOM Average
(modelled)
|
86.9
|
91.3
|
84.2
|
Slope
angles
The deposits are very shallow in nature and will be
backfilled. Therefore, the overall pit slope angles are not overly
relevant for the optimisations and were set at 80 degrees for all
deposits.
Costs
The costs used in the pit shell optimisation process
were sourced from the February 2024 FEED Study[24] and were applied on a US$ per tonne of
beneficiation plant feed basis and are show in Table 4. The site
general and administration fixed cost and the leach / precipitation
costs were provided as overall costs per pound of
U3O8 and the calculation of cost per tonne of
beneficiation plant feed reflected the varying beneficiation
performance across the Mineral Resource areas.
Table 4 - Pits shell optimisation cost
parameters
Mineral Resource
Area
|
Unit
|
Costs
|
Waste Mining
|
US$/t waste
|
1.75
|
|
Bene. Plant Feed Mining
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
1.98
|
|
Back haul of Bene. Reject
|
US$/t reject
|
0.69
|
|
Back haul of Leach Tailings
|
US$/t tailings
|
1.99
|
|
Bene. Plant
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
1.26
|
|
Mineral Resource
Area
|
Leach/Precipitation cost
|
Site G&A cost
|
Lazare North
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
5.12
|
1.55
|
Lazare South
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
5.65
|
1.71
|
Sadi
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
5.12
|
1.55
|
Hippolyte (N, S, E, W)
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
8.14
|
2.46
|
Marie (E, F, G, H)
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
5.26
|
1.59
|
Cut off
Grade
The Cut Off Grades (COG) were estimated for each
Mineral Resource area using the parameters described in the Mineral
Resource Block Models section above. The COG estimation included
the average mining cost from the February 2024 FEED
study[25] of US$4.00/t beneficiation
plant feed. Often COG estimation for open pit mining ignores the
mining cost as it is assumed that all material within the pit shell
will be mined, and the decision point is whether that material is
sent directly to the process plant or waste dump. However, as these
deposits will be mined as strip mining of essentially a single
mineralised horizon it was appropriate that the mining cost be
included in the COG estimation. The cut off grades estimated in
Table 5 indicated that the use of the Mineral Resource proportional
grade fields of the 100 ppm U3O8 COG was
appropriate. In the Hippolyte Mineral Resource area, a COG of 120
ppm U3O8 was applied and any blocks with a
GR_100 grade below 120 ppm U3O8 were taken as
waste.
Table 5 - Cut Off Grades
Mineral Resource
Area
|
Unit
|
Calculated COG U3O8
ppm
|
Selected COG
U3O8 ppm
|
Lazare North
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
80
|
100
|
Lazare South
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
88
|
100
|
Sadi
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
80
|
100
|
Hippolyte (N, S, E, W)
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
117
|
120
|
Marie (E, F, G, H)
|
US$/t Bene. feed
|
81
|
100
|
4.
OPEN PIT SHELL OPTIMISATION RESULTS
The pit shell optimisations results
showed:
· 95%
of the value is contained in the revenue factor 0.7 shell
(US$56/lb U3O8)
· 84%
of the metal is contained in the revenue factor 0.7 shell
(US$56/lb U3O8).
·
Selection of the revenue factor 1.0 shell (US$80/lb) would
increase the mined metal by 10M lbs
U3O8. However, this reduces the average
mined grade from 248ppm to 227ppm U3O8
and increases the waste movement by 80M tonnes (66%
increase)
The revenue
factor 0.7 (US$56/ lb U3O8) shells were
selected for design.
5.
OPEN PIT DESIGNS
Due to the shallow nature of the deposits
(average pit depth of 4.7m, with 99% of the pit less than 9.0 m
deep) the optimisation shells were used as pit designs in this
study. As the project develops, the pit designs will need to be
developed but they will still be relatively simple shapes used to
extract the ore and waste.
The 50m x 50m x 1m model blocks within the pit
shells were aggregated vertically to form mining blocks 50m x 50m x
full depth of the pit at that point, including any sand mining pre
strip.
The mining blocks were grouped into mining
panels of 200m x 200m as the practical working area. All mining
blocks within a mining panel were scheduled to be mined together.
This panel size was selected as it provides sufficient length on
any side to ensure a ramp can be installed and that mine
development can be advanced enough for continuous backfilling.
Individual isolated 50m x 50m mining blocks are retained in the pit
design as they are generally shallower than average (less than 4.7m
depth) and can be mined with minimal ramps.
A "slot mining" technique has been used in the
lowest 2m vertical of each mining block. In the upper parts of the
mining block all waste and beneficiation plant feed are mined. In
the 2m at the base of the mining block the plant feed is mined
using a slot mining technique where the truck and excavator are
both on the top of the bench (top loading). This mining technique
reduces the waste mined by 35% over the project, compared with
mining the pits to a flat floor at full depth.
The open pit mining blocks and location of
processing facilities are shown in Figure 3 and Figure 3a. The
distances shown are for scale and indicative of the longest hauls
to each plant not average haul distances. The mining design
has been structured around six beneficiation plant locations and a
single leach / precipitation plant located adjacent to the Lazare
North beneficiation Plant. Four beneficiation modules will be
used, with movements in year 4, 7, 10 and 15. The average haul from
pit to beneficiation plant is 2.4 km, with the first deposits to be
mined having shorter average haul distances (Lazare North -2.2 km,
Lazare South 1.6 km and Sadi South 2.1 km).
Haulage distances to the allocated benefication
plant have been calculated for each mining block. Waste haulage has
been assumed to be less than 1 km. Benefication plant rejects will
be back loaded to location in the pit where waste is being dumped
at that time for co deposition. Beneficiantion plant rejects will
be 83% - 89.3% of beneification plant feed tonnes, varying by
deposit. Leach plant tailing will be trucked from the leach plant
and co deposited or buried in active pit areas, initially in Lazare
North pits ( 2.2km haul distance) and later into Lazare South pits
(8.5 km haul distance). Leach tails will be 10.7% - 17% of
benefication plant feed tonnes, varying by deposit. In the base
case life of mine 12.3 Mt of leach tailings will be
co-deposited.
Figure 3 - Open pit mining blocks for each
Mineral Resource Area by Uranium grade including infractructure
location and distance to Leach Plant

Figure 3a - Open pit mining blocks for each
Mineral Resource Area by Uranium grade showing maximum haulage
distances and benefication plant locations





6.
WASTE DUMP DESIGNS
The initial mining in each Mineral Resource
area will require a temporary waste dump to be constructed to store
the overburden, beneficiation rejects and dry-stacked tailings
until sufficient void space has been mined for back filling to
commence. The size and location of these dumps is determined by the
production schedule.
Each dump constructed will be
rehandled back into the mining void prior to a mining area being
completed.
7.
MINING OPERATIONS AND MOBILE FLEET
The mining equipment proposed is the same
equipment type as proposed in previous studies[26].
·
Excavator - 60 t - Komatsu PC850-8, 4.0 m3 bucket,
or similar
·
Loader - Komatsu WA500-8, or similar
·
Truck - Komatsu HD605-8, 56 t payload, or similar
Excavators will be used for pit mining. Loaders
will be used for loading trucks with beneficiation plant reject and
leach plant tailings.
The mining is structured around single handling
of plant feed from pit to the beneficiation plant hopper, avoiding
any stockpiling of dry plant feed due to the fine particle
distribution of mineralisation and potential loss by wind. Blasting
or dozer ripping will not be used as it also risks loss of fine
particles of mineralisation.
The beneficiation plant hopper will be of
adequate size to maintain continuous feed to the beneficiation
plant during shift changes, mining equipment down time and while
the excavator is mining waste.
Mining activities will be structured as teams
based at each beneficiation plant site. With sharing of extra
equipment between teams on excavator and loader service
days.
The mining fleet requirements by quarter have
been summarised in Figure 4.
Figure 4 - Mining mobile equipment fleet by
quarter for updated production target.

8.
BASE MINING AND PROCESSING SCHEDULE CASE
The scheduling objectives for the base case
schedule, in order of priority applied, are:
1. Limit the proportion of
Inferred Mineral Resources mined to less than 10 % of feed in first
four years and less than 25 % in the first ten years
2. Maximise cashflow by
targeting high value mining areas early in the life of
mine
3. Maximise utilisation of
leach plant - 520,000 t concentrate per annum
4. Precipitation plant - 3.5M
lbs. U3O8 per annum - not fully
utilised
5. Maximise utilisation of
the beneficiation plant - 4 modules each 1.2 Mt plant feed per
plant per annum
6. Minimise the number
beneficiation plant locations during the first 3 years of the
project to reduce project complexity at startup
7. Minimise the number of
beneficiation plant relocations - estimated to require 3-month
downtime per relocation
8. Minimise mining cost by
reducing haulage distance from pit to beneficiation
plant
9. Minimise mining cost by
levelling activity rates
Key points in the updated base case
schedule
· In
the first 3 years two beneficiation plants locations will be used
Lazare North and Sadi South. Each of these will have 2 modules
(each 1.25 Mtpa capacity)
· In
year 4 one of the Lazare North modules will be relocated to Lazare
South
· In
year 7 one of the Sadi South modules will be relocated to Sadi
North
· In
year 10 mining at Lazare North will be complete and the
beneficiation plant will be relocated to Hippolyte North
· In
year 15 mining at Sadi South will be complete and the beneficiation
plant will be relocated to Hippolyte South
·
Project life of mine is 25 years
The base case schedule physicals are shown in
Table 6 and the physicals charts by year are shown in Figure
5.
Table 6 - Summary Physicals by
Mineral Resource Area
Mineral Resource
Area
|
Total
Movement
|
Strip Ratio
|
Beneficiation Plant
Feed
|
Recovered
Metal
|
Sand
|
Rock
|
Waste
|
Feed
|
U308
|
U3O8
|
U3O8
|
MT
|
MT
|
MT
|
MT
|
ppm
|
Mlbs
|
Mlbs
|
Lazare North
|
0.7
|
37
|
16
|
1.1
|
15
|
287
|
9
|
8
|
Lazare South
|
|
37
|
15
|
1.0
|
15
|
246
|
8
|
7
|
Sadi
|
1.1
|
77
|
28
|
0.8
|
35
|
216
|
17
|
15
|
Hippolyte North
|
0.5
|
35
|
12
|
0.7
|
16
|
292
|
10
|
8
|
Hippolyte South
|
|
26
|
7
|
0.5
|
14
|
234
|
7
|
6
|
Total
|
2.3
|
211
|
77
|
0.8
|
94
|
248
|
52
|
43
|
Note:
There is a low
level of geological confidence associated with Inferred Resources
and there is no certainty that further exploration or evaluation
work will result in the determination of Indicated Resources or
that the production targets reported in this announcement will be
realised. The Company confirms that the use of Inferred Resources
is not a determining factor to the Tiris Project's economic
viability.
Figure 5 - Physicals by mining area by
year.

Note:
There is a low
level of geological confidence associated with Inferred Resources
and there is no certainty that further exploration or evaluation
work will result in the determination of Indicated Resources or
that the production targets reported in this announcement will be
realised. The Company confirms that the use of Inferred Resources
is not a determining factor to the Tiris Project's economic
viability.
9.
MINING COST ESTIMATION
Mining has been costed using an owner mining model
same as was used in the February 2024 FEED study, refer ASX Release
"FEED study confirms excellent economics for the Tiris Uranium
Project" 28 February 2024.
The mining costs were estimated using the project
cost and financial models. Refer to the project capital and
operating cost sections of this release for the mining costs.
10. ORE
RESERVE ESTIMATE
There are no Ore Reserves reported from this
work.
This mine schedule optimisation study has not been
undertaken to a suitable level for Ore Reserve Reporting. There is
outstanding work required before an Ore Reserve can be estimated
based on the June 2024 Mineral Resource. That work is currently in
progress.
Site Layout
The Tiris East Resources are located over a
large area, with beneficiation modules located with each of the
active Resource areas, pumping slurry concentrate to a central
processing plant. The Resource areas are to be mined to
completion, before the beneficiation module is moved to a new area,
maximising capital efficiency.
A goal of the updated production schedule was
to focus mining in the early years of the project on resource areas
closer to the processing plant, reducing or eliminating slurry
pumping requirements. To support this the location of the
processing plant will be moved to be adjacent to the Lazare North
Resource area.
The location of the processing plant and
beneficiation modules over the life of the project can be seen in
Figure 6. It should be noted that although beneficiation
module locations are shown only 4 beneficiation modules are
required for the life of the project, with modules moved to new
resource areas as economic resources are depleted.
Figure 6 - Location of processing and
beneficiation modules, with open pits over the life of the
project

Production Schedule
Base Case Production Schedule
An updated base case production schedule was
developed based on pit optimisation from the updated production
target, with a focus on consolidating mining in the Lazare North
and Sadi Resource areas in the initial mining periods and moving
Hippolyte mining areas to later years. The Production Target
was constrained by maintaining full utilisation of the leaching
circuits, with mining rate and uranium oxide concentrate production
rate allowed to vary to maintain this condition as defined under
scheduling objectives.
The updated production schedule, compared with
the FEED study production schedule has been summarised in Figure
7.
Figure 7 - Comparison of mined ore production
schedule between FEED production target[27]
and Update production target showing increased production targets
in first 10 years and longer mine life

Note:
There is a low
level of geological confidence associated with Inferred Resources
and there is no certainty that further exploration or evaluation
work will result in the determination of Indicated Resources or
that the production targets reported in this announcement will be
realised. The Company confirms that the use of Inferred Resources
is not a determining factor to the Tiris Project's economic
viability.
A focus was maintained on minimisation of
Inferred category material in the first 10 years of operation. The
updated mining schedule includes 7% inferred material in the first
four years and 21% in the first ten years of operation. Over the
Life of Mine a total of 33% Inferred material was included in the
mining schedule. The Project remains strongly viable with removal
of Inferred material.
The production target profile by resource
category can be seen in Figure 8.
Figure 8 - Base Case Mine schedule ore profile
by area at average mining rate of 4.1Mtpa ore.

Note:
There is a low
level of geological confidence associated with Inferred Resources
and there is no certainty that further exploration or evaluation
work will result in the determination of Indicated Resources or
that the production targets reported in this announcement will be
realised. The Company confirms that the use of Inferred Resources
is not a determining factor to the Tiris Project's economic
viability.
The production target profile by resource area
is shown in Figure 5. This shows mining constrained to the
Lazare North and Sadi Resource areas for the first 3 years of
operation, greatly simplifying the construction profile. In
year 4 a beneficiation module from Lazare North is moved to Lazare
South and mining continues in the eastern portions of the Resource
until year 10. From year 11, a beneficiation module is moved
from Lazare North to Hippolyte
The updated Base Case concentrate grade profile
for U3O8 has been presented in Figure 9,
demonstrating an average concentrate grade to leaching of 1,752ppm
U3O8 life of mine. A full description of
concentration of uranium through the beneficiation circuit by
scrubbing and screening, including recovery assumptions, can be
found in ASX and AIM Release, "Tiris Uranium Project Enhanced
Definitive Feasibility Study", 29 March 2023.
Figure 9 - Concentrate grade profile for base
case mining schedule highlighting higher leach feed grade profile
in early years. Average Concentrate production rate of
520,000tpa

The updated production target
U3O8 production profile can be seen in Figure
10. Over the life of mine the average production rate has been
estimated as 1.8Mlb U3O8 pa, ranging from
2.5Mlbpa U3O8 in Year 1 to 1.3Mlb
U3O8 in Year 21. Average production for
the first 10 years of operation will be 2.2Mlb
U3O8 pa.
Figure 10 - Uranium oxide production profile
for base case scenario.

Capital Cost Estimate
The FEED Capital Cost Estimate ("CAPEX") for
the development of Tiris was completed using a design basis of a
single modular processing train, with units combined to generate an
Estimate for total production capacity of 2Mlbpa
U3O8 in Table 7. The total CAPEX was
estimated to be US$230 million (including a contingency allowance
of approximately 12%).
Table 7 - Project CAPEX - FEED 2024[28].
Area
|
FEED 2024
US$M
|
Mining
|
4.3
|
Beneficiation
|
25.6
|
Processing
|
84.2
|
Infrastructure
|
54.1
|
EPCM
|
22.5
|
Owner's cost
|
19.3
|
Contingency
|
20.1
|
Total Capital Cost
|
230.0
|
Operating Cost Estimate
The operating cost estimate inputs were
maintained from the FEED study25, with no changes made
to unit input costs. The updated schedule did result in some
changes to the mining fleet requirements and a higher strip ratio
than the FEED production schedule, which resulted in a modest
increase in unit operating cost.
The operating cost estimate has been summarised
in Table 8. The average LOM C1 cash cost will be US$31.4/lb
U3O8 and LOM AISC, inclusive of royalties,
LOM sustaining capital, insurances and product transport will be
US$35.7/lb U3O8. These costs have been
estimated as an average of annualised expenditure.
Table 8 - FEED Operating Cost estimate,
including comparison to FEED average OPEX.
Error! Reference source not
found.Area
|
Update
|
FEED
|
Variation
|
Q3 2024
|
Q1 2024
|
Absolute
|
%
|
US$/lb U3O8
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
%
|
Owner Mining
|
$9.1
|
$8.1
|
$1.06
|
13%
|
Labour
|
$2.0
|
$2.0
|
$0.03
|
1%
|
Reagents
|
$7.0
|
$6.9
|
$0.14
|
2%
|
Power
|
$8.2
|
$8.6
|
-$0.37
|
-4%
|
Maintenance
|
$1.8
|
$1.8
|
$0.03
|
2%
|
Environment
|
$0.6
|
$0.4
|
$0.18
|
44%
|
Site G&A
|
$2.5
|
$2.5
|
$0.03
|
1%
|
CASH COST
|
$31.4
|
$30.2
|
$1.21
|
4%
|
Transport & Marketing
|
$0.5
|
$0.5
|
$0.00
|
0%
|
Royalties
|
$2.8
|
$2.7
|
$0.09
|
3%
|
Communities
|
$0.8
|
$0.7
|
$0.09
|
13%
|
Sustaining Capital
|
$0.2
|
$0.3
|
-$0.13
|
-45%
|
ALL-IN-SUSTAINING COST
|
$35.7
|
$34.5
|
$1.16
|
3%
|
Market Analysis
Aura has maintained the uranium market
assumptions outlined in the 2024 FEED study[29], with a long term price assumption of US$80/lb
U3O8. These assumptions remain valid
with no material changes.
Financial Analysis
Financial analysis of the Tiris Project is
inclusive of Mauritanian government royalties and commitments
relating to the offtake agreement with Curzon Resources. This is
outlined in the ASX announcement "Update to Curzon Offtake
Agreement", dated 16th April 2024.
Results are on an after-tax basis in $USD,
unless otherwise stated. Financial modelling is inclusive of all
capital items, including mining mobilisation, process plant,
project infrastructure and LOM sustaining capital.
Table 9 shows the variance in NPV8,
IRR, payback period and net cashflows including commitments to the
updated Curzon Resources offtake agreement[30]
between this Production Target Update and the FEED
Study28. Applying a base case uranium price of
US$80/lb
U3O8, the post-tax NPV8 of
the Tiris Project is US$499M, the post-tax IRR of
36%, and the project
payback of 2.25 years from
commencement of production. At this price the project generates
average annual net cashflows
(EBITDA) of US$89M pa for the first 5 years and US$63M pa for the
LOM.
Table 9 - Summary of outputs recommended for
presentation of Production Target Update and FEED update
results
|
Units
|
FEED Update Sept
24
|
FEED Feb 24
|
% Change
|
|
|
|
|
|
Uranium Price
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
$80
|
$80
|
0%
|
|
|
|
Valuations and Returns
|
|
|
Post-tax NPV8
|
US$M
|
499
|
388
|
29%
|
|
|
|
Post-tax IRR
|
%
|
39%
|
36%
|
8%
|
|
|
|
Payback period
|
Years
|
2.25
|
2.5
|
-10%
|
|
|
|
Cashflow Summary
|
|
|
Initial Life of Mine
|
Years
|
25
|
17
|
43%
|
|
|
|
LOM
Production
|
Mlbspa
U3O8
|
43.5
|
30.1
|
44%
|
|
|
|
Annual Production
|
Mlbspa
U3O8
|
1.8
|
1.9
|
-5%
|
|
|
|
Gross Revenue (LOM)
|
US$M
|
3,467
|
2,257
|
54%
|
|
|
|
Free Cashflow pre-tax (LOM)
|
US$M
|
1,922
|
1,327
|
45%
|
|
|
|
Free Cashflow post tax (LOM)
|
US$M
|
1,509
|
1,061
|
42%
|
|
|
|
Unit Operating Costs
|
|
|
All
in Cost
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
41.0
|
41.8
|
-2%
|
|
|
|
All-in Sustaining Costs
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
35.7
|
34.5
|
3%
|
|
|
|
C1
Cash Cost
|
US$/lb
U3O8
|
31.4
|
30.1
|
4%
|
|
|
|
Capital Cost
|
|
|
Development Capital
|
US$M
|
230
|
230
|
0%
|
|
|
|
Sensitivity Analysis
The sensitivity of the project to market and
project factors was examined. Table 10 provides a comparison of
project returns (NPV and IRR) at various throughput profiles and
U3O8 prices. This demonstrated robust returns
for a range of pricing scenarios for both the Base and Growth
scenarios. This analysis determined that the greatest capital
efficiency could be achieved for the base case production profile,
targeting 2Mlbs U3O8 pa
production.
Table 10 - Economic comparison at varying
U3O8 prices for Base Case 2Mlbs
U3O8 pa production
Spot U3O8 Price
|
US$/lb
|
65
|
70a
|
80
|
86b
|
90
|
100
|
110
|
NPV8
|
US$M
|
285
|
355
|
499
|
571
|
639
|
779
|
919
|
IRR
|
%
|
27%
|
29%
|
39%
|
41%
|
47%
|
55%
|
63%
|
a)
Tradetech Forward Availability Model (FAM) 1 average term price to
2040 (Real). Representing best case project development (supply)
scenario.
b)
Tradetech FAM 2 average term price to 2040 (Real). Representing
restricted project development scenario.
The sensitivity of the project to key variables
was examined in Figure 2. This showed that the Project was most
sensitive to revenue drivers, including mined grade and
U3O8 spot price. The Project was least
sensitive to operating cost inputs.
Figure 2 - Tiris
Project Sensitivity analysis
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Project Risks
The key risks with their mitigations, are
identified as follows:
1. The Project's success is
fundamentally linked to the price for uranium for the life of the
project exceeding the operating cost for the project. Aura is in
the process of seeking additional offtake agreements with suitable
long-term pricing, but the market price risk is otherwise largely
outside Aura's control.
2. The estimated capital
costs for the project could prove optimistic, requiring additional
funding. The Capex estimate was composed of 85% external
pricing[31] , so has a strong basis for
its pricing, subject to any subsequent inflation. The project will
rely on competent Project cost control by the EPC company
overviewing the project.
3. OHS management risk of
radioactive dust in the mining and front-end areas. Aura will
ensure operators are in dust sealed cabins, use radiation
monitoring badges and will rotate personnel if
necessary.
4. There are potential risks
in obtaining Mauritanian statutory permit approvals, in the time
required. Aura is seeking a high-level connection between
Government authorities and its senior management, to supplement the
usual project interfaces between Aura's local permitting supervisor
and Government authorities. It is expected given Aura's focus on
maximising local employment, that the Mauritanian Government will
be quite supportive.
5. There are risks from
terror groups in the Sahel region. Aura has provisionally arranged
for military supported security to be permanently based close to
the site. Aura will continue with its very close coordination with
police/gendarmes/military guarding the area.
6. A risk remains of
insufficient water being available for the project. A program
designed to mitigate the risk that includes the drilling and test
work of the Taoudeni basin is currently underway. The Taoudeni
basin supplies water for the SNIM magnetite iron ore operations in
Zouerate and First Quantum's Guelb Morghein Cu/Au/Fe mine in
Akjout. Tiris' water requirements are between 2-3ML pa and it
expected that there will be more than sufficient quantities of
water available.
7. Aura's hybrid diesel and
solar generation plant will be the only power source for the
Project. Aura shall undertake rigorous engineering selection of the
power generation supply and hire experienced and competent
electrical support personnel to maintain the power
plant.
Future Activities
The next steps in progressing
towards the construction and development of the Project planned for
2024 and early 2025 include:
•
Project funding inclusive of debt, strategic
investors and equity
•
Securing offtake contracts for future
production
•
Confirming water infrastructure to support future
operations - drilling commenced
•
Engagement with qualified EPCM contractors for
Project development
•
Additional engineering and design work to support
development activities
•
Update of Ore Reserve Estimate
•
Option analysis for future project
growth
•
Completion of Project Execution Plan
•
Final Investment Decision aimed for Q1
2025