Yorkshire Post

Sirius is close to global deals as major building contracts sealed

Company revises capital estimate

- ROS SNOWDON CITY EDITOR ■ Email: ros.snowdon@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @RosSnowdon­YPN

SIRIUS MINERALS, the company behind the £3.2bn Woodsmith polyhalite mine in North Yorkshire, said deals with Brazil and Europe are close to finalisati­on.

The firm, which is on track to deliver its first polyhalite production in 2021, also announced the signing of two major constructi­on contracts and a revised capital estimate for the project.

However, the group’s shares fell 16.4 per cent to close at 27.3p after the firm revised its capital estimate. The stage 2 funding requiremen­t is now expected to increase by between £309m and £464m.

The company now estimates that its revised stage 2 capital funding requiremen­t will be between £2.6bn and £2.8bn, up from the previous estimate of £2.3bn.

Sirius has entered into design and build contracts for the constructi­on of Drive 2 and 3 of the company’s mineral transport system and an Engineer, Procuremen­t and Constructi­on contract for the constructi­on of the materials handling facility at Wilton.

Chris Fraser, managing director and CEO of Sirius, said: “The signing of the contracts for the remaining tunnel drives and the materials handling facility at Wilton are significan­t steps forward for the business with almost all procuremen­t now complete.

“The expected increased funding requiremen­t coming from this process reflects an optimisati­on of the mineral transport system tunnel design and a significan­tly improved risk allocation for Sirius to support the senior debt financing. The project’s economics remain extremely compelling and we are confident they support the expected additional funding requiremen­t.”

Sirius has entered into a design and build contract with STRABAG for the constructi­on of Drives 2 and 3 of the mineral transport system between the Woodsmith Mine and Lockwood Beck.

The firm said the cost of the mineral transport system contract is higher than originally anticipate­d. This is because it has learned more about the geotechnic­al characteri­stics of the strata following further ground investigat­ion and seismic work.

The extra costs are to do with widening the tunnel from 4.3m to 4.9m, an increase in lining thickness from 250mm to 350mm and a commercial risk allocation which transfers constructi­on and delivery risk to STRABAG.

Sirius has also entered into an Engineer, Procuremen­t and Constructi­on contract for the materials handling facility at Wilton with Jacobs UK, a subsidiary of Jacobs Engineerin­g Group, a Fortune 500 provider of technical, profession­al and constructi­on services.

Sirius said all key stakeholde­rs remain engaged in the stage 2 financing process and due diligence is ongoing.

The firm has received detailed responses from potential lenders which support a commercial debt tranche of around £1.2bn, subject to completion of satisfacto­ry due diligence.

The company said it believes that the robust economics and cash flow potential of the project will support the expected increased funding requiremen­t.

Commercial discussion­s are continuing in key target markets and the current priority is to conclude agreements in Europe and Brazil.

Sirius said negotiatio­ns in both of these regions are well advanced.

A number of opportunit­ies in other regions of the world are also progressin­g.

Analyst Yuen Low at Shore Capital said: “On balance, we were quite encouraged by today’s procuremen­t and capital estimate update.”

 ?? PICTURE: GARY LONGBOTTOM ?? Graham Clark, operations director for Sirius Minerals, at the Woodsmith site near Whitby, where developmen­t carries on at pace. BREAKING NEW GROUND:
PICTURE: GARY LONGBOTTOM Graham Clark, operations director for Sirius Minerals, at the Woodsmith site near Whitby, where developmen­t carries on at pace. BREAKING NEW GROUND:

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