- First
Cobalt anticipates completion of maiden resource estimate imminently at
Idaho site
- Company
completed 100 percent acquisition of Idaho site earlier this month, is
underway on updated mineral resource report including additional drilling
that’s already commenced
- Cobalt
market demand expected to double on electric vehicle production needs alone,
with larger industry driving additional demand
As geopolitical forces put new pressure on the emerging
electric vehicle market, vertically oriented pure-play cobalt company First
Cobalt Corp. (TSX.V: FCC) (OTCQX: FTSSF) (ASX: FCC) is feeling excitement about
the pending issuance of a maiden resource estimate on the Idaho cobalt project
that it only recently acquired full ownership of, which company president and
CEO Trent Mell has described (http://ibn.fm/5sHja)
as “one of the most prospective and advanced projects in North America.”
Cobalt and lithium are critical components in relatively
short supply for the low-heat, high-efficiency batteries that power a list of
computer tech products, most significantly the electric vehicles whose star is
rising worldwide amid heightened concerns about pollution and its contribution
to planetary climate change. Electric vehicles are generally regarded as much
more environmentally friendly than petroleum-burning automobiles, but the large
majority of the world’s supply originates in the mine fields of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo. The DRC has historically been troubled by human rights
violation claims amid its workforce, and it is now expected to declare cobalt as
one of its strategic resources (http://ibn.fm/gXvmw), which would lead to increased taxes
and royalties for the metal. Similarly, Chile is contemplating raising taxes on
lithium and copper (http://ibn.fm/y3Krb)
in the heart of the world-renowned “Lithium Triangle” in response to the rising
demand for those metals for use in EVs.
First Cobalt’s efforts to find a domestic solution to the
production of one of those metals has led it to focus much of its attention on
the Iron Creek property that it obtained last year through the acquisition of
explorer US Cobalt, Inc., although the Canada-based company also owns more than
50 past-producing mines in Canada’s renowned Cobalt Camp and the only permitted
cobalt refinery (currently shuttered) in North America capable of producing
battery materials, giving it three significant North American assets. The Iron
Creek project is located in Idaho’s prolific Cobalt Belt, and drilling from
2017 and 2018 is now being calculated into a mineral resource estimate that’s
expected shortly.
“Our outlook for the Iron Creek Project was instrumental in
the decision to eliminate the outstanding royalty and acquire 100% ownership of
the project at this time,” Mell stated in a news release earlier this
month (http://ibn.fm/J9PcZ).
The maiden resource estimate is expected by October, and
work is already underway to inform an updated mineral resource report that’s
expected in the first half of next year. The company has already stated that it
expects the maiden report due within the next week and a half to show wider
true thickness of mineralization than was reported during prior exploration.
The company has been drilling at the site with the
expectation of extending the strike length in two zones and potentially opening
a third zone between drill holes along the strike. First Cobalt found one of
the two existing zones to be noticeably copper-rich along the extended
exploration line, and some of the lower-grade cobalt-copper finds have high
enough mineralization to potentially merit bulk mining there.
Revenue forecasts for cobalt have been mixed this year, and
uncertainty after Metal Bulletin reduced low-grade cobalt price
assessments by 24 percent last month after a multi-year high in April led some
consumers to lower their purchase volumes of cobalt tetroxide compounds (http://ibn.fm/8DzyM), according
to FastMarkets. However, the launch of new electronic products ahead of the
holiday season is expected to bring an upswing in demand, and, for the
long-term international metals, minerals research agency Roskill expects that
demand from the battery sector alone will increase the size of the entire
cobalt market by more than double by 2027 (http://ibn.fm/8VBXG).
Cobalt comprises about 60 percent of the lithium cobaltate
in the positive electrodes of lithium-ion batteries. High cobalt prices have
driven some electronic product manufacturers to begin using
nickel-cobalt-manganese (NCM) lithium-ion batteries as substitutes for the more
prevalent lithium cobaltate batteries, but even the NCM batteries contain about
20 percent cobalt.
For more information, visit the company’s website at http://ibn.fm/FTSSF
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