21 May
2024
CleanTech Lithium PLC
("CleanTech Lithium", "CTL" or the
"Company")
Final Results 2023
CleanTech Lithium PLC
(AIM:CTL, Frankfurt:T2N, OTCQX:CTLHF), an exploration and
development company advancing lithium projects in Chile,
is pleased to announce its audited Final Results for the
twelve months to 31 December 2023.
Highlights
Operational
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Two Scoping
Studies completed: Laguna Verde and Francisco
Basin Scoping Studies show robust economics, with post-tax
NPV8 ~US$3bn and IRR >43% supporting 20,000tpa LCE
production for +30-year and +12-year operations
respectively.
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JORC resource
increase: Completed additional 7 well drilling
programme - Laguna Verde, 1.8 million tonnes of LCE (Measured &
Indicated Resource increased by 39% to 1.1 million tonnes LCE) and
Francisco Basin 0.92 million tonnes of LCE of which 0.44
million tonnes was upgraded to Indicated.
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DLE pilot
plant: Plant working ahead of expectations,
with first high quality lithium eluate produced post-period end,
after build and commissioning undertaken in 2023 and early
2024.
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CEOL
submission: Applications for operating permits
for Laguna Verde and Francisco Basin submitted in Sept 2023 and now
being updated in line with the new administrative procedure
announced by the Government post-period end in April
2024.
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Ongoing
drilling programme at Laguna Verde: Five well
drilling programme commenced post-period end, results of which will
feed into further resource update and Pre-Feasibility Study
(PFS).
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Laguna Verde
PFS and EIA: Underway and targeted for
completion Q3 2024 and end of 2024 respectively.
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Exploration
assets: Low-cost work programme undertaken at
Llamara project to test surface and subsurface
samples.
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Expanded
footprint in Chile: Obtained additional Salar
de Atacama licence areas.
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First Co-Developed Mining Model:
For lithium extraction signed with Ercilia
Araya Altamirano, Ancestral Authority of the Colla Pai-Ote
community, and representatives from the Río Jorquera and Pastos
Grandes communities.
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Local Operations &
Community office: Opened in
Copiapó in Q3 2023, with local staff employed to manage upkeep
and activities with local stakeholders.
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Health &
Safety: Zero-harm safety
culture focused on continuous improvement to achieve an injury free
and healthy work environment - no LTIs, major incidents or near
misses recorded in 2023 or 2024 to date.
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Management &
Staff: 22 full time
employees, with up to an additional 5 specialist consultants
employed by the Company by the end of 2023.
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Corporate
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Funding: Raised £8 million
in the calendar year 2023.
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Board
changes: Maha
Daoudi and Tommy McKeith appointed as independent non-executive
directors; Jonathan Morley-Kirk became
Senior Independent Director and Steve Kesler assumed the role of
Executive Chairman and post period end as Interim CEO following the resignation of Aldo
Boitano.
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OTCQX: Commenced
trading in the U.S. making it easier for North American
investors.
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ESG
Committee: Established in mid 2023 and
reporting to the Board to ensure the Company is
being held accountable across all ESG factors. The Committee meets
regularly and is producing an ESG Review.
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Signatory of
UN Global Compact: In August 2023, supporting
the Ten Principles of the United Nations Global Compact on human
rights, labour, environment and anti-corruption.
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Awarded: Green
Achievement Grand Prix Award at Huawei's -
'Green & Smart Mining: the Future is Here!'
Green Achievement Awards 2023,
Chile.
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Cash Position: £6.2 million at year-end 2023.
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Steve Kesler,
Chairman and Interim Chief Executive Officer, CleanTech Lithium
PLC, said:
"2023 saw CTL make meaningful progress towards
reaching commercial lithium production. During the year CTL
significantly advanced project delivery, achieving several
milestones which include the publication of positive scoping
studies on the Company's two core-development assets, Laguna Verde
(LV) and Francisco Basin (FB), and the completion of drilling
programmes on both assets, totalling 7 new wells. JORC compliant
resources were upgraded at both projects.
"A DLE pilot plant was constructed in Copiapó
and CTL is now among a small number of companies set to produce
meaningful quantities of battery grade lithium product at
demonstration scale using DLE. The pilot plant is working well and
above expectations, representing a very significant milestone for
the Company and reflecting the progress we have made in the
relatively short time since listing on AIM just over two years
ago.
"In the year ahead CTL will send battery grade
lithium samples to potential strategic partners and off-takers to
start product qualification, as part of the development of the
construction finance to bring Laguna Verde into operation. The
current drilling programme at LV will feed into a further resource
assessment and a maiden reserve estimation this year, supporting
the pre-feasibility study (PFS), which is underway and targeted for
completion in Q3 2024. This paves the way for the next phase of
development, as the Company advances towards the ambition to
deliver a premium ´green´ lithium product into a market that's
increasingly keen to demonstrate a sustainable supply chain of
battery materials".
A full version of the annual report and accounts
will shortly be available on the Company's website, accessible via
the link and with extracts set out below: https://ctlithium.com/investors/latest-presentation-report/
For further information
contact:
CleanTech
Lithium PLC
Steve Kesler/Gordon Stein/Nick
Baxter
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Jersey office: +44 (0) 1534 668 321
Chile office: +562-32239222
Or via Celicourt
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Celicourt
Communications
Felicity Winkles/Philip Dennis / Ali
AlQahtani
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+44 (0) 20 7770 6424
cleantech@celicourt.uk
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Beaumont
Cornish Limited (Nominated Adviser)
Roland Cornish / Asia Szusciak
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+44 (0) 207 628 3396
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Canaccord
Genuity (Joint Broker)
James Asensio
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+44 (0) 207 523 4680
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Fox-Davies
Capital Limited (Joint Broker)
Daniel Fox-Davies
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+44 (0) 20 3884 8450
daniel@fox-davies.com
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The information communicated within this
announcement is deemed to constitute inside information as
stipulated under the Market Abuse Regulations (EU) No 596/2014
which is part of UK law by virtue of the European Union
(Withdrawal) Act 2018. Upon publication of this announcement, this
inside information is now considered to be in the public domain.
The person who arranged for the release of this announcement on
behalf of the Company was Gordon Stein, Director and
CFO.
Beaumont Cornish Limited ("Beaumont Cornish")
is the Company's Nominated Adviser and is authorised and regulated
by the FCA. Beaumont Cornish's responsibilities as the Company's
Nominated Adviser, including a responsibility to advise and guide
the Company on its responsibilities under the AIM Rules for
Companies and AIM Rules for Nominated Advisers, are owed solely to
the London Stock Exchange. Beaumont Cornish is not acting for and
will not be responsible to any other persons for providing
protections afforded to customers of Beaumont Cornish nor for
advising them in relation to the proposed arrangements described in
this announcement or any matter referred to in it.
Notes
CleanTech Lithium (AIM:CTL, Frankfurt:T2N,
OTCQX:CTLHF) is an exploration and development company advancing
sustainable lithium projects in Chile for the clean energy
transition. Committed to net-zero, CleanTech Lithium's mission is
to produce material quantities of sustainable battery grade lithium
products using Direct Lithium Extraction technology powered by
renewable energy. The Company plans to be a leading supplier of
'green' lithium to the EV and battery manufacturing
market.
CleanTech Lithium has two key lithium projects,
Laguna Verde and Francisco Basin, and holds licences in Llamara and
Salar de Atacama, located in the lithium triangle, a leading centre
for battery grade lithium production. The two major projects:
Laguna Verde and Francisco Basin are situated within basins
controlled by the Company, which affords significant potential
development and operational advantages. All four projects have
direct access to existing infrastructure and renewable
power.
CleanTech Lithium is committed to using
renewable power for processing and reducing the environmental
impact of its lithium production by utilising Direct Lithium
Extraction with reinjection of spent brine. Direct Lithium
Extraction is a transformative technology which removes lithium
from brine, with higher recoveries than conventional processes. The
method offers short development lead times with no extensive site
construction or evaporation pond development so there is minimal
water depletion from the aquifer. www.ctlithium.com
Chairman and Interim CEO Statement
2023 saw CTL make meaningful progress towards
reaching commercial lithium production. It is recognised that some
deliverables have taken longer than anticipated but this is often
the case with projects applying technologies which require new
learnings. During the year CTL significantly advanced project
delivery, achieving several milestones which include the
publication of positive scoping studies on the Company's two
core-development assets, Laguna Verde (LV) and Francisco Basin
(FB), and the completion of drilling programmes on both assets,
totalling 7 new wells. JORC compliant resources were upgraded at
both projects.
A DLE pilot plant was constructed in Copiapó and
CTL is now among a small number of companies set to produce
meaningful quantities of battery grade lithium product at
demonstration scale using DLE. The pilot plant is working well and
above expectations, having been used to produce an initial
24m3 of concentrated eluate, for conversion into battery
grade lithium carbonate, post commissioning in Q2 2024. The
composition of the concentrated eluate shows a lithium adsorption
recovery rate of 94% and rejection rates over 99% for key
contaminants calcium, magnesium, potassium, sodium and sulphate.
The results reported post period end in May 2024 demonstrates that
the plant can operate at the designed capacity of concentrated
eluate production sufficient for conversion to at least 1 tonne per
month of battery grade lithium carbonate. The DLE pilot plant
results represent a very significant milestone for the Company and
reflects the progress CTL has made in the relatively short time
since listing on AIM just over two years
ago.
In the year ahead CTL will send battery grade
lithium samples to potential strategic partners and off-takers to
start product qualification, as part of the development of the
construction finance to bring Laguna Verde into operation. The
current drilling programme at LV will feed into a further resource
assessment and a maiden reserve estimation this year, supporting
the pre-feasibility study (PFS), which is underway and targeted for
completion in Q3 2024. This paves the way for the next phase of
development, as the Company advances towards the ambition to
deliver a premium ´green´ lithium product into a market that's
increasingly keen to demonstrate a sustainable supply chain of
battery materials.
Operations
Projects:
Laguna
Verde ('LV')
A Scoping Study was completed and the results
announced in January 2023. Although such a study is low level and
does not provide certainty that the conclusions will be reached, it
projected robust economics and ESG credentials. The study assumed
that the resource could support a production rate of 20,000tpa
lithium carbonate. Estimated operating costs at under US$4,000/t
were in the lower quartile of lithium producers, with estimated
capital cost around US$400 million. Using a long-term price of
US$22,500/t lithium carbonate, the study estimated a post-tax NPV
of US$1.8 billion and post-tax IRR of 45%. The results of this
Scoping Study were positive enough to demonstrate that progress to
a PFS can be reasonably justified. The PFS is underway and the
Company aims to complete it in Q3
2024.
By the end of the first quarter 2023, the
Company had drilled two additional wells on Laguna Verde, bringing
the total number of wells drilled to six. Wells completed in 2023
included LV04 (drilled in 2022), LV05 and LV06, with depths of
320m, 434m and 405m respectively, one aim of which was to support
an upgrade to the Measured and Indicated JORC compliant resource
for use in the PFS. LV04 showed only low lithium values, which
demonstrated it to be outside the area of lithium brine of interest
and was discarded from the resource estimation.
Large samples were also taken from LV05 and LV06
to provide brine feed for the DLE process trials. Pump tests were
completed on these wells in May 2023 with calculated transmissivity
supporting the use of well flow rates of 30l/s used in the LV
Scoping Study.
The completed drilling programme resulted in the
declaration of a JORC compliant resource upgrade in July 2023 of
1.8 million tonnes LCE at a grade of 200mg/l Li, of which the
Measured & Indicated category was 1.1 million tonnes,
representing a 39% increase over the prior estimate, at a grade of
196 mg/l Li. This resource was considered sufficient to reasonably
support evaluation in the Scoping Study of a production scenario of
20,000 tpa lithium carbonate for 30 years.
Post period end, a further five well drill
programme commenced, with two rigs in simultaneous operation. This
programme is largely aimed at converting Inferred resource to
additional Measured & Indicated resource which will then have
technical and economic modifying factors applied from the PFS to
determine a maiden reserve. The programme will also include
additional pump testing and reinjection testing with results
helping to calibrate the hydrogeological model of the basin. This
model will help further define the brine extraction and reinjection
wellfield design and the sustainable production rate from LV.
Leading consultants, Montgomery & Associates have been engaged
to manage the drill programme, JORC resource and reserves reporting
and design of the extraction and reinjection
wellfields.
In April 2024, CTL also completed the planned
acquisition of 23 licences at Laguna Verde which were previously
subject to an option agreement and are located at the heart of the
project area. With CTL now owning 100% of all the 108 licences
covering the Laguna Verde Project this will both support CTL's CEOL
applications and further clear the path for the planned ASX
listing. The terms of the acquisition in the Directors' opinion
were more favourable to CTL shareholders than the previous option
agreement. Payment amounts are now known with the greater part due
only when the Company is revenue generating in production. The
previous option agreement depended on an estimate of ´commercially
extractable lithium products´ with full payment due at the start of
construction and as it was an open-ended arrangement it did not
conform to current ASX listing requirements.
Francisco
Basin ('FB')
Five additional wells were drilled on FB early
2023 - FB02, FB03/03A, FB04, FB05 and FB06 - with depths ranging
from 320m to 462m, bringing the total number of wells drilled to
six. The results from these wells fed into an upgraded resource
estimate, announced in August, and supported the subsequent Scoping
Study, announced in September 2023.
The JORC resource upgrade attributed 0.92
million tonnes of LCE at a grade of 207 mg/l Li as Indicated and
Inferred, representing a 74% increase over the prior estimate. In
the Indicated category, the report attributed an upgrade to 0.44
million tonnes at a grade of 221mg/l Li. The Scoping Study
considered that the resource estimate could support production of
20,000 tpa of lithium carbonate for 12 years. Further drilling is
planned to increase the resource and the projected life of the
Francisco Basin project.
A sampling programme was undertaken on FB01 with
1000 litres for DLE process trials using the Company's lab-based
unit in Copiapó. A pump test was also completed on FB01, with the
results announced in May 2023, recording a high level of
transmissivity, supporting a well pumping rate of 30l/s used in the
FB Scoping Study.
The Scoping Study, albeit low level and does not
provide certainty that the conclusions will be reached, projected
robust economics for FB. The study assumed that the resource could
support a production rate of 20,000tpa lithium carbonate. Estimated
operating costs were lower quartile and less than US$4,000/t
lithium carbonate and capital costs were estimated at about US$450
million. Using a long-term price of US$22,500/t lithium carbonate
the study estimated a post-tax NPV of US$1.1 billion and a post-tax
IRR of 43%.
It was decided to suspend further work at FB at
the present time and utilise available funds to advance the LV
project as rapidly as possible. Design parameters for LV in terms
of extraction and reinjection well design, DLE and conversion
process design as well as other infrastructure will be directly
applicable to FB. It will be more efficient to optimise these for
LV and then replicate them at FB.
Greenfield
Exploration Assets
During the year CTL invested in its long-term
future through the low-cost work programme on the Llamara
exploration licences and by obtaining additional licences on the
periphery of Salar de Atacama. These assets offer material
opportunities and provide potential upside for the Company while
requiring relatively small amounts of near-term
capital.
Llamara is a large exploration area for which
the Company acquired the exploration licences at low cost as an
option offering good prospectivity to complement CTL's two
core-development assets.
The work programme on Llamara in 2023 aimed to
test surface and subsurface samples. Drilling commenced as planned
but had to be suspended for safety reasons due to encountering a
gas pocket. A second well then commenced and was successfully
drilled but subsurface sampling from the well indicated depleted
levels of lithium. The results of surface sampling also showed
relatively low lithium values. Further work at Llamara and Salar de
Atacama have been suspended whilst available funds are concentrated
on advancing Laguna Verde.
DLE Pilot
Plant
A lab scale DLE plant was installed in our
Copiapó facilities in Q4 2022 and used during 2023 for testing of
various adsorbents on the LV brine. CTL then proceeded with
commissioning of a pilot plant scale DLE plant. The plant was
ordered from Sunresin's facility in Europe earlier in the year and
installation started in Q3 2023. Construction was completed in
November and the DLE pilot plant fully commissioned in Q1 2024 with
technical experts on site from Puritech, a subsidiary of
Sunresin. The Company announced, in March 2024, that the pilot
plant is producing lithium chloride eluate from LV brine with the
eluate to be further processed downstream to produce battery-grade
lithium carbonate.
After testing of various adsorbents to determine
which performed best on the LV brine it was decided to purchase
adsorbent from Lanshen, another large Chinese producer of
adsorbents and resins, to load the pilot plant columns.
The pilot plant is designed to produce up to 1
tonne/month of LCE and has demonstrated it can deliver more than
this in initial operations. The pilot plant is now processing brine
into purified lithium chloride eluate and showing encouraging
results with high lithium recovery rates while rejecting
impurities. Post period end, in Q2 2024, the concentrated eluate
has been further concentrated by reverse osmosis at CTL's pilot
plant and the first batch of 24m3 shipped to Conductive Energy in
Chicago for conversion to battery grade lithium carbonate. The
Company will initially scale production in batches for the start of
product qualification testing by potential off-takers and strategic
partners and ramp up production as required by the qualification
process. The pilot plant will also provide design data for the
Laguna Verde PFS. This represents a significant milestone for CTL
as it materially de-risks the scale up of commercial DLE based
production, for the Company, its investors and potential offtake
partners ahead of moving towards commercial production.
Special Lithium
Operation Contracts (CEOLs)
Applications for Special Lithium Operation
Contracts, or CEOLs, for LV and FB were submitted in September 2023
in compliance with Chilean law and as encouraged by the relevant
authorities after regular dialogue. Upon award, CEOLs provide the
authority for the CEOL holder to exploit, produce and sell lithium
on behalf of the State which is paid an agreed royalty based on net
profits arising from the project.
In April 2023 the Government issued its National
Lithium Strategy whereby it signalled its intent to become an
active participant in lithium production in Chile and not just a
passive receiver of royalties. There was initial uncertainty as to
how this would unfold but the Government provided more clarity in
April 2024 by confirming its intent to become majority shareholder
in the strategic assets of Salar de Atacama and Maricunga through a
newly created lithium subsidiary of Codelco. It was also confirmed,
that the State mining companies Codelco and Enami, who have
interests in six other salars, would seek participation from the
private sector under JV arrangements that made the best sense for
each project. Additionally, another 26 salars considered
non-strategic, including Laguna Verde and Francisco Basin, were
confirmed to be opened for development by the private
sector.
An administrative procedure was later published
whereby "Expressions of Interest" are to be submitted by mid-June
2024 with the Government expected to announce the results in early
July and to confirm which projects are to be prioritised for the
award of CEOLs. Afterwards, CTL was advised to update its
submissions for CEOLs within the new administrative procedure. The
Company is updating the CEOL applications with recent information
ready to submit. The resubmission process is expected to have no
impact on the expected project timeline.
The Government has also announced that it wants
to see 3 or 4 new lithium projects operational by 2026. CTL's two
advanced projects are well ahead of any other lithium projects of
similar scale in Chile and can therefore be expected to be
prioritised by the Government.
To support the CEOL applications, the Company
has continued to place CTL in the very best possible position
through a process of regional engagement and support for the local
economy. The Company has a policy of employing local people where
possible and ensuring the economic benefit of developing its assets
is felt across the region and that any concerns and impact are
sensitively managed. The Company announced a ground-breaking
agreement in December 2023, for the first co-created mining model
for lithium extraction in the region, working together with Ercilia
Araya Altamirano, Ancestral Authority of the Colla Pai-Ote
community, and representatives from the Río Jorquera and Pastos
Grandes communities. The communities have agreed to collaborate
with CTL on drafting relevant sections of the EIA for Laguna Verde,
which is the first time this approach has been adopted in Chile for
lithium extraction. This is a positive factor that CTL is hopeful
will accelerate the approval process of the EIA as demonstrating
local community support, which is of critical importance to the
authorities.
Furthermore, the Company's focus on DLE, as the
mechanism to produce LCE, is in keeping with the National Lithium
Strategy to ensure sustainable lithium production as announced by
President Boric in April 2023. Having been an early adopter of the
technology, CTL is well placed to deliver on successful DLE based
brine projects in Chile.
The granting of the CEOLs in 2024 will be an
important stepping stone to production and the delivery of a
strategic partner to support commercialisation of the Company's
projects. CTL will continue to work with the relevant authorities
within the scope of the National Lithium Strategy, which the
Company sees as a welcome model for public-private partnership, as
helping de-risk the delivery of lithium projects in
Chile.
Corporate
Activity
CTL has continually sought to carefully allocate
capital to meet its needs and achieve the goal of delivering
commercial production and cashflows as early as possible. CTL has,
therefore, sought to raise funds from investors only when needed to
advance project development and so minimising dilution to
investors. The strategy has been to fund exploration and early
project development through equity and then, following completion
of the PFS and commissioning of the pilot plant, bring in a
strategic investor. The planned listing on the ASX in Australia is
in keeping with this. In addition to CTL having key investors
already in Australia, the ASX market also benefits from a strong
understanding of the mining industry and lithium sector with deep
pools of capital available for good projects and where many of the
Company's lithium peers are listed.
ESG
In-line with the development of CTL's projects,
the team in Chile expanded during the year and the Company opened
an operational office in Copiapó. At the end of the year the team
amounted to 22 full time employees, with up to an additional 5
specialist consultants employed by the Company over the course of
2023.
The wider team includes operational, technical,
legal and administration staff. It also includes sustainability
support which is key to CTL's right to operate and ability to
deliver. The community relations team made an immediate and
positive impact on the Company driving initiatives which help
inform and keep local and national parties supportive of our
objectives.
These efforts were supported by the creation of
an ESG Board committee during the year, which has oversight of
sustainability initiatives and reports to the wider Board. The
Company winning the 'Green Achievement Grand Prix Award' at
Huawei's 'Green & Smart Mining: the future is here' awards,
which took place in Chile in December, is a good reflection of this
work.
Key to making progress is effective decision
making and accountability across the business. In this regard CTL
has in place a strong Board with a good balance of executive and
independent non-executive directors each of whom comes with
valuable and differing experience which makes a material difference
to the strategic direction and running of the
business.
During the year, I was delighted to see the
Board strengthen further with the appointment of Maha Daoudi and
Tommy McKeith as independent non-executive directors. Maha has many
years of experience in commodity marketing and trading with a deep
knowledge of working in China. Tommy has considerable experience in
exploration and project development and comes with extensive mining
listed company experience in Australia. Both have already made
invaluable contributions. During the year, Jonathan
Morley-Kirk also stepped up to become the Senior Independent
Director, following my change of role to an executive
position.
Post-period end I have taken on the
responsibilities of CEO, on an interim basis, following the
resignation of Aldo Boitano. Despite the circumstances of his
departure he, as co-founder, did a tremendous amount to develop a
vision for the Company and create the opportunity for investors.
For this we are all grateful.
I would like to take the opportunity to thank
the Board, the wider team, shareholders, and suppliers for their
continued support over the last year. The Company is on a journey
and a long way down the path to delivering on its ambitions. This
is entirely down to the experience, skill set, support and tireless
effort put in by all those involved.
Outlook
CTL has an exciting year ahead of us leading up
to discussions with strategic partners later in the year. A lot has
been achieved and in a relatively short time and, as such, the
Company is well placed to realise the value of its portfolio to the
benefit of its investors and other stakeholders. That progress has
accelerated further in 2024 with the commissioning of the pilot
plant, the LV PFS progressing, the CEOL process in train and with
the lithium market showing signs of recovery. We look forward to
the remainder of 2024 with continued confidence.
Steve
Kesler,
Executive Chairman and Interim
CEO
20 May 2024
Financial Review
Key Drivers
for 2023
In the context of managing CTL's funds in an
efficient and effective manner, the focus during 2023 was primarily
twofold: to maintain progress and momentum on the Group's two main
assets, namely: LV and FB; and to carry out the work needed for an
initial technical assessment of the Llamara
licences.
The Board has made clear its commitment to
bringing LV into production as a priority, with FB to follow as
soon thereafter as feasible. In addition, the Board has set targets
and programmes to meet those objectives which are both ambitious
but also achievable. With sufficient funds the Board is confident
the technical, feasibility, environmental, regulatory and other
approvals can be combined to allow CTL to meet its objective of
transitioning into a leading lithium production
company.
Without doubt, CTL has been the most active
lithium exploration and development player in Chile over the past
two to three years:
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Undertaking geophysical and multiple technical
studies in preparation for subsequent phases on each
asset
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Drilling 14 wells in three challenging
environments to deliver a combined total of 2.7 million tonnes LCE
JORC Resource - including undertaking pump tests and other
hydrogeological studies
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Completing two detailed scoping studies which
demonstrate exciting and robust economics at industry-standard
forward lithium prices; in turn enabling the preparation of a PFS
for LV which CTL plans to complete in Q3 2024
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Procuring, shipping, constructing and then
commissioning a 1 tonne per month DLE pilot plant - acquired from a
Sunresin subsidiary in Belgium
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Commencing the work required to support the
EIAs for LV and FB - involving extensive baseline
studies
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Conducting metallurgical tests - both at
lab-scale level and also on the ground at LV and FB, and
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Building a skilled and experienced management,
operational and technical team in Chile to be able to deliver on
the planned objectives, including the use of various consultants
and specialist service companies.
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All of this comes at a cost and requires the
funds to maintain momentum towards meeting the Board's objectives.
At the time of writing, CTL has spent more than £16 million in
Chile on its work programmes over recent years.
Funding in 2023 and Strategy Beyond
CTL began 2023 with £12.4 million cash-in-hand
after completing a £12.3 million fundraise (before expenses) in
November 2022. That funding allowed CTL to undertake the extensive
work programme, referred to above, throughout the year. Whilst the
Company originally intended to dual list on the ASX during the
second half of 2023, the rate at which several regulatory
requirements with ASX could be addressed was slower than CTL would
have liked, and so CTL had little choice but to defer any planned
listing on the ASX until 2024. The requirement for CTL to have to
make commercial changes to the LV Option Agreement, as announced on
22 April 2024, also held up the planned ASX
listing.
To keep up momentum on the multiple capital
programmes being run, CTL completed an over-subscribed placing on
AIM in December 2023, raising £8.5 million (before expenses). This
included £0.5 million raised through an open offer which allowed
eligible shareholders to subscribe for placing shares on similar
terms to those institutional investors which had participated. That
funding allowed CTL to commit resources at the end of 2023 to allow
it to begin an extensive programme in Q1 2024 (including a
five-well drilling campaign at LV, a continuation of its EIA
monitoring and review requirements, a more activated PFS process
and the progression of CTL's DLE pilot plant through to
commissioning and eluate production), all in the context of
prioritising LV toward production. The Company ended 2023 with £6.2
million cash-in-hand.
The Company still plans to dual list on ASX in
2024; with the majority of the administrative and regulatory
hurdles now addressed, the listing process is considered to be in a
reasonably advanced stage at the time of writing. The Company will
need to undertake an equity raise as part of that process, in large
part to meet an ASX requirement to have a certain number of new
Australian based shareholders. The amount of any fundraising
on ASX is not yet decided and will invariably be considered in the
context of other funding options.
The Board, which has extensive experience in
funding major projects, looks forward to discussions with potential
strategic partners and parties seeking offtake later in 2024,
knowing the Company will be negotiating from a position of strength
at that time and with a product such parties will want to
secure.
Overview of 2023 expenditure
Capex: Exploration & Evaluation assets
A total cash capex of £8.9 million was incurred
in 2023 (2022: £4.4 million), made up as follows:
Capital
expenditure
|
Comment
|
2023
£ million
|
2022
£ million
|
Drilling
|
In 2023, 7 wells
completed on LV & FB. 1 on LL
|
6.19
|
3.43
|
Hydrogeology
|
Pump tests
|
0.57
|
0.07
|
DLE Pilot Plant
|
Initial acquisition
and resin costs
|
0.57
|
0.12
|
EIA
|
Baseline & other
studies
|
0.38
|
0.30
|
Communities
|
Contributions and
office refurb.
|
0.19
|
-
|
Scoping & Feasibility
|
LV and FB Scoping
Studies, LV PFS
|
0.29
|
0.09
|
Licences
|
All assets
|
0.56
|
0.30
|
Other
|
-
|
0.10
|
0.09
|
Cash cost
|
|
8.85
|
4.40
|
Income statement
Administrative costs totalled £5.9 million in
2023 (£3.8 million: 2022), with £4.2 million being cash
costs.
Key costs in 2023 included:
Administrative
costs
|
|
2023
£ million
|
2022
£ million
|
|
People
|
Jersey, London &
Chile
|
1.21
|
0.57
|
|
Listing & Compliance
|
AIM and corporate
governance
|
0.34
|
0.17
|
|
Travel
|
Conferences,
marketing, travel in Chile
|
0.88
|
1.33
|
|
PR/IR
|
Includes consulting
costs & conferences
|
0.58
|
0.12
|
|
Legal, finance, tax & audit
|
Including accounting
services
|
0.68
|
0.33
|
|
Other G&A
|
Other overhead costs
across the group
|
0.51
|
0.09
|
|
Cash costs
|
|
4.20
|
2.61
|
|
VAT provision
|
Note 12
|
1.24
|
0.6
|
|
Fair-value of share options
|
Note 14
|
0.45
|
0.59
|
|
Non-cash costs
|
|
1.69
|
1.19
|
|
Total
|
|
5.89
|
3.8
|
|
In addition, other comprehensive income includes
foreign exchange charges of approximately £ 1.0 million, which have
arisen due to translational and transactional changes in GBP
relative to USD and CLP currency movements.
Statement of financial position
The Group maintains a healthy statement of
financial position at 31 December 2023, with net current assets of
£6.1 million (2022: £12.1 million) reflecting current assets of
£6.8 million (2022: £12.6 million) and £0.7 million (2022: £0.6
million) of current liabilities.
Financial Control
The Group maintains control over its day-to-day
finances through a strong finance team based in the UK and Chile,
supported by outsourced back-office accounting and tax compliance
processes. A Group Financial Controller, Dermot Boylan, based
in the UK, works alongside our Chile-based Finance Manager,
Geraldine Carmona, who manages the finances for our work programmes
in Chile.
Post Balance Sheet Events
On 12 April 2024 the Company announced the
resignation of Aldo Boitano after he made the Company aware that he
had entered into a personal loan under which he agreed to provide
security over his shareholding. The granting of security and
subsequent transfers of Ordinary Shares are considered notifiable
events which should have been notified by Mr Boitano to the Company
at the relevant time.
On 22 April 2024 the Company announced it had
completed the planned acquisition of the 23 Laguna Verde licences
previously subject to an option agreement resulting in the Company
now having full ownership, as well as control, of the full 108
mining licences comprising the Laguna Verde project.
On 22 April 2024, the Company also announced it
issued convertible loan notes to raise gross proceeds of £1 million
for the Company on what the Directors believe are advantageous
terms. Further details of the convertible loan notes are set out in
the announcement.
On 8 May 2024 the Company announced as far as it
can determine, Mr Boitano has ceased to have any beneficial
ownership of shares in the Company.
Gordon
Stein
Chief Financial Officer
20 May 2024
Notes to the Financial Statements
1. GENERAL
INFORMATION
CleanTech Lithium Plc ("CTL Plc", or the
"Company")
The consolidated financial statements of
CleanTech Lithium Plc for year ended 31 December 2023 were
authorised for issue in accordance with a resolution of the Board
on 20 May 2024.
CleanTech Lithium Plc was incorporated and
registered as a private company, initially with the name CleanTech
Lithium (Jersey) Ltd, in Jersey on 1 December 2021 with registered
number 139640. It was subsequently reregistered as a public
limited company on 20 January 2022 and on 2 February 2022 it
changed its name to CleanTech Lithium Plc.
On 14 February 2022, a share-for-share exchange
between the shareholders of CleanTech Lithium Ltd (CTL Ltd, or the
U.K. entity) and CTL Plc completed, resulting in CTL Plc acquiring
and becoming the parent company of CTL Ltd and its wholly owned
subsidiaries, together "CleanTech Lithium Group" or the
"Group".
During the year to 31 December 2023, there have
been no changes to the structure of the CleanTech Lithium
Group.
2. BASIS OF
PREPARATION
The financial statements have been prepared in
accordance with U.K.-adopted international accounting standards (UK
IAS). These financial statements are for the year 1 January 2023 to
31 December 2023 and the comparatives are for the year 1 January
2022 to 31 December 2022.
Throughout the reporting period, including the
comparatives, the historical cost basis of preparation is used,
except for certain financial assets measured at fair
value.
The amounts in this document are presented in
British Pounds (GBP), unless noted otherwise. Due to rounding,
numbers presented throughout these financial statements may not add
up precisely to the totals provided and percentages may not
precisely reflect the absolute figures.
As permitted by Companies (Jersey) Law 1991 only
the consolidated financial statements are presented.
Going Concern
The Group is in a pre-revenue phase of
development and until its transition to revenue generation and
profitability the Group will be required to rely on externally
sourced funding to continue as a going concern, the Board
recognises this condition may indicate the existence of material
uncertainties, which may cast significant doubt regarding the
Group's ability to continue as a going concern.
Notwithstanding, the Directors have a demonstrated record of
successfully raising capital for projects and ventures of this
nature and are confident in being able to secure the funding needed
for the Group to deliver on its commitments and continue as a going
concern.
As a part of its Going Concern assessment,
consideration has been given to the Group's anticipated activities
which have been included in the financial forecast. The Group has
no capital commitments and so the Directors are of the opinion that
the Group has adequate financial resources to allow it to continue
for at least 12 months from the date of the approval of these
financial statements. Additionally, the Directors have
considered downside scenarios including the event where there is a
delay to the expected generation of cash. In the event of
financial distress, the Directors are confident that the
implementation of austerity measures, the proven success in raising
capital, the financing and strategic options available, will enable
the Group to continue as a going concern. Therefore, the going
concern basis is adopted in preparing the financial
statements.
The financial statements do not include the
adjustments that would result if the Group and the Company were
unable to continue as a going concern.
3. MATERIAL ACCOUNTING
POLICIES
The preparation of the Group's financial
statements is done in compliance with U.K. adopted International
Accounting Standards and the following summarises the Group's
material accounting policies.
Standards and interpretations issued but not yet
applied
At the date of the Group's financial statements,
the Directors have reviewed the standards in issue by the UK
Endorsement Board and the International Financial Reporting
Interpretations Committee by the International Accounting Standards
Board, which are effective for periods beginning on or after the
stated effective date but have not yet been applied. In their view,
these standards would not have a material impact on the financial
reporting of the Group.
Foreign currency
Functional and presentation currency
Items included in the financial statements of
each of the Group's entities are measured using the currency of the
primary economic environment in which the entity operates (the
"functional currency"). The consolidated financial statements are
presented in pound sterling, which is the Group's presentation
currency.
Transactions and balances
Foreign currency transactions are translated
into the relevant functional currency using the exchange rates
prevailing at the date of the transaction. Foreign exchange gains
and losses resulting from the settlement of such transactions and
from the retranslation at period-end exchange rates of monetary
assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are
recognised in the income statement.
Group companies
The results and financial position of the
Chilean entities are recorded in CLP $ and, where relevant of the
Australian entities from AUD $, are translated into Pounds Sterling
(GBP £), the presentation currency, as follows:
•
|
assets and liabilities on the Statement of
Financial Position are translated at the closing rate at each
reporting date;
|
•
|
income and expenses in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income are translated at average exchange rates,
unless the average is not a reasonable approximation of the
cumulative effect of the rates prevailing on the transaction dates,
in which case income and expenses are translated at the rate on the
dates of the transactions; and
|
•
|
all resulting exchange differences are
recognised in "other comprehensive income".
|
On consolidation, exchange differences arising
from the translation of the net investment in the Chilean entities
are recognised in "other comprehensive income". When a
foreign operation is sold, the associated exchange differences are
reclassified to profit or loss, as part of gain or loss on
sales.
Income taxes
Income tax expense consists of current and
deferred tax expense. Income tax expense is recognised in the
income statement.
Current tax expense is the expected tax payable
on the taxable income for the year, using tax rates enacted or
enacted substantively at the period end, and adjusted for
amendments to tax payable with regards to previous years. The
tax rates that apply in each foreign jurisdiction are disclosed in
Note 7
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are
recognised for future tax consequences attributable to differences
between the carrying amounts of existing assets and liabilities on
the Statement of Financial Position and their respective tax bases.
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using the enacted
or enacted substantively tax rates expected to apply when the asset
is realised, or the liability settled.
The effect on deferred tax assets and
liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognised in the income
statement in the period that substantive enactment
occurs.
A deferred tax asset is recognised to the extent
that it is probable that future taxable profits will be available
against which the asset can be utilised.
The following temporary differences do not
result in deferred tax assets or liabilities:
•
|
the initial recognition of goodwill;
|
•
|
the initial recognition of an asset or
liability in a transaction which is not a business
combination;
|
•
|
the initial recognition of an asset or
liability in a transaction which at the time of the transaction,
affects neither accounting profit nor taxable profit (tax loss);
and
|
•
|
the initial recognition of an asset or
liability in a transaction which at the time of the transaction,
does not give rise to equal taxable and deductible temporary
differences.
|
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are offset
when there is a legally enforceable right to set off current tax
assets against current tax liabilities and when they relate to
income taxes levied by the same taxation authority and the Group
intends to settle its current tax assets and liabilities on a net
basis.
Exploration and evaluation assets
Exploration and evaluation assets are
capitalised as intangible assets on an individual prospect basis
until such time as an economic volume is defined or the prospect is
abandoned. No costs are capitalised until the legal right to
explore the property has been obtained. When it is determined that
such costs will be recouped through development and exploitation,
the capitalised expenditure is first tested for impairment, then
transferred to tangible assets and depreciated over the expected
productive life of the asset.
Costs for a producing prospect are amortised on
a unit-of-production method, based on the estimated life of the
reserves, while costs for the prospects abandoned are
written-off.
Impairment reviews for deferred exploration and
evaluation assets are carried out on a project-by-project basis,
with each project representing a single cash generating unit. An
impairment review is undertaken when indicators of impairment arise
but typically when one or more of the following circumstances
apply:
•
|
unexpected geological occurrences are
identified that render the resource uneconomic;
|
•
|
title to the asset is compromised;
|
•
|
fluctuations in commodity prices render the
project uneconomic; or
|
•
|
lack of available financing to progress the
project.
|
Where the Group enters into exploration option
agreements with third parties, the Group may acquire or dispose of
mineral rights and certain benefits attached to those mineral
rights. Since these options are exercisable entirely at the
discretion of the optionee, the amounts payable or receivable are
not recorded. Option payments are recorded as exploration and
evaluation assets when payments are made, or as recoveries when
payments are received, either against exploration and evaluation
assets or as income within the income statement depending on the
nature of the option agreement.
The recoverability of the amounts capitalised
for the undeveloped exploration and evaluation assets is dependent
upon the determination of economically recoverable ore reserves,
confirmation of the Group's interest in the underlying mineral
claims, the ability to develop its exploration and evaluation
assets, the ability to obtain the necessary financing to complete
their development and future profitable production.
Capitalising of people costs
The relevant portion of employee and contractor
costs (including the share-based payment charge) incurred for
service and activity deemed to relate to the evaluation, technical
feasibility and commercial viability of extracting a mineral
resource are capitalised.
Environmental rehabilitation
An obligation to incur restoration,
rehabilitation and environmental costs arises when environmental
disturbances are caused by the exploration or development of
exploration and evaluation assets due to statutory, contractual,
constructive, or legal obligations.
At the reporting date, the Group has no
environmental rehabilitation obligations in Laguna Negro Francisco
SpA, Laguna Escondida SpA, Laguna Brava SPA, Atacama Tierras
Blancas SpA, or Atacama Salt Lakes SpA; as such, no provision has
been recognised in the Group's financial statements.
The Directors review annually for changes in
regulatory requirements with respect to environmental
rehabilitation obligations.
Impairment
At the end of each reporting period, the
carrying amounts of the Group's assets are reviewed to determine
whether there is any indication that those assets are impaired. If
any such indication exists, the recoverable amount of the asset is
estimated to determine the extent of the impairment, if
any.
The recoverable amount is the higher of fair
value less costs to sell and value in use. Fair value is determined
as the amount that would be obtained from the sale of the asset in
an arm's length transaction between knowledgeable and willing
parties. In assessing value in use, the estimated future cash flows
are discounted to their present value using a pre-tax discount rate
that reflects current market assessments of the time value of money
and the risks specific to the asset. If the recoverable amount of
an asset is estimated to be less than its carrying amount, the
carrying amount of the asset is reduced to its recoverable amount
and the impairment loss is recognised in the income
statement.
For an asset that does not generate independent
cash inflows, the recoverable amount is determined for the cash
generating unit to which the asset belongs.
Where an impairment loss subsequently reverses,
the carrying amount of the asset (or cash generating unit) is
increased to the revised estimate of its recoverable amount, but to
an amount that does not exceed the carrying amount that would have
been determined had no impairment loss been recognised for the
asset (or cash generating unit) in prior years. A reversal of
an impairment loss is recognised immediately in the income
statement.
Financial instruments
Where applicable, the Directors classify the
Group's financial assets in the following categories:
•
|
financial assets at "fair value through income
statement"; or
|
•
|
loans and receivables
|
The classification depends on the purpose for
which the financial assets were acquired. The classification of the
Group's financial assets is determined at initial recognition and
depends on the nature and purpose of the financial
instrument.
Financial assets carried at fair value through
income statement are recognised and recorded initially at fair
value and transaction costs are expensed in the income
statement.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will
not be able to meet its obligations as they become due. The Group's
ability to continue as a going concern is dependent on the
Directors' ability to raise the funds required. The Group has no
regular cash inflow from its operating activities.
The Directors manage the Group's liquidity risk
by:
•
|
maintaining adequate cash reserves through the
use of the Group's cash received from equity placings a;
|
•
|
continuously monitoring actual cash flows to
ensure the Group maintains an appropriate amount of liquidity;
and
|
•
|
forecasting cash flow requirements for the
Group's planned exploration and development work programmes and its
associated corporate activities. Based on this analysis, the
Directors secure sufficient additional investment to ensure an
appropriate level of liquidity is maintained.
|
Failure to realise additional funding, as
required, could result in the delay or indefinite postponement of
further exploration of the Group's mineral properties and could
result in the Group being unable to meet the continued listing
requirements following admission to the London Stock
Exchange.
All the Group's liabilities are on demand or
fall due in less than one year.
Foreign currency risk
The Group has its only significant exposure to
foreign currency risk through expenditures incurred on the Chilean
entities' exploration and evaluation assets in Chile, denominated
in Chilean Pesos. Cash balances held within the Group
entities are denominated in their respective functional currencies
although US dollar accounts are also held for ad hoc expenditure
denominated occasionally in US dollars; the financial instruments
denominated in US dollars held by the Group are minimal at each
reporting year.
A 10% movement in the GBP £ / CLP $ exchange
rates would increase/(decrease) net assets of the Group by the
amounts shown below. This analysis assumes that all other
variables, in particular interest rates, remain
constant.
At 31 December 2023
Effect on net assets of the Group:
|
£
|
Strengthened by 10%
|
15,369
|
Weakened by 10%
|
(15,369)
|
At 31 December 2022
Effect on net assets of the Group:
|
£
|
Strengthened by 10%
|
478,845
|
Weakened by 10%
|
(478,485)
|
Commodity price risk
Fluctuations on prevailing commodity market
prices present a possible risk for the Group. Such commodity
prices could impact the cost of power for production processes and
the market price for battery-grade lithium carbonate. The
pre-production status of the Group means exposure to these risks
has minimal financial impact on the Group. The Group does not
use commodity forward contracts and futures to hedge against price
risk in commodities as they are not yet appropriate for the
Group.
Loans and receivables
Other receivables and borrowings that have fixed
or determinable payments that are not quoted in an active market
are classified as "loans and receivables". "Loans and receivables"
are recognised initially at the transaction value and carried
subsequently at amortised cost less impairment losses. The
impairment loss of receivables is based on a review of all
outstanding amounts at year end.
The Directors have classified the Group's other
receivables and borrowings as "loans and receivables".
Share based payments
The fair value of share options or warrants
granted is charged to the income statement or capitalised in the
statement of financial position, with a corresponding increase in a
share-based payment reserve. The fair value of share options is
measured at grant date, using the Black-Scholes pricing model, and
spread over the period up to the point the vesting condition is
met. Upon exercise, the share-based payment reserve is
released to the accumulated profit or loss. The warrant instruments
granted to any counterparty are measured and recognised in the same
way as share options at the date of issue.
Other financial liabilities
"Other financial liabilities" are measured
initially at fair value, net of transaction costs, and are measured
subsequently at amortised cost using the effective interest method,
with interest expense recognised on an effective yield basis. The
effective interest method is a method of calculating the amortised
cost of a financial liability and of allocating interest expenses
over the corresponding period. The effective interest rate is the
rate that exactly discounts estimated future cash payments over the
expected life of the financial liability, or, where appropriate, a
shorter period.
The Directors have classified the Group's other
payables as "other financial liabilities".
4. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING
ESTIMATES AND JUDGEMENTS
The preparation of financial statements
confirming with adopted IFRSs requires the Directors to make
judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities, as well as the disclosure of
contingent assets and liabilities as at the reporting date and the
reported amount expenses during the period. Actual outcomes
may differ from those estimates. The key sources of uncertainty in
estimates that have a risk of causing material adjustment to the
carrying amounts of assets and liabilities, within the next
financial year, are the impairment of assets and the Group's going
concern assessment, as described in note 2. In addition,
judgement is required to be exercised in determining a functional
currency, including assessing the underlying transactions, events
and conditions which are relevant to an entity.
Impairment
The Directors apply significant judgment in
assessing each of the Group's cash-generating units and assets for
the existence of indicators of impairment at the reporting date.
Internal and external factors are considered in assessing whether
indicators of impairment are present that would necessitate
impairment testing. The indicators of impairments and their
assessment are set out in Note 11.
VAT receivables
Included within trade and other receivables is
an amount approximately £1.8 million in Chilean VAT
recoverable. Although the Chilean VAT is expected to be
eligible for refund in future, due to the uncertainty over the
timing of future production and revenues, which would trigger the
Group's eligibility to recover that VAT, the Directors have made
full provision against this same amount, as disclosed in note
12.
5. ADMINISTRATION
EXPENSES
Administration expenses in the year to 31
December 2023 totalled £5.9 million, of which approximately £1.8
million reflects non-cash items. More specifically,
approximately £1.2 million reflects a provision made against VAT in
Chile which CleanTech being able to recover once production starts
(Note 12 provides further detail). In addition to the
non-cash VAT provision, approximately £0.5 million has been
recorded as a share-based payments for share options awarded to
staff and contractors (further detail is set out in Note
14).
Of the £4.2million in cash costs, approximately
£1.2 million relates to staff costs (2022: £1.1 million), £0.7
million relates to promotion, public and investor relations (2022:
£0.3 million), approximately £0.6 million relates to travel (2022:
£0.1 million), £0.8 million relates to legal and professional
support (2022: £1.4 million), and approximately £0.5 million
relates to listing and compliance and insurance costs(2022: £0.2
million), the balance of £0.4 million comprises a variety of other
and general administrative costs (2022: £0.1 million).
6. STAFF AND
DIRECTORS
|
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-23
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-22
|
Average number of employees and long-term
contractors
|
|
22
|
9
|
Directors
|
|
6
|
4
|
Total
|
|
28
|
13
|
During 2023 the Group's the average number of
employees increased as operational requirements expanded, but
notably was essentially unchanged from where the Group's number of
employees (a number which includes longer-term consultants) was at
the end of 2022.
During 2023, the Board also expanded following
the appointment of two Non-Executive Directors; details of those
appointments are set out in further detail in both the Strategic
Report and Governance sections of this Annual
Report.
Details of Directors remuneration are set out
Directors' Remuneration section on page 37 in the
report.
7. INCOME
TAX
The accrued income tax expense continues to be
£nil as the Group remains in a loss-making
position.
Income tax expense
|
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-23
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-22
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
Current tax
|
|
-
|
-
|
Total current tax expense
|
|
-
|
-
|
Reconciliation of the tax expense
The standard rate of corporation tax in Jersey
is nil % (2022: nil %) which differs from the tax rates in foreign
jurisdictions as follows: Chile tax rate of 27% (2022: 27%); and
U.K. tax rate of 19% (2022: 19%).
Notwithstanding the Group has cost centres in
several tax jurisdiction, for tax reconciliation purposes, the
Directors have decided to use the Chilean corporate tax rate as
most appropriate given the operations and future production of the
Group is located in Chile.
|
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-23
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-22
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
Loss before taxation
|
|
(5,885,600)
|
(3,800,537)
|
|
|
|
|
Tax at the aggregated applicable tax rate of
27% (2022: 27%)
|
|
2,561,166
|
1,720,384
|
Expenses not deductible for tax
purposes
|
|
(1,331,581)
|
(951,012)
|
Losses carried forward on which no deferred tax
is recognised
|
|
(1,229,585
)
|
(769,372)
|
Total current tax expense
|
|
-
|
-
|
Not all losses incurred are allowable for
taxation purposes. At 31 December 2023, the Group had £
3,469,383 of accumulated tax losses (2022: £ 2,239,798). An
indefinite carry-forward of net operating losses is permitted under
Chilean tax rules. Losses mainly relate to those incurred by
the Chilean entities, which are not expected to be transferrable to
UK or JE jurisdictions.
No deferred tax asset is recognised on these
losses due to the uncertainty over the timing of future profits and
gains.
8. LOSS PER
SHARE
The calculation of basic loss per ordinary share
is based on the loss after tax and on the weighted average number
of ordinary shares in issue during the period.
Diluted loss per share assumes conversion of all
potentially dilutive Ordinary Shares arising from the share options
schemes and warrant instruments detailed in Note 14. Potential
ordinary shares resulting from the exercise of warrants, and
options have an anti-dilutive effect due to the Group being in a
loss position. As a result, diluted loss per share is disclosed as
the same value as basic loss per share.
Basic and diluted loss per share
|
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-2023
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-22
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
|
|
|
|
Loss after taxation
|
|
(5,885,600)
|
(3,800,537)
|
|
|
|
|
Basic weighted average number of ordinary
shares (millions)
|
|
109.74
|
78.56
|
|
|
|
|
Basic loss per share (GBP £)
|
|
(0.054)
|
(0.048)
|
9. SEGMENTAL
INFORMATION
The Group operates in a single business segment,
being the exploration and evaluation of mineral properties. These
activities are undertaken in Chile, alongside administrative
operations in the U.K., Jersey and formerly in
Australia.
31 December
2023
|
Chile
|
Rest of
World
|
Total
|
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
Exploration and
evaluation assets
|
13,710,413
|
-
|
13,710,413
|
Non-current
assets
|
13,710,413
|
-
|
13,710,413
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
484,252
|
126,646
|
610,898
|
Related party and
intra-group receivables
|
94,826
|
(94,826)
|
-
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
48,609
|
6,153,419
|
6,202,028
|
Current
assets
|
627,687
|
6,185,239
|
6,812,926
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
(230,439)
|
(121,198)
|
(351,637)
|
Related party and
intra-group payables
|
(14,094,942)
|
14,094,942
|
-
|
Provisions and
accruals
|
(166,411)
|
(212,302)
|
(378,713)
|
Current
liabilities
|
(14,491,792)
|
13,761,442
|
(730,350)
|
|
|
|
|
Net Assets
|
(153,692)
|
19,946,681
|
19,792,989
|
|
|
|
|
31 December
2022
|
Chile
|
Rest of
World
|
Total
|
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
Exploration and
evaluation assets
|
5,317,412
|
-
|
5,317,412
|
Non-current
assets
|
5,317,412
|
-
|
5,317,412
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
186,273
|
92,066
|
278,339
|
Related party and
intra-group receivables
|
102,985
|
(102,985)
|
-
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
174,311
|
12,193,954
|
12,368,265
|
Current
assets
|
463,569
|
12,183,035
|
12,646,604
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
369,756
|
70,582
|
440,338
|
Related party and
intra-group payables
|
510,767
|
(510,767)
|
-
|
Provisions and
accruals
|
115,609
|
77,799
|
193,408
|
Current
liabilities
|
996,132
|
(362,386)
|
633,746
|
|
|
|
|
Net Assets
|
4,784,848
|
12,545,421
|
17,330,270
|
|
|
|
|
10. WIND UP OF AUSTRALIAN
ENTITIES
On 25 March 2022 the Australian Entities were
wound-up and formally deregistered. There has been no net
change to the overall economic substance of the Group, nor had
there been a change to the ultimate beneficial owners of the Group
arising from the corporate restructurings which ultimately led to
the deregistrations of the Australian entities.
11. EXPLORATION AND EVALUATION
ASSETS
Expenses incurred to date by the Chilean
entities on feasibility studies, mineral exploration and
delineation were capitalised as "exploration and evaluation assets"
within "non-current
assets" in accordance with the Group's accounting
policy.
Exploration and evaluation assets
|
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-2023
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-22
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
Opening balance
|
|
5,317,412
|
765,115
|
Additions
|
|
9,383,902
|
4,316,747
|
Effect of foreign exchange
translations
|
|
(990,901)
|
235,550
|
Closing balance
|
|
13,710,413
|
5,317,412
|
Of the additions, approximately £0.5 million is
non-cash in nature, which reflects the accounting adjustment for
share-based payments made to staff and contractors, about which
further detail is set out in Note 14
Impairment assessments
The Directors assess for impairment when facts
and circumstances suggest that the carrying amount of an
exploration & evaluation asset (E&E) may exceed its
recoverable amount. In making this assessment, the Directors have
regard to the facts and circumstances noted in IFRS 6 paragraph 20.
In performing their assessment of each of these factors, at 31
December 2023, the Directors have:
•
|
reviewed the time period that the Group has the
right to explore the area and noted no instances of expiration, or
licences that are expected to expire in the near future and not be
renewed;
|
•
|
determined that further E&E expenditure is
either budgeted or planned for all licences;
|
•
|
not decided to discontinue exploration activity
due to there being a lack of quantifiable mineral resource;
and
|
•
|
not identified any instances where sufficient
data exists to indicate that there are licences where the E&E
spend is unlikely to be recovered from successful development or
sale.
|
Based on the above assessment, the Directors are
not aware of any facts or circumstances that would suggest the
carrying amount of the E&E asset may exceed its recoverable
amount. Consequently, the Directors do not consider there is
any indication of impairment.
In 2024, the DLE pilot plant was commissioned,
consequently the Directors will consider whether expenditure
relating to the DLE pilot plant should be reclassified as tangible
assets in 2024. However, at 31 December 2023, expenditure
related to DLE had been classified as intangible pending
confirmation as to its technical and commercial
feasibility.
12. TRADE AND OTHER
RECEIVABLES
Trade and other receivables
|
Audited
As at
31-Dec-2023
|
Audited
As at
31-Dec-22
|
|
£
|
£
|
Prepayments and deposits
|
570,936
|
194,712
|
VAT
|
13,385
|
4,988
|
Other receivables
|
26,577
|
78,639
|
Total
|
610,898
|
278,339
|
Prepayments and deposits largely reflect
prepayments with respect to with capital projects in Chile and
prepaid insurance and other commercial subscriptions which renew
variously and annually as well as office rental deposit amounts
paid.
Although VAT shows a balance of approximately
£13,000 at 31 December 2023, at that date approximately £1.8
million in Chilean VAT recoverable is not shown in the table
above. Although the Chilean VAT is expected to be eligible
for refund in future, due to the uncertainty over the timing of
future production and revenues, which would trigger the Group's
eligibility to recover that VAT, the Directors have made full
provision against this same amount. Accordingly,
approximately £1.2 million provision has been reflected in the
income statement for the year ended 31 December 2023 (£0.6 million
in 2022).
Other receivables comprise multiple smaller
working capital balances.
13. SHARE CAPITAL
Share capital
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
shares
|
£
|
At 1 January 2022
|
|
2
|
0.02
|
Share for share exchange CTL Ltd
|
|
60,366,573
|
5,051,201
|
Cash received for shares held in
creditors
|
|
-
|
194,917
|
Fundraise shares issued
|
|
44,766,925
|
17,867,122
|
Commissions on fundraise shares
issued
|
|
-
|
(1,047,970)
|
Warrant shares fair value adjustment
|
|
-
|
(989,115)
|
Equity settled transactions
|
|
200,000
|
-
|
At 31 December 2022
|
|
105,333,500
|
21,076,155
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
|
105,333,500
|
21,076,155
|
Share options exercised
|
|
1,100,000
|
396,000
|
Fundraise shares issued
|
|
38,728,826
|
8,520,341
|
Commissions on fundraise shares
issued
|
|
-
|
(607,104)
|
Warrant shares fair value adjustment
|
|
-
|
(3,074,767)
|
At 31 December 2023
|
|
145,162,326
|
26,310,625
|
In 2022, CTL Plc completed its formal
acquisition of the Underlying Group through a share- for-share
agreement with the shareholders of CTL Ltd. In addition, shares
were issued by CTL Plc as a part of the IPO placing, and as a part
of the placing which completed in November 2022. Of the share
capital raised, approximately £1.0 million was offset by
fundraising commissions.
In 2023, approximately £0.4 million was raised
through the exercise of share options from a previous employee (see
Note 14). In addition, CTL Plc completed a fundraise of
approximately £8.5 million, which included £0.1 million of non-cash
settled share based payments, and of which approximately £0.6
million was offset by fundraising commissions.
14. SHARE BASED
PAYMENTS
During the year ended 31 December 2023, share
options have been granted to certain Directors, staff and
suppliers.
In addition, during the year, 1,100,000 share
options were exercised by a former employee at an exercise price of
36p per share, giving rise to a £396,000 cash inflow to the
Company.
|
|
Year ended
31-Dec-23
|
Year ended
31-Dec-22
|
|
|
#
|
#
|
Outstanding at start of the year
|
|
10,984,745
|
-
|
|
Share options granted
|
|
3,283,000
|
6,670,000
|
|
Warrant shares granted
|
|
21,876,005
|
4,314,745
|
|
Share options exercised
|
|
(1,100,000)
|
-
|
|
Share options revoked or forfeited
|
|
(681,000)
|
-
|
|
Outstanding at end of the year
|
|
34,362,750
|
10,984,745
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
All warrants have vested, the outstanding share
options have various vesting conditions, some of which have vested,
others which have not.
|
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-23
|
Audited
Year ended
31-Dec-22
|
|
|
#
|
#
|
IPO share
options
|
vested
|
2,900,000
|
2,900,000
|
Performance related
options
|
Milestone 1 (see note
below: M1)
|
1,238,334
|
1,103,667
|
|
Performance related
options
|
Milestone 2
(see note below:
M2)
|
1,418,334
|
1,103,667
|
|
Performance related
options
|
Milestone 3 (see note
below: M3)
|
1,418,332
|
1,103,666
|
|
Non-Executive Director
Options
|
Time (see note below:
time)
|
697,000
|
595,000
|
|
Other contractor
options
|
Fully vested nil-cost
options
|
500,000
|
-
|
|
Share options
outstanding at end of the year
|
8,172,000
|
6,670,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Notes on vesting conditions
|
M1
|
This vesting condition is met when the Board
publishing a JORC 'measured and indicated' resource total of 1m
tonnes (or more) of Lithium Carbonate Equivalent; this condition
was met during the 2023
|
M2
|
This vesting condition is met when the Board
agrees to the publication of a Pre-Feasibility Study
(PFS)
|
M3
|
This vesting condition is met when proposed
pilot plant testing process has met its objectives to produce
sufficient battery grade lithium carbonate and/or lithium hydroxide
to enable the Company to supply material for offtake customer
testing and to provide process design data for the Definitive
Feasibility Study (DFS)
|
Time
|
Refers to annual anniversary time vesting
points
|
All options and warrants are granted in the
Company's name. Share options granted have a weighted average
exercise price of 47 pence and warrants granted have a weighted
average exercise price of 33 pence.
The accounting standards and CTL's accounting
policies provide that the cost of issuing equity instruments
(warrants or share options) is measured at its fair value. In
the case of share options, fair values are charged to the income
statement or the exploration asset, with a corresponding increase
in equity. The fair value of share options is measured at grant
date, using a Black-Scholes pricing model and spread over the
period during which the employee becomes unconditionally entitled
to the award (the vesting period). The charge is adjusted to
reflect the expected number of shares or options that vest.
The fair value of each option granted in the period was estimated
using the Black Scholes option pricing model with the following
assumptions:
|
|
|
Share
Options
|
Fair value of call option per share
|
|
|
£0.12 -
0.38
|
Share price at grant dates
|
|
|
£0.39 -
0.55
|
Exercise price
|
|
|
£0.01 -
0.57
|
Expected volatility
|
|
|
116%
|
Vesting period
|
|
|
4.7-5.0 years from
vesting
|
Risk-free interest rate (based on government
bonds)
|
|
|
4.16%
|
The fair value of warrants is also measured at
grant date, using a Monte Carlo simulation where vesting dates
depend on performance related criteria, or using the Black-Scholes
pricing model where more appropriate. As with the treatment
of share options, the fair value is spread over the period during
which the warrant holder has entitlement to the award. The charge
is adjusted to reflect the number of warrants that vest. In
the case of warrants, fair values are charged to an equity
reserve.
The total share option fair value charge for
year ended 31 December 2023 is £1,060,152 (£588,713 in 2022), of
which approximately £528,000 has been recorded in the income
statement as a non-cash employee expense; the balance has been
recorded within E&E. The total warrant fair value charge
for year ended 31 December 2023 is approximately £3,074,000 (2022:
£989,114).
All of the warrants granted during the year
vested on or shortly after the grant date. The warrants which
were awarded to subscribers of the two-tranche placing and open
offer which was approved by shareholders and completed on 14
December 2023 have a vesting date of 14 December 2024 and expire on
the second annual anniversary. Broker warrants issued as a
part of the two-tranche placing during the period had a vesting
date of 15 December 2024 and expire on 15 December 2028.
As noted, these fair value estimates are
non-cash accounting entries.
15. CONTINGENT
LIABILITIES
Laguna Verde Option Agreement
At 31 December 2023, the Group held an indirect
interest in the Laguna Verde concessions pursuant to the Laguna
Verde Option Agreement which was entered into on 23 April
2021. Pursuant to the Option Agreement, the Vendors have
granted Atacama Salt Lake SpA (Atacama) the
option to purchase the concessions at any time prior to the expiry
of the agreement, being 20 April 2026.
In consideration for the grant of the Option,
Atacama is required to make payments to the vendors comprising:
(i) a fixed price of US$334,000 (of which
US$204,000 has been paid as at 30 June 2023, with the balance
payable in annual instalments); and (ii) a variable price, as
calculated in reference to the valuation of lithium carbonate and
other commercially extractable products from the concessions. The
variable price is payable with a mix of cash and shares as follows:
20% payable in cash and 80% payable through the issue of shares in
CleanTech Lithium Plc. The minimum variable price payable under the
Option Agreement is USD $3.5 million. Atacama may discard the
option to purchase the relevant Laguna Verde properties and in the
event of such a decision no further payments would be
due.
Subsequent to the year end, the Company announced
the buy-out of the LV option agreement. This buy-out
formalises CleanTech's legal ownership of the mining concessions of
interest in the Laguna Verde asset, details of which are set out in
Note 21.;
16. PAYABLES, PROVISIONS AND
ACCRUALS
|
|
Year ended
31-Dec-23
|
Year ended
31-Dec-22
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
Trade and other payable
|
|
(291,369)
|
(321,476)
|
Provisions
|
|
(106,451)
|
(86,007)
|
Other taxes and social
security
|
|
(59,027)
|
(118,862)
|
Accruals
|
|
(272,262)
|
(107,401)
|
Total
|
|
(730,350)
|
(633,746)
|
Trade and other payables include routine trade
creditors.
The provisions balance largely reflects the
provision for taxes associated on the expenses classified as
Director fees for Mr Boitano. Prior to 2021, Mr. Boitano provided
ad hoc financing support to the Group to fund working capital and
exploration and evaluation expenditure. Related party transactions
involving Mr. Boitano comprised settlements of liabilities on
behalf of the Group or on behalf of Mr. Boitano and transfers by
Mr. Boitano to or from the Group under informal finance
arrangements. No such funding arrangements were made between the
Group and Mr. Boitano after 2020. In historical periods, net
amounts owing to the Group were waived and expensed to the Income
Statement and totalled approximately £33,000 in 2020. These amounts
were classified as Director fees and a provision for taxes relating
to same was made. Any amounts advanced by or to Mr. Boitano
were deemed repayable on demand and did not carry an interest
rate.
Other taxes and social security balances largely
relate people-related costs and taxes balances at the period
end.
Accruals include routine accruals for
professional services rendered not invoiced at period
end.
17. OTHER RESERVES
Foreign exchange reserve
The foreign exchange reserve represents the
differences arising on the translation of transactions from the
functional currencies.
Accumulated losses
The accumulated losses represent the
consolidated losses of the Group. Movements during the year
represent the consolidated comprehensive loss for that
year.
18. CAPITAL
MANAGEMENT
The capital of the Group consists of the items
included within "equity"
on the Statement of Financial Position. The Directors manage the
Group's capital structure based on the nature and availability of
funding and the timing of expected or committed expenditures. The
Directors' capital management policy is to maintain sufficient
capital to support the acquisition, exploration and future
development of the Group's exploration and evaluation assets and to
provide sufficient funds for the Group's corporate
activities.
The Group's exploration and evaluation assets
are in the exploration phase of development, consequently, the
Group is unable to finance its operations through production
revenues. The Group has relied historically on equity financings
and on debt funding, or a combination thereof, to finance its
activities. The Directors project the Group's future capital
requirements by planning the exploration and future development
activities to be undertaken on its exploration and evaluation
assets and assessing the level of corporate activities that are
necessary to support the growth and development of the Group. The
Group is not subject to any capital requirements imposed
externally.
19. RELATED PARTY
TRANSACTIONS
At the year end, Company had one receivable
owing from one of the directors totalling approximately GBP £18,000
which has been fully repaid in January 2024. There were no
related party transactions during the year other than transactions
with Directors as disclosed in the Directors remuneration section
of the report on page 30. In
addition, during the year, one month's fees for one of the
directors was settled in shares. In 2022, the Company procured
professional photographs of the Board for publication purposes from
a related party of one of the Directors. The transaction had a
value of £750 and was paid in full in 2022.
20. SUBSIDIARY
UNDERTAKINGS
At 31 December 2023, CleanTech Lithium Plc has
the following subsidiary undertakings, all of which are wholly
owned, directly or indirectly:
Name of company
|
Country of incorporation
|
Ownership
|
CleanTech Lithium Ltd
|
England & Wales
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Plc
|
CLS Chile SpA
|
Chile
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Ltd
|
Laguna Negro Francisco SpA
|
Chile
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Ltd
|
Atacama Salt Lakes SpA
|
Chile
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Ltd
|
Laguna Escondida SpA
|
Chile
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Ltd
|
Atacama Tierras Blancas SpA
|
Chile
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Ltd
|
Laguna Brava SpA
|
Chile
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Ltd
|
Llamara SpA
|
Chile
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Ltd
|
CleanTech Lithium Ltd acts as holding company
(for the Chilean entities) and management service provider to the
Group. CLS Chile SpA primarily acts as service provider to
the other Chilean entities, which are themselves are asset and
mining licence companies.
The financial information presented by the Group
in this report also contains information relating to the two
Australian entities, noting these were wound-up and formally
deregistered on 25 March 2022. There been a change to the
ultimate beneficial owners of the Group arising from the corporate
restructurings and subsequent deregistrations of the Australian
entities.
Name of company
|
Country of
incorporation
|
Ownership
|
Chilean Lithium Salars Holdings
Limited
|
Australia
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Ltd
|
Chilean Lithium Salars Pty Limited
|
Australia
|
Wholly owned by CleanTech Lithium
Ltd
|
21. SUBSEQUENT
EVENTS
Matters relating to events occurring since
Period end are reported in the section entitled Chairman Statement
and set out below:
On 12 April 2024, the Company announced it had
accepted the resignation of Aldo Boitano as CEO and director of the
Company with immediate effect. This announcement followed his
suspension after he failed to disclose entered into a loan
agreement with a financial institution, under which he agreed to
provide security over ordinary shares which he had held in his
name. Steve Kesler will continue as CEO on an interim basis
to ensure no impact on the Company's ongoing activities. To
ensure continuity, Steve Kesler, as Executive Chairman has been
working closely with Mr Boitano and is well placed to ensure
ongoing continuity and progress.
On 22 April 2024 the Company announced it had
completed the planned acquisition of the 23 Laguna Verde licences
previously subject to an option agreement resulting in the Company
securing full ownership, as well as control, of the full 108 mining
licences comprising the Laguna Verde project.
Also on 22 April 2024, the Company announced it
issued convertible loan notes to raise gross proceeds of £1 million
for the Company on what the Directors believe are advantageous
terms.
On 8 May 2024 the Company announced that, as far
as it can determine, Mr Boitano has ceased to hold a beneficial
interest in shares in the Company.
On 14 May 2024 the Company announced that the
DLE pilot plant had produced high quality eluate with low
impurities. DLE primarily acts as a purification stage, recovering
lithium chloride from the brine whilst rejecting other impurities.
The pilot plant in Copiapó has demonstrated that it can operate at
the designed capacity of concentrated eluate production sufficient
for conversion to 1 tonne per month of battery grade lithium
carbonate. This places CleanTech Lithium at the forefront of
exploration companies in Chile and the wider sector, in its ability
to make available large samples of lithium carbonate product to
potential strategic and offtake partners seeking to start product
qualification.
-ENDS-
Glossary
CTL Ltd
|
CleanTech Lithium Ltd; U.K. registered and tax
domiciled company
|
CTL Plc
|
CleanTech Lithium Plc; Jersey registered and tax
domiciled company
|
DLE
|
Direct lithium extraction
|
EIA
|
Environmental Impact Assessment
|
ESG
|
Environmental, Social and Governance
|
Group
|
CleanTech Lithium statutory group
|
IPO
|
Initial public offering
|
JORC
|
The JORC Code provides a mandatory system for
the classification of minerals Exploration Results, Mineral
Resources and Ore Reserves according to the levels of confidence in
geological knowledge and technical and economic considerations in
public reports
|
LCE
|
Lithium carbonate equivalent, industry standard
terminology used to compare different forms of lithium
compounds
|
LSE
|
London Stock Exchange
|
MoU
|
Memorandum of Understanding
|
mg/L
|
micrograms per litre
|
SBP
|
Share based payments
|
SPA
|
Sale & Purchase Agreement
|