VANCOUVER, BC, March 25,
2024 /PRNewswire/ - Taseko Mines Limited (TSX: TKO)
(NYSE American: TGB) (LSE: TKO) ("Taseko" or the "Company") is
pleased to announce that it has entered into a definitive agreement
("Agreement") to acquire the remaining 12.5% interest in the
Gibraltar Mine from Dowa Metals & Mining Co., Ltd. ("Dowa") and
Furukawa Co., Ltd. ("Furukawa"). Under the terms of the Agreement,
Taseko will acquire Dowa and Furukawa's shares in Cariboo Copper
Corp ("Cariboo") and will then own 100% of Cariboo shares and have
an effective 100% interest in the Gibraltar Mine.
All amounts in this press release are stated in Canadian
dollars (C$) unless otherwise specified.
The acquisition price consists of a minimum amount of
$117 million payable over a period of
ten years and potential contingent payments depending on copper
prices and Gibraltar's cashflow.
An initial $5 million will be paid to
Dowa and Furukawa ($2.5 million each)
shortly following closing and the remaining amounts will be settled
with annual payments commencing in March
2026.
Stuart McDonald, President &
CEO of Taseko, commented, "We are happy to once again own 100% of
the Gibraltar mine, our
foundational asset, which will continue to generate strong
returns for the Company for many years to come. This
acquisition provides 14% growth in our attributable copper
production, and is immediately cashflow accretive as we advance
construction at our Florence Copper Project.
We also receive additional offtake rights as the Cariboo offtake
contract comes back to Taseko, providing potential cost savings and
longer-term strategic benefits as we continue to develop our North
American copper production profile."
"We have established a positive relationship with Dowa and
Furukawa over the last 14 years. Given that both groups are
reducing their copper smelting businesses and are exiting their
copper mining investments, we've been able to structure this exit
from our long-term partnership in a mutually beneficial manner,"
concluded Mr. McDonald.
Terms of the acquisition
An initial $5 million payment will
be made to Dowa and Furukawa shortly following closing. The
remaining cash consideration will be repayable in annual payments
commencing in March 2026. The annual payments will be based
on the average LME copper price of the previous calendar year,
subject to an annual cap based on a percentage of cashflow from the
Gibraltar Mine. At copper prices below US$4.00 per pound, the annual payment will be
$5 million, increasing pro-rata to a
maximum annual payment of $15.25
million at copper prices of US$5.00 per pound or higher. The annual
payments also can not exceed 6.25% of Gibraltar's annual cashflow for the 2025 to
2028 calendar years, and 10% of Gibraltar's cashflow for the 2029 to 2033
calendar years. Any outstanding balance on the minimum
acquisition amount of $117 million
will be repayable in a final balloon payment in March 2034.
Total consideration is capped at $142
million, limiting the contingent consideration to a maximum
of $25 million. In addition,
Taseko has the option to settle the full acquisition price at any
time prior to 2029 by making total payments of $117 million.
The Company's minimum payment obligations are in the form of
loans from Dowa and Furukawa to Cariboo. The loans are
guaranteed by Taseko, and a portion of the loans are secured by
Cariboo's 25% joint venture interest in the Gibraltar Mine.
The loans contain minimum protective covenants including the
requirement not to amend the joint venture agreement for the
Gibraltar mine, or sell Cariboo's
25% interest in the joint venture.
Under the Cariboo offtake arrangements entered into in 2010,
Dowa and Furukawa were entitled to receive 30% of Gibraltar's copper concentrate offtake for the
life of mine, at benchmark terms. Upon closing of this
acquisition, the Cariboo offtake agreement will be terminated and
Taseko will retain full marketing rights for 100% of Gibraltar's concentrate offtake going
forward.
Stuart McDonald
President and CEO
No regulatory authority has approved or
disapproved of the information contained in this news release.
Caution Regarding Forward-Looking
Information
This document contains "forward-looking statements" that were
based on Taseko's expectations, estimates and projections as of the
dates as of which those statements were made. Generally, these
forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of
forward-looking terminology such as "outlook", "anticipate",
"project", "target", "believe", "estimate", "expect", "intend",
"should" and similar expressions.
Forward-looking statements are subject to known and unknown
risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the Company's
actual results, level of activity, performance or achievements to
be materially different from those expressed or implied by such
forward-looking statements. These included but are not limited
to:
- uncertainties about the future market price of copper and the
other metals that we produce or may seek to produce;
- changes in general economic conditions, the financial markets,
inflation and interest rates and in the demand and market price for
our input costs, such as diesel fuel, reagents, steel, concrete,
electricity and other forms of energy, mining equipment, and
fluctuations in exchange rates, particularly with respect to the
value of the U.S. dollar and Canadian dollar, and the
continued availability of capital and financing;
- inherent risks associated with mining operations, including our
current mining operations at Gibraltar, and their potential impact on our
ability to achieve our production estimates;
- uncertainties as to our ability to control our operating costs,
including inflationary cost pressures at Gibraltar without impacting our planned copper
production;
- uncertainties related to the accuracy of our estimates of
Mineral Reserves (as defined below), Mineral Resources (as defined
below), production rates and timing of production, future
production and future cash and total costs of production and
milling;
- the risk that we may not be able to expand or replace reserves
as our existing mineral reserves are mined;
- our ability to comply with the extensive governmental
regulation to which our business is subject;
- uncertainties related to First Nations claims and consultation
issues;
- our reliance on rail transportation and port terminals for
shipping our copper concentrate production from Gibraltar;
- uncertainties related to unexpected judicial or regulatory
proceedings;
- changes in, and the effects of, the laws, regulations and
government policies affecting our mining operations and mine
closure and bonding requirements;
- our dependence solely on our interest in Gibraltar (as defined below) for revenues and
operating cashflows;
- our ability to collect payments from customers, extend existing
concentrate off-take agreements or enter into new agreements;
- environmental issues and liabilities associated with mining
including processing and stock piling ore;
- labour strikes, work stoppages, or other interruptions to, or
difficulties in, the employment of labour in markets in which we
operate our mine, industrial accidents, equipment failure or other
events or occurrences, including third party interference that
interrupt the production of minerals in our mine;
- environmental hazards and risks associated with climate change,
including the potential for damage to infrastructure and stoppages
of operations due to forest fires, flooding, drought, or other
natural events in the vicinity of our operations;
- litigation risks and the inherent uncertainty of
litigation;
- our actual costs of reclamation and mine closure may exceed our
current estimates of these liabilities;
- our ability to meet the financial reclamation security
requirements for the Gibraltar
mine ;
- the capital intensive nature of our business both to sustain
current mining operations;
- our reliance upon key management and operating personnel;
- the competitive environment in which we operate;
- the effects of forward selling instruments to protect against
fluctuations in copper prices, foreign exchange, interest rates or
input costs such as fuel;
For further information on Taseko, investors should review the
Company's annual Form 40-F filing with the United States Securities
and Exchange Commission www.sec.gov and home jurisdiction filings
that are available at www.sedarplus.ca, including the "Risk
Factors" included in our Annual Information Form.
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SOURCE Taseko Mines Limited