Australian Critical Minerals confirms Cooletha lithium prospectivity

Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) is planning follow-up exploration for Q1 2024 across its Cooletha Lithium Project in Western Australia after confirming lithium prospectivity through a recent mapping and sampling program. 

The $15.67 million market capitalisation is preparing to continue sampling across Cooletha, having identified 10 target areas that, combined, total more than 24km in length. 

Australian Critical Minerals Managing Director Dean de Largie says future exploration is expected to provide a ‘faster’ test and evaluation procedure of the specific targets identified, especially on the central and eastern side of the project. 

Current work has also highlighted the potential of iron ore and manganese within the Cooletha tenure, and when efficient to do so, Australian Critical Minerals will sample these units to value-add to the information database. 

This news comes after trace elements and spectral analyses confirmed the presence of a lithium-caesium-tantalum (LCT) pegmatite system and generated the 10 priority targets in the untested Goldilocks zone.  

Australian Critical Minerals says the scale of the total prospective area has exceeded the company’s expectations. 

Dean de Largie adds that the initial 251 samples of intrusive and pegmatitic rocks delivered the geochemical information required to develop the company’s understanding of the intrusive fractionation processes that have occurred at the project. 

“Identifying the location and vectors in fractionated rocks is the first important step to the discovery of evolved pegmatitic LCT systems. 

We look forward to building on this data with a scientifically robust exploration plan which includes the sampling of the identified targets within the modelled LCT pegmatite goldilocks zone.”

“We look forward to building on this data with a scientifically robust exploration plan which includes the sampling of the identified targets within the modelled LCT pegmatite goldilocks zone”

The company has also submitted a Program of Work (PoW) to drill iron ore targets at its Shaw Project. This is expected to begin in Q2 2024. 

Australian Critical Minerals is a critical minerals explorer focused on its assets in Western Australia. The company’s flagship Cooletha project has over 100km-square of lithium prospectivity in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. 

As of 30 September 2023, the company had $3.734 million cash and cash equivalents at hand, according to its latest quarterly report.

Write to Aaliyah Rogan at Mining.com.au  

Images: Australian Critical Minerals
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Written By Aaliyah Rogan
Relocated from the East Coast in New Zealand to Queensland Australia, Aaliyah is a fervent journalist who has a passion for storytelling. When Aaliyah isn’t writing stories, she is either spending time with friends and family or down at the beach.

Australian Critical Minerals: a critical explorer at a critical time

Australia’s critical minerals list isn’t a particularly thrilling read, but it’s an important one. Put together by the Australian Government, it features 26 commodities — from lithium and cobalt to helium and rare earths — deemed essential for modern technologies, economies, and national security.

They play starring roles in mobile phones, computers, fibre optics, semiconductors, and banknotes, plus numberless other products spanning defence, aerospace, telecommunications, health care, and — of course — green energy.

Indeed, to work in the critical minerals sector is to work at some sort of cutting edge. It is to be a champion of the preservation of Life As We Know It; it is to be faced with a heavy challenge, but a worthy one nonetheless.

“I think it’s huge,” says Dean de Largie, Managing Director of Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM), when asked about the role of such things in an ever-changing world.

“I think it’s bigger than most people really imagine. The demand is going to be very difficult to manage.”

“I think it’s bigger than most people really imagine”

In its pre-IPO days, ACM was looking to be “a significant player” in the kaolin space and had compiled a portfolio of high-purity projects initially developed by what are now ACM’s wholly owned subsidiaries.

“Years ago, when junior kaolin companies were hitting the boards and getting great investor response, we put a huge kaolin package together,” de Largie says.

“Then, as investment sentiment was swinging to the green energy sector, we developed the assets we currently hold in the Pilbara and the midwest of Western Australia.”

In addition to the extensive kaolin tenements in WA’s southwest, ACM owns the Cooletha and Shaw projects in the Pilbara and holds a 51% earn-in option at the Rankin Dome Project near Southern Cross.

Now, freshly on the other side of an ASX listing in July, the company has its arms open to a much broader set of commodities, and de Largie — together with Chairman Michael Wright and Non-Executive Director Gary Brabham — is asking the obvious question: How much of those commodities does ACM have?

Beverley, Kondinin and Kojonup

ACM’s kaolin tenements, located between Perth and Albany, include the Beverley, Kondinin and Kojonup projects. Though they’ve taken a back seat in the context of green energy hype, they’ve not been forgotten.

“Kaolin was our initial focus prior to becoming public, and currently the market’s not giving kaolin companies much love,” de Largie says.

“But what’s interesting is that some of our kaolin areas, although they’re good quality kaolin, they’re likely to be interesting targets for rare earths as well. We will be reviewing our kaolin projects for rare earths as we progress our work programs.”

Rankin Dome

When it comes to rare earths, however, Rankin Dome is the star of ACM’s show. Held under a joint venture with Kula Gold (ASX:KGD), the project was recently subject to a 249-hole auger drilling program as well as a 6-hole reverse circulation (RC) campaign totalling 900m. 

While both sought to better define a previously discovered rare earth anomaly, the auger program was as much a re-do as anything else. The existing auger lines, de Largie explains, had a variety of orientations, which made it difficult to determine the actual orientation of the anomaly.

“No matter which way I tried to model it, it didn’t quite fit,” he says.

“To remove any bias, I covered the area with a 100m-by-100m grid. That takes any orientation bias out of the modelling, and from there I’ll be able to make the right decisions on where we drill and at what orientation.”

Already, ACM has seen “some nice clays” in the area, which has been pegged for additional work, including bringing the 100-by-100 grid down to more narrow spacing.

“East of that grid auger program, we’ve done a small 6-hole RC program, and it was reasonably obvious that we expected bedrock close to surface there. That’s why I didn’t worry about any auger work, I just drilled straight into the intrusive,” de Largie says.

“We’ve drilled some reasonably deep holes through that particular area to give us an answer to the question of whether we’re dealing with a hard rock-hosted rare earth property or clay-hosted.”

“We’ve drilled some reasonably deep holes through that particular area to give us an answer to the question of whether we’re dealing with a hard rock-hosted rare earth property or clay-hosted”

Cooletha and Shaw

Much further to the north — around 200km north of Newman — is the Cooletha Project, which de Largie says is notable for its variety of opportunities. The project covers more than 100 square km of land prospective for lithium and tantalum, plus another 100 square km prospective for iron ore. But with several pegmatite swarms stretching across the 30km width of the tenements, the focus is predominantly on lithium.

Australian Critical Minerals has so far collected 251 rock samples to verify targets already identified through desktop studies. Trace element ratios from geochemical analysis are expected to help guide the company to areas that might be “more highly fractionated”.

“You hear people talk about how ‘the sweet spot in pegmatites is X kilometres from the source’, and that’s all based on the fractionation processes that occur when these pegmatites form,” de Largie says.

“So we’ll get the geochemistry from that and we’ll make some decisions about where we go next.”

Even further north, 68km west of Marble Bar, sits the 90 square km Shaw Project. Originally drilled by Anaconda Australia in the 1970s, the small number of shallow holes that hit the targeted unconformity returned some promising gold grades.

“There are some great grades of gold at surface, half-ounce gold in this unconformity. But we’re not chasing that,” de Largie says.

“We’re chasing — at Shaw — the banded iron formation, and there are potentially some other opportunities to do with the unconformity hosting other minerals, like rare earths. So we’ll be looking at that as well.”

‘In the land of the giants’

The preference for iron ore over gold is partly due to the location of not just Shaw, but also Cooletha. As far as popular jurisdictions go, the Pilbara is one of the more densely populated, and it hosts players ranging from the smallest micro-cap juniors to the world’s very biggest mining behemoths.

“We’re in the land of the giants with these two projects. We’re surrounded by Atlas Iron, which is Hancock Prospecting. We’re surrounded by BHP, FMG, Rio Tinto,” de Largie says.

“So it’s a very easy situation for us to define an inferred resource, and if it’s of a grade that the majors are interested in, it’d be an easy offtake agreement. We could probably sell that material for $1 or $2 a tonne. If we’re looking at several hundred million tonnes, that’s a pretty significant transaction for a little junior that floated at an $8.5 million market cap.”

“if it’s of a grade that the majors are interested in, it’d be an easy offtake agreement.”

It’s a popular strategy, and one that makes good sense. After all, why would a potentially cash-strapped junior spend a fortune building processing facilities when so many already exist?

The other factor is that iron ore has always been risky for junior players. 

“You’re dealing with huge ore bodies, expensive infrastructure, and extended time frames,” de Largie explains.

“That’s why it’s risky for a junior to try and develop iron ore resources, irrespective of the grade, because the infrastructure costs are so high. It’s a much more sensible idea to find a resource and allow established producers to purchase it, or you have an offtake agreement.”

But it’s also a matter of finding the right suitor: an appropriate ‘major’ with a balance sheet sufficient to take on and develop the resource.

“Having 300 million tonnes of iron, for example, sounds very exciting to a junior. It’s a great resource, very valuable. But to the major iron ore players, like BHP, it’s not exciting to them, it’s a rounding error,” de Largie adds.

“So you have to look at the mid-tier iron ore producers like FMG and Roy Hill, which would likely have the appetite for the size of resource we expect to define.”

A prudent strategy though it might be, it’s not as if de Largie and the rest of the ACM team are married to it. The company may only have three staff, but their combined experience is not to be sneezed at.

“Both Gary Brabham and Michael Wright have had lots of production experience. Michael, especially, has built huge mines, both in Australia and Indonesia. So we’ve got the right board to be able to do that. We’ll see how the projects stack up and then decide what we’re going to do.”

The road ahead

Indeed, de Largie isn’t getting ahead of himself. The name of the game, for now at least, is to get the numbers right and develop a resource.

“Get it up to at least an inferred resource and then go knock on their doors,” he says.

“And as soon as we deliver some lithium results at Cooletha, I think the major lithium producers will start to follow our progress more closely given the size and quality of our tenure and the potential size of any resource we develop.”

Either way, de Largie is anticipating that this will all translate to “a serious re-rate” of ACM’s share price over the next 12 months.

“I’d like to have some significant numbers on the board in terms of our rare earths and lithium, and I’d like to have the numbers that would make it obvious that our market cap will be jumping significantly. I won’t say the sort of numbers I think they’ll probably go to, but I think there will probably be a couple of re-rates in that process,” he explains.

“Because, realistically, the green energy sector really isn’t developed enough at the moment to take on the production of energy without fossil fuels. So, just on that basis, there will be huge demand for green energy minerals and, hence, any company with a resource will be expected to achieve an incredible re-rate of their market capitalisation on that basis.”

Australian Critical Minerals certainly presents an interesting investment prospect. It’s true that the company has built for itself a strategy rooted in strong demand for important commodities. It’s true, also, that the company has an impressive collection of assets in enviable regions, and the human expertise to make those assets sing. How it all shakes down in the high-pressure chamber of real life is, of course, the risk as it relates to reward.

Write to Oliver Gray at Mining.com.au

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Written By Oliver Gray
Originally from Perth, Oliver has a keen interest long-form journalism. He has written for a number of publications and was most recently Contributing Editor of The Market Herald’s opinion section, Art of the Essay.

OD6 delivers ‘exceptional’ Splinter Rock assays

OD6 Metals (ASX:OD6) has delivered ‘exceptional’ new rare earths results from a phase three drilling program at its Splinter Rock Rare Earth Project in Western Australia. 

The $18.44 million market capitalisation company says the results include grades of up to 6,441 parts per million (ppm) total rare earth oxide (TREO) and offer ‘real and substantial’ potential for a mineral resource expansion.

OD6 plans to conduct a review and potential upgrade of its Splinter Rock Mineral Resource Estimate in the first quarter of 2024. 

OD6 reports 92% of the assays from 67 holes drilled at the Centre prospect encountered clays with rare earth concentrations of more than 300ppm TREO, and 77% of the holes intercepted rare earth concentrations of more than 1,000ppm TREO. 

Drilling also confirmed clays across a 14km length at Centre with widths between 4km to 5km. 

OD6 adds that ‘high-value’ magnet rare earth oxides (MREO) represent an average of 23% of the TREO grade. 

Some of the ‘significant high-grade’ intersections include hole SRAC0356 with 58m @ 2,060ppm TREO (21.8% MREO) from 21m; and hole SRAC0303 with 24m @ 2,379ppm TREO (25.5% MREO) from 18m. 

OD6 Metals Managing Director Brett Hazelden says these ‘exceptional’ assay results have surpassed the company’s previous results and showcase some of Australia’s thickest high-grade clay-hosted rare earths intercepts. 

“The consistency of mineralisation across such a vast 14km-by-5km zone highlights the quality and significance of our discovery. 

Importantly, a deep, wide clay channel extensional to the southern end of the resource has returned grades in excess of 1,400ppm TREO. The volume and grades in this area alone create the strong potential for substantial resource expansion. 

The geological team of internal and external experts will now start reviewing the current Splinter Rock Mineral Resource Estimate with a view to update this early in the new year.”

“The geological team of internal and external experts will now start reviewing the current Splinter Rock Mineral Resource Estimate with a view to update this early in the new year”

OD6’s drilling comprised 145 holes for 7,435m across the Centre and Prop prospects within the Splinter Rock project. The program received funding through the Western Australian Government Exploration Incentive Scheme (EIS). 

OD6 Metals is an Australian critical minerals and rare earths-focused explorer and developer. The company wholly owns the Splinter Rock and Grass Patch projects in Western Australia. 

As of 30 September 2023, OD6 had about $2 million cash at hand, according to its latest quarterly report.

Write to Aaliyah Rogan at Mining.com.au 

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Written By Aaliyah Rogan
Relocated from the East Coast in New Zealand to Queensland Australia, Aaliyah is a fervent journalist who has a passion for storytelling. When Aaliyah isn’t writing stories, she is either spending time with friends and family or down at the beach.

Australian Critical posts inaugural ASX quarterly run-down

Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) is progressing a 900m reverse circulation (RC) drilling program at its joint venture (JV) Rankin Dome Project in Western Australia. 

It comes as the company recaps its inaugural quarter as a listed explorer, having raised $5 million through an initial public offering in July. 

State One Equities acted as lead manager for the IPO, which received ‘strong’ support from institutions and sophisticated investors. Funds raised through the IPO were directed towards various exploration activities at the Cooletha Lithium and Rankin Dome Rare Earth projects.  

Australian Critical Minerals, which has a $12.4 million market capitalisation, followed its IPO by undertaking a ‘comprehensive’ mapping and surface sampling program at Cooletha, with phase one sampling comprising 251 rock samples gathered from 25% of the granted tenure.

Assays are currently pending from the sampling, with 4 priority areas uncovered and interpreted as having fractionation textures and spodumene, as announced in August. 

Australian Critical Minerals also noted the presence of visible spodumene and manganese mineralisation on tenements E45/4990 and E45/5228, respectively.   

The company is busy planning an additional RC drilling program to test the new targets. 

Meanwhile, at Rankin Dome, Australian Critical Minerals completed a shallow auger sampling program comprising 249 holes, with assays pending. 

The company, alongside its JV partner Kula Gold (ASX:KGD), began a 900m RC drilling program at the end of last month, and this program is still in progress.

Post-quarter, Australian Critical Minerals announced an entitlement offer of loyalty options that comprised the issue of one option for every 2.5 fully paid ordinary ACM shares in the capital of the company held by eligible shareholders.

The options had an issue price of $0.005 each and an exercise price of $0.30 per option before 29 June 2026. The offer closed on October 26, and Australian Critical Minerals sought just over $87,000 through the raise. 

Australian Critical Minerals is focused on developing a ‘world-class’ portfolio of critical minerals projects in Western Australia. 

The company’s JV Rankin Dome project lies in the Youanmi Terrane near Southern Cross, and its Cooletha Project covers 100km-square of lithium prospectivity with outcropping pegmatite swarms in the Pilbara lithium district.   

Australian Critical Minerals had $3.734 million cash and cash equivalents at hand as of 30 September 2023.

Write to Adam Drought at Mining.com.au

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Written By Adam Drought
Born and raised in the UK, Adam is a sports fanatic with an interest in Rugby League and UFC/MMA. When not training in Muay Thai and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, Adam attends Griffith University where he is completing his final year of a Communication & Journalism degree.

Australian Critical Minerals and Kula begin RC drilling at Rankin Dome

Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) has begun a 900m reverse circulation (RC) drill program at its joint venture (JV) Rankin Dome Project in Western Australia with Kula Gold (ASX:KGD). 

Kula, which has a $5.22 million market capitalisation, says drilling has been expanded following the completion of a 249-hole auger geochemical program over the northwestern portion of the rare earth element (REE) anomaly. 

This auger geochemical program is expected to better define the REE anomaly geometry and provide improved orientation information to guide future drilling. 

Sampling was also standardised across the region and is expected to provide a more ‘robust’ geological interpretation when assays are received. 

RC drilling will test areas of REE anomalism in soils in the northwestern section of Rankin Dome. 

Speaking on the drilling, Kula Gold Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Ric Dawson says: “We extend our sincere gratitude to Stark Drilling for their exceptional support in facilitating our decision to mobilise drilling resources in the most efficient and cost-effective manner. 

Our primary objective continues to be the swift completion of our drilling program at the Kirup Lithium Project. However, we are closely monitoring the progress made by ACM at the Rankin Dome Project, as it has piqued our keen interest.”

Australian Critical Minerals completed an initial public offering (IPO) that raised $5 million in July. 

Kula Gold is a Western Australian explorer with expertise in the discovery of new mineral deposits across the state. 

Australian Critical Minerals is an explorer focused on developing a ‘world-class’ portfolio of critical minerals projects in Western Australia. 

Together, both Australian Critical Minerals and Kula Gold manage the Rankin Dome project in Youanmi Terrane near Southern Cross, an established mining centre. 

Kula Gold had $558,000 cash and cash equivalents at hand as of 30 June 2023, according to its latest quarterly report.

Write to Adam Drought at Mining.com.au

Images: Australian Critical Minerals & Kula Gold
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Written By Adam Drought
Born and raised in the UK, Adam is a sports fanatic with an interest in Rugby League and UFC/MMA. When not training in Muay Thai and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, Adam attends Griffith University where he is completing his final year of a Communication & Journalism degree.

Australian Critical Minerals completes phase one sampling across WA assets

Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) has wrapped up its phase one sampling program at the Cooletha Project and a definition shallow auger program at the Rankin Dome Project in Western Australia. 

To date, the $15 million market capitalisation company has identified 3 areas as priority for future work areas, namely the Bloodwood, Echo Valley, Burnt Ridge, and Billy Creek areas. 

Mapping and sampling have also amassed 251 rock chip samples which have been delivered to Labwest for analysis. 

Australian Critical is planning a reverse circulation (RC) drill program to test the new and potentially ‘substantial’ target, that was observed through pegmatite sills at the Billy Creek dip. 

Pegmatite sills identified have an extent of up to 40m wide and 400m long. 

Meanwhile at Rankin Dome, 249 holes were completed as part of the shallow auger sampling program. Samples have been submitted to the laboratory with results yet to be received. 

The company is currently undertaking a 900m RC drilling program to test areas of rare earth elements (REE) anomalism in soils. 

Commenting on the ongoing activities, Australian Critical Minerals Managing Director Dean de Largie says: “Our field investigations have increased the potential area of prospectivity for lithium pegmatites, identified 4 prospects described as having large pavements of pegmatites and identified shale-hosted manganese. 

Whilst lithium exploration will remain our priority, the addition of manganese to our portfolio of green energy commodities will be received well by our shareholders. As foreshadowed previously, Rankin Dome has progressed further with additional shallow auger sampling completed and RC drilling currently in progress.”

The company’s flagship Cooletha Lithium Project has over 100km-square of lithium prospectivity with outcropping pegmatite swarms in the Pilbara lithium district. 

Australian Critical Minerals is an ASX-listed exploration company, focused on developing a quality portfolio of critical minerals projects in Western Australia.

Write to Aaliyah Rogan at Mining.com.au        

Images: Australian Critical Minerals 
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Written By Aaliyah Rogan
Relocated from the East Coast in New Zealand to Queensland Australia, Aaliyah is a fervent journalist who has a passion for storytelling. When Aaliyah isn’t writing stories, she is either spending time with friends and family or down at the beach.

Cygnus outlines potential ‘significant’ Bencubbin REE discovery

Cygnus Metals (ASX:CY5) has received a string of rare earth element (REE) results that demonstrate the ‘significant’ discovery potential at its Bencubbin Rare Earths Project in Western Australia. 

The recent results delivered grades of up to 7,243 parts per million (ppm) total rare earth oxide (TREO), within intercepts up to 79m wide. 

Cygnus reports the latest assay results recorded include 79m @ 1,576ppm TREO from 32m, including 8m @ 7,243ppm TREO; and 19m @ 1,959ppm TREO from 4m, including 4m @ 4,747ppm TREO. 

The $51.29 million market capitalisation company is now planning a follow-up aircore drill program, pending final government approvals. Drilling is designed to test for scale and beyond the 22km long auger anomaly defined along the magnetic granite margin. 

Through this follow-up program, Cygnus will be able to test the potential scale of a REE resource at Bencubbin. 

Metallurgical testwork is also planned to be completed through the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, which has extensive experience in REE processing. 

Initial results are expected to take 16 weeks from the receipt of samples at ANSTO in Sydney, Australia. 

Commenting on the drill results, Cygnus Metals Managing Director David Southam says: “These are the latest in a string of highly promising rare earth results at Bencubbin. It is early days in the discovery, but we can see the project has significant potential, and that’s why we are about to start metallurgical tests. 

we can see the project has significant potential, and that’s why we are about to start metallurgical tests”

While our clear focus remains on lithium in James Bay, Quebec, we are going to pursue Bencubbin with the aim of establishing its true full value. Our small dedicated Australian team will now focus on some follow-up aircore drilling, while samples are being sent for very important metallurgical testwork.”

The company’s rare earth exploration at Bencubbin is being carried out in parallel with its lithium exploration program in the James Bay region. Separate teams are assigned to both exploration programs. 

Cygnus Metals is an emerging Canadian and Australian critical minerals exploration company. The company is focused on its rare earths and lithium assets located in Quebec, Canada and Western Australia. 

As of 30 June 2023, the company had $5.4 million cash at hand, according to its latest quarterly report. Subsequent to the end of June, Cygnus launched a placement to raise $11.1 million via a placement.

Write to Aaliyah Rogan at Mining.com.au    

Images: Cygnus Metals
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Written By Aaliyah Rogan
Relocated from the East Coast in New Zealand to Queensland Australia, Aaliyah is a fervent journalist who has a passion for storytelling. When Aaliyah isn’t writing stories, she is either spending time with friends and family or down at the beach.

Kula intersects stacked pegmatites at Kirup 

Kula Gold (ASX:KGD) has intersected pegmatites over four intervals to 132m at the Mustang Lithium prospect within its Kirup Lithium Project in Western Australia. 

The company says intervals vary from 2m to 9m in thickness and have been recorded within the first drillhole (23MPRC001) at Mustang, which is up to 100m wide and up to 1km in strike. 

However, the program has been temporarily suspended due to ground conditions and will restart in a few weeks.

The drill rig is now en route to the joint venture (JV) Rankin Dome Project near Southern Cross, where Kula operating partner Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) is managing a maiden reverse circulation (RC) drill program for rare earth and lithium targets generated by Kula last year.     

Commenting on the Kirup discovery, Kula Gold Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Ric Dawson says: “It is fantastic to have commenced our reconnaissance drilling program at Kirup with the first phase at the Mustang lithium prospect. 

The combination of some very encouraging outcrop, geochemistry, and geophysics warrants subsurface drilling”

The combination of some very encouraging outcrop, geochemistry, and geophysics warrants subsurface drilling.”

Kula Gold is an ASX-listed explorer with a portfolio of promising lithium, gold, copper, nickel, platinum group elements, halloysite and kaolin projects in Western Australia’s Southern Cross and Kirup/Brunswick regions. 

The company’s Kirup project is located about 20km west of the Greenbushes lithium mine, one of the largest lithium mines globally, and is home to the Mustang prospect, which Kula says is one of an advanced set of lithium prospects within its portfolio. 

Australian Critical Minerals is an explorer focused on developing a ‘world-class’ portfolio of critical minerals projects in Western Australia. 

Together, both Australian Critical Minerals and Kula Gold manage the Rankin Dome project in Youanmi Terrane near Southern Cross, an established mining centre. 

Kula Gold had $558,000 cash and cash equivalents at hand as of 30 June 2023, according to its latest quarterly report. 

Meanwhile, Australian Critical Minerals completed an initial public offering (IPO) that raised $5 million in July.

Write to Adam Drought at Mining.com.au

Images: Kula Gold
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Written By Adam Drought
Born and raised in the UK, Adam is a sports fanatic with an interest in Rugby League and UFC/MMA. When not training in Muay Thai and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, Adam attends Griffith University where he is completing his final year of a Communication & Journalism degree.

Australian Critical Minerals confirms spodumene at Cooletha

Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) has confirmed spodumene mineralisation through its recent maiden drilling program at the Cooletha Lithium Project in Western Australia. 

The $8.5 million market capitalisation company says ‘encouraging’ mineralisation has been uncovered, with visible spodumene sites discovered on E45/4990 and manganese mineralisation identified on E45/5228. 

A reconnaissance program has covered about 15% of the pegmatite-prospective region so far, and the company adds mapping and sampling is continuing. 

Commenting on the exploration activities, Australian Critical Minerals Managing Director Dean de Largie says: “We are very encouraged by the visible spodumene identified during this program, and whilst we wait for the results of the first batch of rock samples within 6-8 weeks, reconnaissance sampling will continue. 

Having only covered 15% of the prospective pegmatite region so far, we are excited about the potential for exploration success

Having only covered 15% of the prospective pegmatite region so far, we are excited about the potential for exploration success. 

We are also eagerly anticipating the commencement of our first drilling program at Rankin Dome, which will target anomalous rare earth prospects. Final approvals and landowner access to allow this program to begin are imminent.”

Australian Critical is planning drilling programs comprising reverse circulation (RC), aircore, and auger drilling targeting several rare earth element (REE) anomalous areas within the large Rankin Dome Project area. 

The Cooletha Project has over 100km-square of lithium prospectivity with outcropping pegmatite swarms in the Pilbara lithium district. 

Australian Critical Minerals is an ASX-listed mineral exploration company focused on developing a quality portfolio of critical minerals projects in Western Australia. The company’s portfolio of assets includes the Cooletha and Rankin Dome projects.

Write to Aaliyah Rogan at Mining.com.au  

Images: Australian Critical Minerals
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Written By Aaliyah Rogan
Relocated from the East Coast in New Zealand to Queensland Australia, Aaliyah is a fervent journalist who has a passion for storytelling. When Aaliyah isn’t writing stories, she is either spending time with friends and family or down at the beach.

The Weekly Wrap-Up 28 July, 2023

Mining.com.au is Australia’s leading online daily Mining news service, reaching hundreds-of-thousands of mining professionals, investors, and industry participants each month. The Weekly Wrap-Up with Harry Mulholland provides listeners with a recap of the mining headlines each week.

In this episode, Harry reports on news from Astute Metals (ASX:ASE), Hamelin Gold (ASX:HMG), Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM), and Great Boulder Resources.

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Australian Critical Minerals steps into mapping and sampling program at Cooletha Lithium Project, WA

Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) has begun a mapping and sampling program over outcropping pegmatite swarms at its Cooletha Lithium Project in Western Australia.

As previously reported by Mining.com.au, the newly listed $8.7 million market capitalisation company’s mapping and sampling program aims to evaluate the ‘high-priority’ target area over an initial 10km of the 30km strike of outcropping pegmatite swarms to define ‘high-priority’ targets for future drilling campaigns, with results expected later this quarter.

This mapping and sampling program will be followed by a drill program targeting rare earth element (REE) anomalies in the September quarter at its Rankin Dome Rare Earths Project in Western Australia.

The news comes as part of Australian Critical Minerals’ first quarterly report since it began trading on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) after completing a $5 million initial public offering (IPO) on 3 July 2023.

Funds raised through the IPO are being utilised to begin exploration activities at both Cooletha and Rankin Dome.

At Cooletha, Australian Critical Minerals reports it has mobilised field personnel to begin mapping and sampling, and at Rankin Dome, preparations are underway to start drilling in the September quarter.

Cooletha is the company’s flagship lithium project in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, covering over 100km-square of ‘prospective’ ground with outcropping pegmatite swarms. The company says observed pegmatites exhibit varying widths, ranging from several metres to 100m, and extend over several hundred metres in length.

Surface samples have confirmed the presence of spodumene, and Australian Critical Minerals notes it has already identified ‘high-value’ target areas.

The company says Rankin Dome produced ‘highly anomalous’ REE results in shallow auger samples. The project is a joint venture (JV) between Australian Critical Minerals and Kula Gold (ASX:KGD), with Australian Critical Minerals positioned to earn a 51% interest in the project.

Rankin Dome lies close to Southern Cross, and a drill campaign is set to begin in this area shortly.

Australian Critical Minerals is a Western Australia-based critical minerals explorer focused on its portfolio of projects that aim to support the green revolution. These assets include the Cooletha Lithium, Rankin Dome Rare Earths, Shaw Iron Ore and Gold projects, as well as the Beverley, Kondinin, and Kojonup Kaolin projects.

Write to Harry Mulholland at Mining.com.au

Images: Australian Critical Minerals Ltd
Written By Harry Mulholland
Hailing from the Central Coast region of NSW, Harry is a passionate journalist with a background in print, radio and ESG news. When not bashing away on his keyboard, he can be found brewing a coffee or playing with his dog.

Newly listed Australian Critical Minerals begins maiden exploration at flagship Cooletha Lithium Project in WA

Newly listed junior explorer Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) has begun a mapping and sampling program at its Cooletha Lithium Project in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. 

The company says this program will evaluate the ‘high-priority’ target area over an initial 10km of the 30km strike of outcropping pegmatite swarms. 

Australian Critical Minerals reports channel samples will be cut at surface using a diamond saw to provide ‘high-quality’ samples, with results expected to define ‘high-priority’ targets for future drilling programs. 

The company notes this program represents its maiden exploration activity following its listing on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) at the start of July.  

The company raised $5 million in an initial public offering (IPO) on 3 July 2023. It currently has a $8.7 million market capitalisation.

Australian Critical Minerals used State One Equities as the Lead Manager for the IPO.  

Speaking on the mapping and sampling programs, Australian Critical Minerals Managing Director Dean de Largie says: “Following our successful IPO this month, focus has turned immediately to undertaking systematic exploration across our portfolio of projects.

We are excited that our initial efforts as a listed company will be at the Cooletha Lithium Project in the Pilbara, a region that hosts a number of significant lithium mines and recent exploration successes. At Cooletha, we have already identified numerous targets across 10km of the 30km strike with the focus on the prospective spodumene-bearing pegmatites. 

With preparations completed for the three-week mapping and sampling program, we expect to significantly improve our data set and understanding of the underlying geological characteristics across our tenements”

With preparations completed for the three-week mapping and sampling program, we expect to significantly improve our data set and understanding of the underlying geological characteristics across our tenements. With results due later this quarter, this will enable us to plan our first drilling campaign at Cooletha later this year. Shortly after this program, we will commence drilling at the Rankin Dome Rare Earth Project at Southern Cross.” 

Australian Critical Minerals is an ASX-listed explorer and developer working to develop its flagship Cooletha Lithium project in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. 

The project comprises over 100km-square of lithium prospectivity with outcropping pegmatite swarms in the Pilbara lithium district and is situated south of ‘significant’ discoveries at Pilbara Minerals’ (ASX:PLS) Pilgangoora Lithium Project (223 million tonnes @ 1.25% Li2O) and Global Lithium Resources’ (ASX:GL1) Archer Lithium deposit at Marble Bar.

Write to Adam Drought at Mining.com.au

Images: Australian Critical Minerals Ltd
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Written By Adam Drought
Born and raised in the UK, Adam is a sports fanatic with an interest in Rugby League and UFC/MMA. When not training in Muay Thai and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, Adam attends Griffith University where he is completing his final year of a Communication & Journalism degree.

Australian Critical Minerals’ ASX Debut and the Promising Potential for ‘Price Catalysts’

Newly-listed Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) is exploring Western Australia for lithium, rare earth elements, iron ore, gold and kaolin. Discussing the ‘great potential’ of each of the company’s 6 projects, Managing Director Dean de Largie believes the resources will be of interest to mining giants. Before then, he says there’s a lot of work to do, and shareholders can look forward to many price catalysts along the way.

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Written By Carolyn Rebeiro
Joining Mining.com.au from the West Coast, finance presenter Carolyn began her journalism degree in Townsville and developed a passion for mining news after a FIFO stint in WA's Goldfields.

Australian Critical Minerals debuts on ASX following $5 million IPO

Battery metals developer Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) has begun trading on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) following a $5 million initial public offering (IPO).

The company reports it raised the initial public offering (IPO) funds through the issue of 25 million shares at $0.20 per share, giving Australian Critical Minerals a market capitalisation of about $8.7 million at the IPO price.

The offer was ‘strongly’ supported by institutions and sophisticated investors, and the company says it received demand well over the maximum subscription amount. State One Equities was the lead manager to the IPO.

The funds raised through the IPO will be used to start exploration at ACM’s projects in Western Australia. At the Cooletha Lithium Project, the team is in the process of mobilising field personnel to begin mapping and sampling, while drilling is expected to begin later this quarter at the Rankin Dome Rare Earth Project.

Other projects held by the company include the Shaw Iron Ore and Gold Project, as well as the Beverley, Kondinin, and Kojonup Kaolin projects, also in Western Australia.

Commenting on the ASX listing, Australian Critical Minerals Managing Director Dean de Largie says: “On behalf of the board, I would like to welcome our new shareholders to the ACM register and look forward to their long-term support. I welcome both Mr Michael Wright and Mr Gary Brabham to the ACM board.

With Michael Wright as our Chairman, I look forward to benefiting from his decades of corporate management experience. Gary Brabham has extensive experience in exploration, resource modelling and mine development, combined with a deep geological acumen, and we welcome his insights and advice as the ACM projects develop and ACM grows to fulfil its potential.

ACM’s projects are in ideal geological settings and have the size and logistical attributes to permit large-scale resource development”

ACM lists on the ASX today (July 3 2023) with impeccable timing as end users and governments globally are scrambling to secure sources of energy-related commodities to support the drive to a green energy future. ACM’s projects are in ideal geological settings and have the size and logistical attributes to permit large-scale resource development.

We thank our shareholders that have supported us in the IPO, and we are pleased to advise that ACM intends to issue a loyalty option post-listing, whereby each shareholder at the record date of the offer, anticipated to be in the next 3-6 months, will be given the opportunity to subscribe for one option for every 2 shares held.”

Australian Critical Minerals is a newly ASX-listed battery minerals developer focused on its portfolio assets in the Pilbara and Southwest Goldfields regions of Western Australia. These projects cover 1,861km-square of ground considered prospective for lithium, tantalum, gold, iron ore, rare earth oxides, and kaolin.

Write to Harry Mulholland at Mining.com.au

Images: Australian Critical Minerals Ltd
Written By Harry Mulholland
Hailing from the Central Coast region of NSW, Harry is a passionate journalist with a background in print, radio and ESG news. When not bashing away on his keyboard, he can be found brewing a coffee or playing with his dog.

Australian Critical Minerals set to list on ASX following $5 million raise

Emerging critical mineral exploration company Australian Critical Minerals (ASX:ACM) is poised to list on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) in the first week of July 2023 under the proposed code of ACM.

The initial public offering (IPO) is fully subscribed with Australian Critical Minerals raising the maximum $5 million. While the offer under the prospectus will remain open for compliance purposes, the company will not be accepting further investments at this time.

State One Equities is the lead manager for the IPO in which 25 million new ordinary shares will be issued at $0.20 per share.

Speaking to Mining.com.au, Managing Director Dean de Largie says with the global transition towards green energy it is an ideal time for the company to float on the ASX given its suite of assets.

“We’re very blessed and fortunate to bring these assets on board, we’ve been working on them for quite a while to get them to this stage and they’re really at the cutting edge.”

“We’re very blessed and fortunate to bring these assets on board, we’ve been working on them for quite a while to get them to this stage and they’re really at the cutting edge”

The company’s portfolio comprises 6 projects considered prospective for lithium, tantalum, gold, iron ore, rare earth oxides, and kaolin spanning 1,861km-square across the Pilbara and Southwest Goldfields regions in Western Australia.

The MD says once listed, Australian Critical Minerals will deploy the capital raised in the IPO across its entire portfolio. Upon listing it will immediately begin work at its Rankin Dome Rare Earth and Cooletha Lithium projects.

Its flagship Rankin Dome Project has produced shallow auger samples highly anomalous for REE. Located in close proximity to Southern Cross, Rankin Dome is held in a JV with Kula Gold (ASX:KGD) with ACM to earn up to 51% interest in the project.

The company also holds prospective tenements for iron ore in the Pilbara with exploration activity to begin in H2 2023 at its Cooletha and Shaw projects. Cooletha has more than 100km-square of lithium prospectivity with outcropping of pegmatites in the Pilbara lithium district. De Largie says Australian Critical Minerals has already identified ‘high-value’ targets, which will be mapped and sampled upon listing on the ASX.

De Largie tells this news service the company is positioned to explore and develop critical minerals projects in Western Australia to support the growing shift towards cleaner technologies.

“It is clear from the level of interest we have received for the IPO that investors are actively seeking opportunities focused on critical minerals and the green energy sector. We look forward to commencing our rare earth and lithium exploration programs upon listing on the ASX.”

Write to Adam Orlando at Mining.com.au

Images: Australian Critical Minerals Ltd
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Written By Adam Orlando
Mining.com.au Managing Editor Adam Orlando has more than 20 years’ experience in the media having held senior roles at various publications, including as Asia-Pacific Sector Head (Mining) at global newswire Acuris (formerly Mergermarket). Adam has worked in newsrooms around the world including Hong Kong, Singapore, London, and Sydney.

Australian resources companies targeting new financing sources as banks fly the coop

Australian mining companies are increasingly being forced to seek project funding for development projects away from traditional banks, as offtake deals, equity raisings, and government lending agencies emerge as more reliable sources of capital.

According to Bridgend Capital Advisory, since peaking in 2015 aggregate exposure to resources by the ‘Big 4 banks’ in Australia has declined steadily to $40.4 billion in 2022, nearly $25 billion (37%) below the peak to levels not seen since 2013.

Bridgend Capital says this decline has occurred despite strong overall balance sheet growth by banks. Resources exposure has declined as a proportion of total bank exposure from 1.7% in 2015 to 0.8% in 2022.

The firm notes worse still, the gap is widening.

Earlier this week, Arafura Rare Earths (ASX:ARU) Managing Director Gavin Lockyer was reported as saying his company is looking offshore to finance its $1.6 billion open-pit Nolans Project in the Northern Territory.

Lockyer was quoted as being critical that Australian banks have been reluctant to lend to rare earths projects in particular, meaning critical minerals developers have sought out overseas export credit agencies, or government bank money as a result. Arafura is engaging government-backed credit agencies in Europe, North America, as well as Asia.

One of the reasons for the reluctance to fund these projects, he says, is a lack of onshore processing and manufacturing of materials made using REEs. This is despite rare earths being required to manufacture electric vehicles (EVs), wind turbines, and other electronic devices needed for decarbonisation.

iTech Minerals Rare Earths

Australian banks withdraw at critical time

Managing Director of emerging rare earths exploration company OD6 (ASX:OD6) Brett Hazelden agrees that when it comes to backing emerging commodities and innovative development projects, Australian banks have dropped the ball.

Hazelden tells Mining.com.au this position of domestic banks forces the hand of companies developing critical minerals assets to look abroad or seek government bank money.

“To date, Australian banks have been rarely seen backing new commodities and new development projects until after the construction risk has passed and it is operational, producing to design capacity. This is really a failure of Australian banks to back Australian companies and innovators.

“This is really a failure of Australian banks to back Australian companies and innovators”

Having been through the development and funding process in the past myself and observing more recent financing deals most companies are now reliant on overseas banks and investors or looking to use overseas export credit agencies (government bank money) or Australia government money.”

Hazelden notes such agencies include EFA, previously known as the Export Finance and Insurance Corporation, the Clean Energy Finance Corporation (CEFC), and Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility (NAIF).

“The large Australian superfunds are probably another potential financier and investor that could do more in this space too.”

Chief Project & Structured Finance Officer at Export Finance Australia (EFA), Amanda Copping, will be speaking at Mines and Money Connect Melbourne on 14-15 June. She will be joined by Frank van Rooyen, Senior Director at NAIF who has 30 years’ experience in mining, equities, and debt financing.

Bridgend Capital Advisory co-founder and Managing Director Nick Rees is also slated to present at the conference.

Earlier this month, the EFA and Export-Import Bank of the United States (EXIM Bank) expanded their bilateral relationship by signing an updated reinsurance agreement. The reinsurance agreement reflects the commitment of EFA and EXIM Bank to working together in sectors such as climate and energy security, Indo-Pacific infrastructure, critical minerals, and other sectors of strategic importance.

While the addition of Copping and van Rooyen to the Mines and Money Connect Melbourne lineup is indicative of the current times, export credit agencies have been around for some time.

An early example of mining companies seeking financing from these non-traditional lenders is  Australian lithium developer Pilbara Minerals (ASX:PLS), which in mid-2017 tapped the Nordic bond market to raise US$100 million to fund its Pilgangoora Lithium-Tantalum Project in Western Australia.

Six years on, the now lithium producer in February 2023 reported it has executed a 10-year $250 million debt facility with the Australian government through EFA and the NAIF. The CEFC, which was an existing lender, decided not to participate in Pilbara Minerals’ refinancing of the existing debt facility to facilitate the increased participation of commercial lenders.

In another example, in February 2022 Hastings Technology Metals (ASX:HAS) secured $140 million loan to construct the Yangibana Rare Earths Project in Western Australia from the federal government’s NAIF.

Not all projects are created equal

However, not all critical minerals or rare earths projects are created equal. While many factors come into play, including the amount of capex required, not all would be considered by Australian banks to be ‘outside their comfort zone’.

Speaking to Mining.com.au on the sidelines of the Resources Rising Stars conference on the Gold Coast last week, ABx Group (ASX:ABX) Managing Director and CEO Mark Cooksey detailed how Ionic Adsorption Clay (IAC) rare earths projects tend to a have lower capex than hard rock REE projects.

Cooksey notes that IAC deposits, which the company has within its portfolio, are a less common source of rare earths but have a major advantage in that they can be extracted from the clay via a low-cost desorption process. Another advantage is IACs often exist at shallow depth, meaning a project can be developed rapidly and at a much lower capex.

ABx recently announced its Mineral Resource Estimate (MRE) exceeds the 20 million tonne resource milestone REE deposit at the Deep Leads – Rubble Mound Project in northern Tasmania.

These lower cost projects are of course a more attractive investment proposition for a bank considering financing the project.

Comparatively, Arafura is seeking $1.6 billion to fund its Nolan Project, which could be 10 times the capex an IAC rare earths project requires. Arafura has to date received non-binding in-principle support from NAIF to increase its tranche of project finance debt from $100 million to $150 million, which is subject to a financial investment decision.

Another IAC player, Ionic Rare Earths (ASX:IXR), also has a unique deposit and is one of only a handful of Western IACs – a major source of low-cost critical and heavy rare earths to fill the void in pending global supply shortages.

Mining.com.au reported today (24 May 2023) that the company has begun a phase five drill program for 4,380m across its Makuutu Rare Earths Project in Uganda. The company, which is scheduled to attend the Mines and Money Connect Melbourne in June, reiterates Cooksey’s position that IAC ores require much lower capex intensity to produce refined REO.

In a company presentation, Ionic says IACs experience none of the radionuclide issues that plague hard rock LREO projects while also IAC products achieve about “double the payability”.

As more rare earths and critical minerals deposits are developed into mines to meet surging global demand, juniors in the space whether they own IAC deposits or other minerals, could be a new generation of companies to bypass seeking funding from Australian banks altogether.

Bridgend Capital Advisory says what this means for resources companies and project sponsors is an increasing need to target new sources of capital and a wider range of markets in order to finance operations, meet project funding requirements, and sustain growth.

Bridgend Capital Advisory notes the capital landscape is now more complex and the interplay between different sources and classes of capital requires careful navigation.

“The availability and cost of capital for mining companies may yet become a key challenge in Australia realising the full potential of this new era of commodity demand and supporting global energy transition,” the firm says.

“The availability and cost of capital for mining companies may yet become a key challenge in Australia realising the full potential of this new era of commodity demand and supporting global energy transition”

In the meantime, the federal government has launched the Critical Minerals Development Program, which provides funding to help progress early to mid-stage critical minerals projects towards financing and production. Projects will target critical minerals as listed in Australia’s Critical Minerals Strategy.

Australian critical minerals companies undertaking projects that support Australia’s Critical Minerals Strategy and long-term sustainable growth are eligible to up to $30 million of funding.

The Critical Minerals Strategy 2022 was formulated to grow Australia’s critical minerals sector, expand downstream processing, and help meet future global demand.

To register for Mines and Money Connect Melbourne held on 14-15 June 2023 click here.

Write to Adam Orlando at Mining.com.au

Images: iStock
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Written By Adam Orlando
Mining.com.au Managing Editor Adam Orlando has more than 20 years’ experience in the media having held senior roles at various publications, including as Asia-Pacific Sector Head (Mining) at global newswire Acuris (formerly Mergermarket). Adam has worked in newsrooms around the world including Hong Kong, Singapore, London, and Sydney.