Sunland is no more a JV, it is acquired 100%
Botswana Diamonds acquires
remaining 50% of Sunland from Alrosa
According
to Botswana Diamonds that the company now holds 100% of the equity in Sunland
Minerals, having acquired for a nominal sum the 50% previously held by Alrosa
as part of the Company's joint venture with Alrosa for the Sunland JV.
Initially
Botswana Diamonds had 50% of holding & now, acquires remaining 50% of
Sunland from Alrosa thus, the Company's 100% ownership allows for a new
investor to enter as a new joint venture partner. Obligatory work could begin
in the first half 2019 focussing on targets identified in 2018.
A
potential new investor, itself a large diamond producer with new ideas and keen
to find new kimberlites in Botswana, is close to acquiring 50% of Sunland.
Naturally, such new investment into Sunland could not be formalised until
Botswana Diamonds took title to the Sunland shares.
This
is now done. The Company anticipates the New Partner stepping into the
exploration shoes of Alrosa and, once the deal is finalised, work could begin
in the first half of 2019 focusing on targets which have already been
identified. The New Partner has a strong
exploration team in place.
Changes
took place at board / top management level in Alrosa in 2016 and 2017. This
caused a change in emphasis. Early stage exploration joint ventures lost
priority, as corporate strategy changed direction towards production and
marketing.
Accordingly,
operatorship of the Sunland JV transferred to Botswana Diamonds in early 2018
as previously announced. Subsequently
Alrosa did not contribute additional funds to 2018 exploration. Given the exploration potential already
identified in the Gope region of the Kalahari, Botswana Diamonds conducted
focused work to protect the licences. In accordance with the new central
policy, Alrosa transferred its interest in the Sunland JV to Botswana Diamonds,
and assisted the Company in the search for new partners.
The
Sunland JV was established in 2014 to test existing Alrosa exploration technology
on Botswana Diamonds' large data base. The logic being that was new technology
and new approaches to exploration could identify new targets - ideally large
diamond-bearing kimberlites under the Kalahari sands.
Unfortunately
grassroots exploration is a slow process requiring painstaking evaluation,
refinement and selection of targets. This was ongoing in the joint venture, and
progress has been made. The work was done by Botswana Diamonds' geologists in
2018 built on pioneering work by Alrosa before the operatorship was transferred
to the Company.
John
Teeling, Chairman, commented, "Alrosa has been an excellent partner over
the past four years. They brought a fresh approach and new technology to
exploration in the Kalahari. The work done by Sunland was and is of a high
standard. We had no instant success, you rarely do in exploration, but progress
had been made toward the target of a commercial discovery.
For
reasons unconnected with this acreage, new Alrosa management prioritised
marketing over early stage exploration. This happened before, in a previous
company, with the Karowe discovery. We
successfully replaced a partner, which then developed the Karowe mine. I believe energy is more important than scale
in driving innovative exploration.
"Although no
guarantees can be given at this stage, we are at an advanced stage of
discussions with a significant diamond producer who has in place an experienced
exploration team. If talks are finalised I would hope that some of the targets
on Sunland ground in the Kalahari, identified in 2018, will be drilled in 2019.
I look forward to providing our shareholders with further updates regarding the
New Partner in due course."
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