FPX Nickel (TSXV: FPX) says it has made a significant new nickel discovery with the first two holes it drilled at the Van target at its Decar project, 90 km northwest of Fort St. James in British Columbia.
Drilling intersected some of the highest grade, near-surface nickel mineralization ever drilled at the Decar project, the company says.
The first hole intersected 101 metres grading 0.21% total nickel, starting about 27 metres below surface. The second hole, collard 350 metres to the southwest, intersected 103 metres grading 0.22% total nickel, starting about 55 metres below surface.
The Van target is 6 km north of FPX’s 100%-owned Baptiste deposit, which has an indicated resource of 2 billion tonnes averaging 0.12% nickel and an inferred resource of 592.9 million tonnes grading 0.11% nickel.
The size of the Van target defined by outcrop sampling is comparable to the Baptiste deposit, which measures 3 km along strike with widths of up to 1,000 metres.
Nickel mineralization at Van occurs as disseminated awaruite (a naturally occurring nickel-iron alloy) and in the same ophiolite host rocks as at Baptiste.
“We are extremely pleased with these first drill results from Van, confirming the potential for this target to host a large-scale, standalone nickel deposit to rival the deposit already delineated at Baptiste, which is the world’s third largest undeveloped nickel deposit,” Martin Turenne, FPX’s president and CEO, stated in a news release.
A 2020 preliminary economic assessment done for Baptiste put the after-tax net present value at an 8% discount rate, at $1.7 billion and the internal rate of return at 18.3%. Operating at 120,000 tonnes per day, the mine would have a 35-year life producing an average of 99 million lb of nickel annually. Preproduction capex of $1.7 billion would be paid back after taxes in four years.
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