Re: Beaten again by our nemesis LSG-jasmts
in response to
by
posted on
Nov 11, 2009 09:21PM
San Gold Corporation - one of Canada's most exciting new exploration companies and gold producers.
Lake Shore Gold does not include profit or loss
Ticker Symbol: C:LSG
Lake Shore Gold does not include profit or loss
Lake Shore Gold Corp (C:LSG)
Shares Issued 213,545,003
Last Close 11/10/2009 $4.28
Wednesday November 11 2009 - News Release
Mr. Tony Makuch reports
LAKE SHORE GOLD CONTINUES TO ACHIEVE DEVELOPMENT AND EXPLORATION SUCCESS AND TO GROW PROPERTY POSITION, PLANS TO COMMENCE ACCELERATED THUNDER CREEK ADVANCED EXPLORATION PROGRAM
Lake Shore Gold Corp. has released financial and operating results for the third quarter and first nine months of 2009 and plans to commence an accelerated underground advanced exploration program for the Thunder Creek property. Key operating highlights are provided below:
Project spending in the first nine months of 2009, including exploration expenditures of $11.9-million, totalled $66.0-million (excluding non-cash charges and changes in working capital). The company expects its expenditures in 2009 to be in line with the previously announced budget of $89-million.
Subsequent events
On Nov. 6, 2009, Lake Shore Gold completed a business combination with West Timmins Mining Inc. through which the company acquired all of the outstanding common shares of West Timmins with shareholders of West Timmins receiving 0.73 of a Lake Shore Gold common share for each common share of West Timmins they held. Lake Shore Gold issued approximately 104 million common shares pursuant to the transaction. With the transaction's completion, Lake Shore Gold has established a new gold mining complex in the Timmins camp. The Timmins West gold mine complex comprises the company's Timmins mine, the consolidated Thunder Creek project and approximately 120 square kilometres of additional highly prospective land along the Timmins mine trend west of the Mattagami River fault.
On Oct. 23, 2009, the company entered into an agreement with Goldcorp Canada Ltd. and Goldcorp Inc. to purchase approximately 28 square kilometres of prospective exploration property in the surrounding vicinity of the company's Bell Creek complex ranging from a project with a historic resource, Marlhill mine, to early-stage targets with significant exploration potential. Consideration for the transaction totals $20-million ($15-million in cash and the remainder in shares of Lake Shore Gold). The transaction is subject to regulatory approval, with closing expected in December.
On Oct. 7, 2009, the company issued a National Instrument 43-101 technical report for the Timmins mine, which was required for incorporation by reference in a circular mailed to shareholders of West Timmins. Highlights of the report included: an updated reserve estimate totalling 3.4 million tonnes at 7.52 grams per tonne containing 812,000 ounces on a cut basis (826,000 ounces previously); peak annual production of 120,000 ounces of gold, cash operating costs, at peak output, of $322 (U.S.) per ounce, an additional capital requirement in 2010 to bring the project to commercial production of $33-million with $29-million of sustaining capital expected over the remaining project life, and an internal rate of return, assuming a gold price of $950 (U.S.) per ounce and based on the $62-million of capital expected from the end of 2009, of 240 per cent.
Outlook
The company has commenced an underground advanced exploration program for the Thunder Creek property with two drifts planned from the Timmins mine at the 650 level and 200 level targeting high-grade mineralization at Thunder Creek. The company expects to reach mineralization at Thunder Creek by the third quarter of 2010.
Prioritizing development at Thunder Creek as part of the overall Timmins West gold mine complex is intended to accelerate growth in the company's production capacity. The company's goal for Thunder Creek is by the end of 2010 to have completed an NI 43-101 resource estimate for the property and to have commenced processing ore from the Thunder Creek advanced exploration program.
Given the near-term prioritizing of drifting from Timmins mine to Thunder Creek, focusing work at the 650 level at Timmins mine on drilling and on accessing and expanding resources in the Ultramafic and Footwall zones, and the complexity and continuity of the near-surface vein systems in the ramp, the company has revised its target for 2009 to 7,500 ounces. The targets for 2010 and 2011 of 100,000 ounces and 200,000 ounces, respectively, remain unchanged and will be updated as progress is made underground at Thunder Creek, Bell Creek and the other Bell Creek complex properties.
Anthony (Tony) Makuch, president and chief executive officer of Lake Shore Gold, commented: "We continue to make excellent progress with our exploration, advanced exploration and development programs. With the completion of the West Timmins transaction, we are now going to move aggressively to access Thunder Creek underground. Our efforts are aimed at building the production capacity of Lake Shore Gold as much as possible over the next year. By the end of 2010, we expect to be in commercial production at Timmins mine, to be approaching preproduction at the Bell Creek complex and to have commenced processing ore from the Thunder Creek advanced exploration program.
"At the Timmins mine, results of underground drilling, sampling, mapping and development to date in the Ultramafic zone suggest that grades and widths are consistent with the recently released NI 43-101 reserve and suggest that the tonnage and ounces for the Ultramafic zone resource could be expanded at similar grades. At Bell Creek, exploration results continue to be excellent and confirm the presence of a large gold system extending to depth. Our belief in the significant potential of the Bell Creek complex properties and the new mine trend in Timmins was a key factor in our decision to acquire a large land package in the area from the Porcupine Gold Mines joint venture."
FIRST NINE MONTHS 2009 OPERATIONS REVIEW
(in thousands of dollars)
Nine months ended
Project and exploration spending Sept. 30, 2009(i)
Resource property and deferred exploration
Timmins mine $37,130
Bell Creek mill 13,196
Bell Creek mine and exploration properties 8,796
Thunder Creek joint venture (company's share) 1,963
Casa Berardi net 920
Other projects 253
--------
$62,258
--------
Property, plant and equipment
Timmins mine 2,047
Bell Creek mill 397
Bell Creek mine 1,287
--------
$3,731
--------
Total project and exploration spending $65,989
(i) Project and exploration spending reported above for the nine months
ended Sept. 30, 2009, exclude non-cash charges of $2.8-million for
resource property and deferred exploration, $8.3-million for property,
plant and equipment and changes in working capital.
Timmins mine project
During the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2009, the company spent $39.2-million on the Timmins mine project (including advanced exploration, ramp development and exploration drilling expenditures as well as $2.0-million on property, plant and equipment).
The company is carrying out an advanced exploration program for delineation of bulk sampling of the Footwall, Ultramafic and Main zones of the property, along with supporting an underground diamond drilling program to both expand the currently identified probable reserve and identify new resources. During the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2009, the company's spending on advanced exploration at Timmins totalled $17.5-million.
On May 13, 2009, the Timmins shaft reached the 650 level. The 650 level shaft station was completed as of June 2, 2009, and development from the 650 level toward the ore in the Ultramafic zone, representing approximately 60 per cent of the Timmins mine deposit, commenced in July. Work on the Timmins mine shaft during the third quarter of 2009 included development on the 650 level, diamond drilling, chip and muck sampling of development faces and geologic mapping. Approximately 10,000 tonnes of material has been extracted from the Ultramafic zone resource area at the 650 level and stockpiled on surface with limited processing to date. Results from diamond drilling, sampling, mapping and development are still continuing, but suggest that the overall trend for grades and widths of the mineralization in this area is similar to that predicted by the resource and reserve model that supports the most recent National Instrument 43-101 report.
In addition, recent block modelling and resource estimation for the 50-metre horizontal slice of the Ultramafic zone surrounding the 650 level, incorporating results of recent underground diamond drilling and using inverse distance squared and a 50 g/t top capping, have been completed and indicate that tonnage and ounces for the Ultramafic zone resource could be expanded from the most recent NI 43-101 resource calculation at similar grades.
The company is continuing to carry out advanced exploration work along the 650 level resource/reserve areas. This includes development along all of the mineralized ore zones, sampling, mapping and diamond drilling at this elevation, and sublevels at intervals both above and below the level. This work will be continuing throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and will carry on into the first half of 2010.
To date, the Timmins ramp has advanced approximately 1,370 metres to a vertical depth of approximately 200 metres, in line with the company's target for the year. The vein systems in vein zones have shown weaker continuity and greater complexity than predicted in the original surface drilling. As a result, the reserve in the upper portion of the deposit was downgraded by approximately 14,000 ounces in the NI 43-101 technical report filed on Oct. 6, 2009. Project spending related to the ramp during the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2009, was $18.3-million (including $2.0-million for property, plant and equipment).
During the third quarter (Aug. 24, 2009), the company announced results in Stockwatch from four underground holes (906.5 metres) from the 525 level and 650 level of the Timmins mine. All four holes intersected zones of mineralization consistent in grade and width with intersections from previous surface drilling, with two holes also intersecting high-grade mineralization in areas outside the existing resource and two others intersecting mineralization on the edge of existing resource blocks for the Footwall zone.
Subsequent to the end of the third quarter (Oct. 29, 2009), results from an additional 21 underground holes (4,417 metres) were released in Stockwatch. The results continued to confirm that the overall size and shape of the main Ultramafic zone is similar to the existing resource model and to expand the resource potential of the project.
Bell Creek mill
The Bell Creek mill, acquired in 2007 together with the Bell Creek mine, was made operational in December, 2008, at a capacity of 800 tonnes per day. Processing of low-grade material from development and advanced exploration work in the Timmins mine ramp commenced at the Bell Creek mill near the end of the first quarter of 2009. The mill was initially running in campaigns processing material as stockpiles were established. The mill is running on a more continuous basis as deliveries from the Timmins mine increase, both from the ramp and shaft. In addition, work to refurbish the secondary ball mill circuit at the Bell Creek mill was completed near the end of the third quarter which increased the mill's capacity to 1,500 tonnes per day. To date in the fourth quarter, the mill has continued to operate at approximately 800 tonnes per day with the secondary circuit expected to come on stream as production volumes increase. As of Nov. 9, 2009, the company had poured approximately 4,000 ounces of gold.
Spending at the Bell Creek mill in the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2009, totalled $13.2-million including processing costs as well as new surface buildings, the construction of a cyanide destruction plant and other mill improvements and repairs.
Bell Creek mine, Vogel and Schumacher
The company's project spending for the advanced exploration program at the 100-per-cent-owned Bell Creek mine and contiguous Vogel and Schumacher properties for the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2009, totalled $4.8-million. The Bell Creek complex advanced exploration program includes dewatering and rehabilitating the existing Bell Creek mine shaft and workings and collaring a ramp at Bell Creek to be connected to the Bell Creek mine workings and then to be driven across the Bell Creek property to the contiguous Schumacher and Vogel properties in order to access known mineralization at Vogel. As at Nov. 9, 2009, the Bell Creek shaft had been dewatered to a depth of 250 metres and the ramp at Bell Creek had advanced 880 metres with an additional 110 metres of advance toward the Vogel property.
Exploration expenditures
Exploration spending for the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2009, totalled $11.9-million (representing 92,610 metres of drilling) and included $3.4-million at the Timmins mine project, $2.0-million at Thunder Creek, $5.3-million at the Bell Creek complex, and $900,000 at Casa Berardi, with the remainder at other projects.
During the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2009, the company announced results from the drilling (16 holes and three wedge holes, for a total of 13,592 metres) on the now 100-per-cent-owned Thunder Creek property, which is located immediately adjacent to the Timmins mine project (refer to the press releases in Stockwatch dated March 31, May 5, June 24 and Aug. 25, 2009). The drilling is part of the company's continuing 22,000-metre diamond drill program commenced in August, 2008.
Results announced in Stockwatch on Aug. 25, 2009, included 12.17 g/t gold over 9.00 metres within an overall drill intersection of 3.73 g/t gold over 80.30 metres. In addition, TC09-73 successfully extended main porphyry structure, with gold mineralization, to a 1,125-metre vertical depth with potential for additional high-grade zones at this depth and below considered excellent. The Aug. 25 results followed the most encouraging results from Thunder Creek to date, released in Stockwatch on June 24, 2009, which included TC09-68b which intersected 12.75 g/t gold over 83.40 metres.
Encouraging exploration results were also reported from the company's 100-per-cent-owned Bell Creek complex (including the Bell Creek, Vogel and Schumacher properties). To date in 2009, the company has announced results from 79 holes, 18 wedge holes and one hole extension (46,760 metres). Included in the results were 12.67 g/t gold over 14.5 metres, including 16.73 g/t gold over 10.0 metres on Oct. 1, 2009, and 12.63 g/t gold over 11.65 metres on July 21, 2009. Subsequent to the end of the third quarter, on Nov. 5, 2009, in Stockwatch, the company released additional results at Bell Creek, including 5.13 g/t gold over 26.40 metres, including higher-grade zones of 9.75 g/t gold over 5.60 metres and 12.80 g/t gold over 1.5 metres. The Nov. 5 results extended the mineralization at Bell Creek to a total plunge length of approximately 1,250 metres and defined a continuous high-grade mineralized system from the 500-metres level to 1,000 metres with the system remaining open at depth and along strike.
More information about Lake Shore Gold's third quarter and first nine months 2009 results and financial condition and liquidity is available in the company's consolidated financial statements and management's discussion and analysis, which have been filed on SEDAR and posted to the company's website.
Lake Shore Gold will also host a conference call and webcast on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2009, at 10 a.m. EST to discuss the company's third quarter 2009 performance. Those wishing to access the call can do so using the telephone numbers listed below. The call will also be webcast and available on the company's website.
Participant call-in: 416-340-8018 or 866-225-0198Replay number: 416-695-5800 or 800-408-3053 Replay ID: 8076047 Available until: 11:59 p.m., Nov. 19, 2009
� 2009 Canjex Publishing Ltd.