Gordon Stein, CFO of CleanTech Lithium, explains why CTL acquired the 23 Laguna Verde licenses. Watch the video here.
London South East prides itself on its community spirit, and in order to keep the chat section problem free, we ask all members to follow these simple rules. In these rules, we refer to ourselves as "we", "us", "our". The user of the website is referred to as "you" and "your".
By posting on our share chat boards you are agreeing to the following:
The IP address of all posts is recorded to aid in enforcing these conditions. As a user you agree to any information you have entered being stored in a database. You agree that we have the right to remove, edit, move or close any topic or board at any time should we see fit. You agree that we have the right to remove any post without notice. You agree that we have the right to suspend your account without notice.
Please note some users may not behave properly and may post content that is misleading, untrue or offensive.
It is not possible for us to fully monitor all content all of the time but where we have actually received notice of any content that is potentially misleading, untrue, offensive, unlawful, infringes third party rights or is potentially in breach of these terms and conditions, then we will review such content, decide whether to remove it from this website and act accordingly.
Premium Members are members that have a premium subscription with London South East. You can subscribe here.
London South East does not endorse such members, and posts should not be construed as advice and represent the opinions of the authors, not those of London South East Ltd, or its affiliates.
I have no interest in going to this AGM but hope that those who do find it worthwhile.
And great if CB looks to show humility more than God complex from here forward, including:
1) he makes very clear that, as well as fundamentals, he gets that his credibility is a key driver of this s/p...and the s/p speaks for itself as to where his credibility currently stands
2) he gets that he needs to do something about being spread WAY too thin across all his interests .. which also feeds into what's going on re delegation and succession planning at xtr too (instead of reversing this trend, he seems to be spreading himself more thinly again even imho)
3) While I absolutely respect CB's strengths - knowledge/experience, marketing orientation, vision etc - and instinctively always want to be a fan of his, some of his behaviours here in more recent times have seriously annoyed me. And even the perception that he's fine with treating shareholders like mushrooms - mostly kept in darkness and intermittently fed sh^^t - sees xtr.l s/p on its knees as a rule
āØhi cygnus your point regarding patchy, would certainly describe the variability thatās needed between the ore and waste. as the effectiveness of bos is dependant on how the material for rejection is present in such a way that it can be identified as pay or non pay and separated effectively in large bulk sorting batches. but this would still apply to the higher grade as is still sp**** compared with the host rock. however i think with just the metallurgical analysis this could not be properly determined from that yet, it would probably see bulk samples tested at later point as project advances.
the reason given why the high grade sample failed was that higher metal content was found in the waste fractions. which could mean due to sulphide dissemination which are finely scattered particles that could be difficult for xrt sensor to determine a cut off of a batch for rejection.
Hi Zap,
Sorry for taking so long to get back to you. My meaning concerning the lack of adavantage of using the ore sorting with the high grade material was that one lorry load of ore from the crown of the porphyry is very much like the next and the sorter cannot differentiate one rich portion from the next. The lower grade material is surely patchy in grade and therefore easier to sort, good from mediocre.
And I'm old.
A s far as electric vehicles are concerned I used to say when they can produce an electric aircraft that can take 300 people to the Far East in one go I'll consider it the new era in transport, at the moment it wouldn't get off the ground. Literally.
Now I'd say as far as say Cyprus would be a start.
Some of the emerging countries will skip electric and go straight to hydrogen I think, purely on timing.
I'm sticking to my American dinosaurs, Harleys and Corvettes, may not be as quick but they make a great noise.
Gixxer -interesting point you make about electric cars, same here. People seem to be getting rid of them.
I haven't bothered to pay much attention to copper demand recently as my copper plays are mainly CB companies and production is always....... . But have to admit l wrote of BR a long time ago in my head. Until the AA clause is removed and copper prices increase then imho the value of XTR remains in Manica.
Agreed, does appears the copper price is dominated by China's productivity currently so we may have to wait a little. I had expected to see other 'emerging' countries such as India to be chasing copper by now but that does not seem to be happening
The rest of the worlds politicians are on the are screaming electrification is the way forward in terms oof energy sustainability but not much is being done about it! I know at least 5 people who moved over to leccy cars only to go back to dead dino propulsion 6 months later due to lack of infrastructure.
We need to see similar forecasts for copper, but in a shorter time scale as I'm impatient.
As it's increasing looking like we're been severely misled by Bird and BR may not be a mine at all and therefore worth next to feck all for shareholders - Remember, we still have Manica:
Gold Price Prediction 2023 - 2025 - 2030
Gold price stood at $1,963.90 per troy ounce
07/22/2023, Saturday, 8:15 am CT.
According to the latest long-term forecast, Gold price will hit $2,000 by the end of 2023 and then $2,500 by the middle of 2026. Gold will rise to $3,000 within the year of 2028, $3,500 in 2030, $4,000 in 2031 and $5,000 in 2035.
Year Mid-Year Year-End Tod/End,%
2023 $1,928 $2,000 +2%
2024 $2,006 $2,067 +5%
2025 $2,236 $2,390 +22%
2026 $2,543 $2,645 +35%
2027 $2,761 $2,982 +52%
2028 $3,024 $3,051 +55%
2029 $3,144 $3,304 +68%
2030 $3,516 $3,727 +90%
2031 $3,873 $4,078 +108%
2032 $4,261 $4,463 +127%
2033 $4,664 $4,671 +138%
2034 $4,862 $4,908 +150%
2035 $5,092 $5,275 +169%
Could bode well for the SP now it appears the Mine life will be longer than first anticipated
"If you are not there means you're a paid basher of XTR. "
I wish I was !! I don't know where to apply for the job, if there are any prospective employers out there please get in touch.
And a shareholder now ? I've proof I've been lining CB pockets for well over ten years !
I've already lost more than you probably hold with the Chepica debacle.
I only added more to try and recoup that.
You are the one who appears and thinks they invented XTR Twinkle !
And reading BB doesn't count as research let alone the interstellar variety.
Lol !
Wink !
etc
I live in Norfolk, I'm from Selby ( and Ainsty now apparently, never heard of it)
"Btw train strikes no excuse NOT to go."
Do you suggest I jog the 100 miles or so ?
Also:
"If you are not at AGM that means only ONE thing??!!"
What ONE thing is that then Winkle ?
SP back to Monday opening price.
Treading water.
Must try harder Colin.
You have a momentumometer ?
Yea, I tried to make it Public. will have a play when i'm less busy and paste here.
Thanks for trying Gixer. I worked it out but it came back as invalid or expired
They don't make it easy anymore
T 'dot' me
Feck :)
'****' = ****
*h _t _t _p _s_ ://****/+anwjb3uxa6q5zja0
*************+anwjb3uxa6q5zja0
hi cygnus do you mean, the copper ore has similarly magnetic properties to the pyrite/ pyrrhotite host rock.?
if so i think they had possibly switched from using magnetic resonance tech that nextore use for bos, to using tomraās x-ray transmission (xrt) sensor based tech. that is not exactly clear, but colin mentioned a few times the magnetic properties of the waste rock ācould beā what makes bos amenable. so is just an assumption by me.
amenability could come down to the dissemination of the copper in the rock sample (sp****ly scattered particles) that are difficult to detect if dissemination is too great, even at the higher grade end of the range.
please research tho iām not certain.
Mb, cuckoo
Crikey, it's *'ed out the beginning of the 'long' word.
Should mean "that the ore is generally very similar"!
it's interesting that the ore sorting technique is of little use to the higher grade ore. i take this to mean that the ore is generally ****geneous so very little sorting actually takes place.