VANCOUVER,
Aug. 13, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -
Commerce Resources Corp. (TSXv: CCE, FSE: D7H, OTCQX: CMRZF)
(the "Company" or "Commerce") is pleased to announce additional
results from the on-going metallurgical programs on the Company's
100%-owned Ashram Rare Earth Element (REE) Deposit, as well as an
update on related trade-off studies.
Highlights
- Independent lab verification by Hazen Research Inc. of the
multi-stage beneficiation and flotation method developed at UVR-FIA
GmbH
- Simplified and improved multi-stage beneficiation and flotation
has created mineral concentrates of 25% to >45%
Total Rare Earth Oxide (TREO)
- Successful hydrochloric acid (HCl) leach of mineral concentrate
followed by Wet High Intensity Magnetic Separation (WHIMS) has
effectively doubled the TREO grade at a recovery of 97% in
these steps
- Initiation of trade-off study for hydromet location
Mineral Concentrate Production and Merging of
Flowsheets
Since late May
2013, the independent approaches developed at Hazen Research
Inc. (single-fraction method) and UVR-FIA GmbH (multi-fraction
method) have been merged into a joint beneficiation/flotation
flowsheet. Mineral concentrates ranging from 20% to 35% TREO
are now regularly being produced at both UVR and Hazen. Recent
highlights include 31.4% TREO at 57.3% recovery and 22.1%
TREO at 67.2% recovery in addition to the continued production
of mineral concentrates of 30-40% TREO at ~50% recovery at
both Hazen and UVR.
Demonstration of the beneficiation/flotation
method at a second independent laboratory is a key step in
confirming a viable, robust, and stable upgrading circuit. The
process developed uses only commercially available reagents and
other consumables, as well as conventional methods currently used
at the industrial scale. This is critical to allow the scaling up
of the process as would be required in a potential mining
operation.
Company President David
Hodge states "The continued improvements in metallurgy
for our Ashram REE Deposit are very exciting. In terms of
benchmarking amongst other rare earth projects in development,
confirming the ability to concentrate to such a high degree, along
with such a significant reduction of mass, identifies the Ashram
Deposit as a leader. Having mineralogy which has a history of
successful commercial processing is absolutely critical in this
industry, and Ashram with its sheer size, grade, balanced rare
earth distribution, and overall mineral concentrate grades achieved
to date, show that this deposit is well positioned to enter
production at a level which will have a meaningful impact in the
light, middle, and heavy REE supply chain."
Physical Upgrade
As first outlined in the February 20th, 2013 News Release,
Ashram's high grade mineral concentrates are produced using a size
fraction approach in which mineralized whole rock material is
ground and separated by means of hydrocycloning and screening, into
three size fractions termed 'fine', 'middle', and 'coarse'. The
course fraction is reground and classified into the fine and middle
fractions with the fine fraction either then discarded or partially
re-mixed and treated with the middle fraction. This method
of sizing control allows for optimized flotation without the
hindrance of fine slimes or coarser fractions. Recent test
results are presented in Table 1.
Table 1: Test Results of Flotation
Upgrading Using a Three Size Fraction Approach
Metallurgical
Lab |
Flotation
Stage |
Test ID |
Upgrading
Process |
% of Original
Feed Weight |
Analysis
(TREO)(1) |
Recovery(1) |
Upgrade
Ratio(2) |
Grade and
Recovery referenced to Whole Rock Input (i.e. Overall
Recovery) |
Hazen |
3rd Cleaner |
3638-92 |
Flotation |
3.3% |
30.0% |
50.2% |
15.4 times |
Hazen |
3rd Cleaner |
3638-93 |
Flotation |
5.8% |
22.1% |
67.2% |
11.3 times |
Hazen |
3rd Cleaner |
3638-87 |
Flotation |
4.5% |
23.4% |
56.7% |
12.0 times |
UVR |
1st Cleaner |
58-23 |
Flotation |
4.1% |
28.6% |
56.0% |
14.7 times |
UVR |
1st Cleaner |
58-17 |
Flotation |
4.5% |
30.7% |
52.5% |
15.7 times |
UVR |
1st
Cleaner |
58-20 |
Flotation |
4.3% |
31.4% |
57.3% |
16.1 times |
UVR |
2nd Cleaner |
58-21 |
Flotation |
3.9% |
32.9% |
54.1% |
16.9 times |
UVR |
3rd Cleaner |
58-20 |
Flotation |
2.9% |
41.1% |
50.9% |
21.1 times |
UVR |
3rd Cleaner |
58-25 |
Flotation |
2.2% |
44.3% |
45.1% |
22.7 times |
(1) |
TREO and recovery are fully
quantitative and derived from ICP analysis of
Ce2O3 + La2O3 +
Pr2O3 + Nd2O3 +
Eu2O3 + Sm2O3 +
Gd2O3 + Tb2O3 +
Dy2O3 + Ho2O3 +
Er2O3 + Tm2O3 +
Yb2O3 + Lu2O3 +
Y2O3. |
(2) |
Based on an average 1.95% TREO
starting head grade. |
Since the February update, the size fraction
method has continued to advance with impressive results.
Regrinding of the coarse fraction has confirmed its appropriate
classification into fine and middle fractions, thereby
necessitating only two sizes. Further, the middle fraction
(which has seen flotation recoveries as high as 90%), originally
comprised 53% of the whole rock; however, it has since been
increased to comprise up to 95% of the whole rock, with the
incorporation/elimination of the coarse fraction. Recoveries
of this improved middle fraction (95% of whole rock) are currently
being evaluated.
Reproducibility of high grade (>30%) mineral
concentrates continues to be demonstrated under increasingly
simplified conditions. The optimization has been achieved
through varying parameters such as reagent dosage amounts, timing,
pH control, etc., thereby allowing the reduction of cleaner stages
(fewer stages to achieve same grade and recovery). In addition,
recoveries in the first and most important rougher stage have been
continually improved.
Another notable attribute of the method is the
significant reduction of fluorite content (up to 90%) in the
mineral concentrate during rare earth upgrading. The removal
of fluorite simplifies the subsequent hydromet and allows for
considerably higher TREO grades to be achieved.
As is typical for rare earth deposits, two
flowsheet circuits are strongly preferred to create a saleable
end-product. The first is the physical upgrade, typically a
combination of grinding, flotation, WHIMS, etc. to create a RE
mineral concentrate. The second is hydromet, which involves
dissolution of the mineral concentrate, releasing the elements from
their individual minerals into solution, followed by impurity
removal and precipitation/purification of a RE saleable
end-product.
The ability to successfully complete the
physical upgrade stage (creating a RE mineral concentrate) is
essential to a low cost operation as all consumables are
dramatically reduced, and there is less unwanted material to deal
with during the hydromet that follows. In addition, the
hydromet is simplified as fewer impurities are present along with
the REEs in solution during the process.
The mineralogy of a rare earth deposit, and the
ability to free those REE minerals from the gangue (waste)
minerals, is one of the most critical aspects in REE project
evaluation. The high-grade mineral concentrates currently
being produced from Ashram are a direct result of the simple rare
earth mineralogy of the deposit consisting of monazite,
bastnaesite, and xenotime. These three minerals contain among
the highest REO (>60%) contents of any known minerals, dominate
current commercial processing, and share common and conventional
processing techniques.
Hydromet
Two general approaches for liberating the REEs
from their minerals and putting them into solution
(hydrometallurgy) have been developed. Each has differing
consumable requirements and efficiencies. These
are:
- Sulphation Roast Method, whereby sulphuric acid
(H2SO4) is applied at elevated temperature
followed by water leaching to dissolve the mineral concentrate into
solution
- Two Acid + WHIMS Method, whereby the mineral concentrate is
leached in hydrochloric acid (HCl) to remove the carbonate,
followed by WHIMS to remove the fluorite, and finally
undergoing a sulphation roast followed by water leaching to
dissolve the remaining mineral concentrate.
As previously discussed in the November 15th, 2012 News Release, the
sulphation roast has been successful at recovering up to 95% of the
total REEs into solution from mineral concentrates grading 10-12%
TREO. The next phase of work is currently testing the
sulphation roast on a >25% TREO mineral concentrate. As
less fluorite and carbonate are present in higher grade mineral
concentrates, recoveries into solution are expected to improve
further, with acid consumption expected to decrease
significantly.
Currently, the mineral concentrates produced at
Ashram have allowed for some of the lowest acid consumptions in the
industry. Acid consumption and related expenses are typically
one of the highest operating costs of a rare earth mine. For
this reason, reducing the amount consumed is critical to moving a
project forward.
The Two Acid + WHIMS method adds two extra
pre-steps (chemical leach and physical separation) to the
Sulphation Roast Method that reduces overall acid consumption and
simplifies the hydromet process by removing additional waste
minerals (carbonate and fluorite respectively). Recent
testwork has confirmed that an HCl leach of a mineral concentrate
at ambient temperature will selectively dissolve the carbonate and
not the REE bearing minerals, thereby achieving considerable
upgrading with essentially zero REE loss. This simple method,
developed at Hazen, allows for near perfect REE recovery with a
minimal HCl consumption of 220 kg (100% HCl basis) per tonne of
mineral concentrate (28 kg/t of HCl per tonne of whole rock
mined). This is an ~80% decrease in HCl consumption compared
to earlier tests (See February
20th, 2013 News Release).
The material was then subjected to WHIMS for
fluorite removal (additional physical upgrading), with the
sulphation roast testwork, as described above in Method 1.
The result of the process (flotation + HCl leach
+ WHIMS) is considerable upgrading with minimal REE loss and
considerable weight/volume reduction. Results of experiment
3572-115 (HCl leach) and 3638-98 (WHIMS) are presented in the table
below.
Table 2: TREO Grade Upgrading by HCl
Leach of Mineral Concentrate Followed by WHIMS
|
Whole
Rock
Material |
REE
Mineral
Concentrate(1) |
HCl Leached
REE
Mineral
Concentrate(1) |
WHIMS
(Magnetic Fraction)(1) |
TREO
Grade(1) |
~2.0% |
10.2% |
14.2% |
20.8% |
Upgrade
Ratio
Between Stage |
5.1 times (66%
recovery, 87% mass rejection) |
|
|
|
1.3 times (100%
recovery, 34% mass rejection) |
|
|
|
1.5 times (97%
recovery, 45% mass rejection) |
|
10.4 times
total upgrade from whole rock (64% recovery, 95% mass
rejection) |
(1) |
TREO and recovery are fully
quantitative and derived from ICP analysis of
Ce2O3 + La2O3 +
Pr2O3 + Nd2O3 +
Eu2O3 + Sm2O3 +
Gd2O3 + Tb2O3 +
Dy2O3 + Ho2O3 +
Er2O3 + Tm2O3 +
Yb2O3 + Lu2O3 +
Y2O3. |
Trade-off Study for Hydromet Location
A trade-off study for the location of the
hydromet facility ('cracking facility') has been initiated with a
report expected in Q3 2013. The study will assess the
economic viability of constructing a hydromet facility at the mine
site, or at a more southern location closer to infrastructure, a
skilled workforce, and sources of consumables. The results of
this evaluation will help constrain options for the flowsheet and
saleable end-products, as well as the viability/practicality of a
fluorine based by-product. The PEA base case assumed a
hydromet facility at the mine-site; however, a facility constructed
in a less remote area is expected to significantly lower the CAPEX
and OPEX of that facility, and in turn, the overall project.
Darren L. Smith,
M.Sc., P.Geol., Dahrouge Geological Consulting Ltd., a Qualified
Person as defined by National Instrument 43-101, supervised the
preparation of the technical information in this news release.
Eric Larochelle, Eng, and Alain Dorval, Eng.,
Manager- Process, Mining and Mineral Processing., of Roche Ltd,
Consulting Group, Qualified Persons as defined by National
Instrument 43-101, reviewed the technical information presented in
this news release.
About Hazen Research Inc.
Hazen Research Inc., located in Colorado U.S.A, is an industry leader in
metallurgical processing including rare earths. Their
expertise extends across many commodities including base, precious,
and rare metals, as well as pilot plant level studies.
Over their 50+ year history, extensive
experience in the metallurgy of rare earths has been developed via
direct involvement on many rare earth projects having varying ore
and gangue mineralogy. They are therefore, very well-known to
industry, within and outside North
America, as a leader in mineral beneficiation and
hydrometallurgical processing of raw materials, including rare
earth mineralized material.
Hazen is the primary metallurgical facility
focused on defining the beneficiation and hydrometallurgical
flowsheet for the Ashram Deposit.
About UVR-FIA GmbH
UVR-FIA GmbH, located in Freiberg Germany, is a mineral processing and
research facility with roots dating back to 1954. The
surrounding region has a history of over 800 years of mining and
smelting with Freiberg hosting the world oldest university of
mining and metallurgy in the world (Freiberg University of Mining
and Technology, established in 1765).
R. Gerhard
Merker, a mineral processing engineer (Dipl.-Ing.) and
leading expert in flotation of carbonate and fluorite-bearing
bastnaesite ores, is consultant and manager of the Ashram Deposit's
test work at UVR. Mr. Merker has over 30 years'
experience in the raw material and recycling industry including
several years studying the Dong Pao Rare Earth Deposit in
Vietnam and other RE
deposits.
UVR-FIA is working in tandem with Hazen Research
to complete the Ashram Deposit`s flowsheet with a focus on fluorite
separation from the rare earth minerals.
About the Ashram Rare Earth Element
Deposit
The Ashram Rare Earth Element (REE) Deposit is a
carbonatite within the Eldor Property, located in north-eastern
Quebec. The Deposit has a measured
and indicated resource of 29.3 million tonnes at 1.90% TREO and an
inferred resource of 219.8 million tonnes at 1.88% TREO. The
deposit boasts a well-balanced distribution with enrichment in the
light, middle and heavy rare earth elements including all five of
the most critical elements (neodymium, europium, dysprosium,
terbium, and yttrium).
The REEs at Ashram occur in simple and
well-understood mineralogy, being primarily in the mineral monazite
and to a lesser extent in bastnaesite and xenotime. These minerals
dominate the currently known commercial extraction processes for
rare earths.
A Preliminary Economic Assessment, completed in
May of 2012 by SGS-Geostat of Montreal (Blainville) (see news release dated
May 24, 2012), outlines highly robust
economics for the Ashram Deposit. The PEA is based on a 4,000
tonne per day open-pit operation with an initial 25-year mine life
(300 years at economic cut-off if open-pit + underground
development), a pre-tax and pre-finance Net Present Value (NPV) of
$2.32 billion at a 10% discount rate,
a pre-tax/pre-finance Internal Rate of Return (IRR) of 44%, and a
pre-tax/pre-finance payback period of 2.25 years.
The company continues to advance the Ashram
Deposit with metallurgical programs at both UVR-FIA and Hazen
Research.
About Commerce Resources Corp.
Commerce Resources Corp. is an exploration and
development company with a particular focus on deposits of rare
metals and rare earth elements. The Company is focused on the
development of its Upper Fir Tantalum and Niobium Deposit in
British Columbia and the Ashram
Rare Earth Element Deposit in Quebec.
On Behalf of the Board of Directors
COMMERCE RESOURCES CORP.
"David Hodge"
David Hodge
President and Director
Tel: 604.484.2700
Email: dhodge@commerceresources.com
Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its
Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the
policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for
the adequacy or accuracy of this release.
Forward-Looking Statements
This news release contains forward-looking information which are
subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties and other factors
that could cause actual events or results to differ from those
projected in the forward-looking statements. Forward looking
statements in this press release include the focus of the
metallurgical work, the results of the on-going metallurgical
programs the reported grades and potential cost reductions, that
the Ashram deposit can be developed economically as an open-pit
mine; all reference to and information contained in the
pre-feasibility study; that the deposit is well positioned to enter
production at a level which will have a meaningful impact in the
light, middle and heavy REE supply chain; recoveries are expected
to improve; acid consumption is expected to decreased
significantly; location and construction of a Hyrdomet
location. These forward-looking statements are based on the
opinions and estimates of management and its consultants at the
date the information is disseminated. They are subject to a variety
of risks and uncertainties and other factors that could cause
actual events or results to differ materially from those projected
in the forward-looking information. Risks that could change
or prevent these statements from coming to fruition include the
ability to finance ongoing exploration, development and
metallurgical programs, changing costs for mining and processing;
changing forecasts of mine production rates; the timing and content
of upcoming work programs; geological interpretations based on
drilling that may change with more detailed information; potential
process methods and mineral recoveries assumption based on test
work; the availability of labour, equipment and markets for the
products produced; market pricing for the products produced; and
despite the current expected viability of the project, conditions
changing such that the minerals on our property cannot be
economically mined, or that the required permits to build and
operate the envisaged mine can be obtained. The forward-looking
information contained herein is given as of the date hereof and the
Company assumes no responsibility to update or revise such
information to reflect new events or circumstances, except as
required by law.
SOURCE Commerce Resources Corp.