Engineering News and Mining Weekly

Restart Setback

Langer Heinrich restart faces minor delay, costs tweaked

- MARIAAN WEBB | CREAMER MEDIA DEPUTY EDITOR ONLINE

After more than six years of care-and-maintenanc­e, the Langer Heinrich uranium mine, in Namibia, has restarted production activities and, while Paladin Energy continues to target first commercial production by the end of the first quarter, lower contractor productivi­ty over the Christmas and New Year period may mean a slight delay.

Despite the hiccup, there has been extensive collaborat­ion between the commission­ing team and the operations team, which has mitigated the impact of reduced productivi­ty.

However, it may mean a slight delay in achieving commercial production to early in the second quarter.

The restart project is now more than 93% complete. Paladin is forecastin­g total capital costs of about $125-million, from the previous forecast of $118-million.

First ore was fed to the processing plant on January 20, following the successful commission­ing of the beneficiat­ion circuit, Paladin CEO Ian Purdy reported last month.

Ahead of commercial production starting, Paladin has executed a $150-million syndicated debt facility to provide capital flexibilit­y.

The company executed the facility, comprising a $100million amortising term loan over five years and a $50-million revolving credit facility with a three-year term, with Nedbank and Macquarie Bank.

Purdy said that the outlook for uranium prices was strong. Paladin has about $80 uncapped upside exposure to the uranium spot price until the end of 2030, the company said.

The company also has flexible shipping arrangemen­ts and early payment terms with its largest customer, providing significan­t delivery flexibilit­y and improved cash flow during the Langer Heinrich operationa­l ramp-up.

During the quarter, Paladin has executed a nonmateria­l offtake agreement for the supply of uranium to an industry leading counterpar­ty in Europe.

Paladin has a geographic­ally diverse offtake book, with seven offtake agreements executed with top-tier counterpar­ties in the US, Europe and China. These contracts range in type and duration and provide base-escalated, fixedprice and market-related pricing mechanisms.

Paladin executed commercial agreements with two Western conversion facilities and has received export permits for 2024 from the Ministry of Mines and Energy in Namibia.

Langer Heinrich has an estimated 17-year mine life, supported by ore reserves of 84.8-million tonnes with an average uranium grade of 448 parts per million.

Life-of-mine production is estimated at 77.4-million pounds of uranium.

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