For immediate release
16 June 2020
Serabi Gold plc
(“Serabi” or the “Company”)
AGM Statement and update
Serabi Gold plc (AIM:SRB, TSX:SBI), the Brazilian focused gold mining and development company, advises that at 2.00 pm today (UK time), it will be holding its Annual General Meeting (the “Meeting”)
As advised in the Notice of Meeting issued on 15 May 2020, to conform with the UK government’s mandatory measures to reduce the transmission of COVID-19, including certain travel arrangements and public gatherings, shareholders are reminded not to attend in person and it will not be possible to gain access to the Meeting. Details of the results of the votes cast at the Meeting will be issued later today.
Typically, the Company’s Chief Executive, Mike Hodgson, would make a statement to the Meeting outlining the achievements of the Company in the past financial year and providing an update on current operational, development and exploration matters. On this occasion and in lieu of this statement, Mr Hodgson has provided interviews to BRR Media and Crux Investors. These interviews can be viewed using the following links:
BRR Media
https://www.brrmedia.co.uk/broadcasts-embed/5ee24bc35e278421d06982fe/?popup=true
Crux Investors
https://youtu.be/MBEW1bBnxPM
Highlights of these interviews are:
2019
Exploration
2020 operations
Corporate
Enquiries:
Serabi Gold plc
Michael Hodgson Tel: +44 (0)20 7246 6830
Chief Executive Mobile: +44 (0)7799 473621
Clive Line Tel: +44 (0)20 7246 6830
Finance Director Mobile: +44 (0)7710 151692
Email: contact@serabigold.com
Website: www.serabigold.com
Beaumont Cornish Limited
Nominated Adviser and Financial Adviser
Roland Cornish Tel: +44 (0)20 7628 3396
Michael Cornish Tel: +44 (0)20 7628 3396
Peel Hunt LLP
UK Broker
Ross Allister Tel: +44 (0)20 7418 9000
GLOSSARY OF TERMS
The following is a glossary of technical terms:
“Ag” | means silver. |
“AISC” | means All-In Sustaining Cost – a non IFRS performance measurement established by the World Gold Council |
“ANM” | means the Agencia Nacional de Mineral. |
“Au” | means gold. |
“assay” | in economic geology, means to analyse the proportions of metal in a rock or overburden sample; to test an ore or mineral for composition, purity, weight or other properties of commercial interest. |
“CIM” | means the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum. |
“CIP” or “Carbon in Pulp” | means a process used in gold extraction by addition of cyanide. |
“chalcopyrite” | is a sulphide of copper and iron. |
“Cu” | means copper. |
“cut-off grade” | the lowest grade of mineralised material that qualifies as ore in a given deposit; rock of the lowest assay included in an ore estimate. |
“deposit” | is a mineralised body which has been physically delineated by sufficient drilling, trenching, and/or underground work, and found to contain a sufficient average grade of metal or metals to warrant further exploration and/or development expenditures; such a deposit does not qualify as a commercially mineable ore body or as containing ore reserves, until final legal, technical, and economic factors have been resolved. |
“electromagnetics” | is a geophysical technique tool measuring the magnetic field generated by subjecting the sub-surface to electrical currents. |
“garimpeiro” | is a local artisanal miner. |
“geochemical” | refers to geological information using measurements derived from chemical analysis. |
“geophysical” | refers to geological information using measurements derived from the use of magnetic and electrical readings. |
“geophysical techniques” | include the exploration of an area by exploiting differences in physical properties of different rock types. Geophysical methods include seismic, magnetic, gravity, induced polarisation and other techniques; geophysical surveys can be undertaken from the ground or from the air. |
“gold equivalent” | refers to quantities of materials other than gold stated in units of gold by reference to relative product values at prevailing market prices. |
“gossan” | is an iron-bearing weathered product that overlies a sulphide deposit. |
“grade” | is the concentration of mineral within the host rock typically quoted as grams per tonne (g/t), parts per million (ppm) or parts per billion (ppb). |
“g/t” | means grams per tonne. |
“hectare” or a “ha” | is a unit of measurement equal to 10,000 square metres. |
“indicated mineral resource” | is that part of a mineral resource for which quantity, grade or quality, densities, shape and physical characteristics, can be estimated with a level of confidence sufficient to allow the appropriate application of technical and economic parameters, to support mine planning and evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit. The estimate is based on detailed and reliable exploration and testing information gathered through appropriate techniques from locations such as outcrops, trenches, pits, workings and drill holes that are spaced closely enough for geological and grade continuity to be reasonably assumed. |
“inferred mineral resource” | is that part of a mineral resource for which quantity and grade or quality can be estimated on the basis of geological evidence and limited sampling and reasonably assumed, but not verified, geological and grade continuity. The estimate is based on limited information and sampling gathered through appropriate techniques from locations such as outcrops, trenches, pits, workings and drill holes. |
“IP” | refers to induced polarisation, a geophysical technique whereby an electric current is induced into the sub-surface and the conductivity of the sub-surface is recorded. |
“measured mineral resource” | is that part of a mineral resource for which quantity, grade or quality, densities, shape, and physical characteristics are so well established that they can be estimated with confidence sufficient to allow the appropriate application of technical and economic parameters, to support production planning and evaluation of the economic viability of the deposit. The estimate is based on detailed and reliable exploration, sampling and testing information gathered through appropriate techniques from locations such as outcrops, trenches, pits, workings and drill holes that are spaced closely enough to confirm both geological and grade continuity. |
“mineralisation” | the concentration of metals and their chemical compounds within a body of rock. |
“mineralised” | refers to rock which contains minerals e.g. iron, copper, gold. |
“mineral reserve” | is the economically mineable part of a measured or indicated mineral resource demonstrated by at least a preliminary feasibility study. This study must include adequate information on mining, processing, metallurgical, economic and other relevant factors that demonstrate, at the time of reporting, that economic extraction can be justified. A mineral reserve includes diluting materials and allowances for losses that may occur when the material is mined. |
“mineral resource” | is a concentration or occurrence of diamonds, natural solid inorganic material or natural fossilised organic material including base and precious metals, coal, and industrial minerals in or on the Earth’s crust in such form and quantity and of such a grade or quality that it has reasonable prospects for economic extraction. The location, quantity, grade, geological characteristics and continuity of a mineral resource are known, estimated or interpreted from specific geological evidence and knowledge. |
“mt” | means million tonnes. |
“NI 43-101” | means Canadian Securities Administrators’ National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects. |
“ore” | means a metal or mineral or a combination of these of sufficient value as to quality and quantity to enable it to be mined at a profit. |
“oxides” | are near surface bed-rock which has been weathered and oxidised by long term exposure to the effects of water and air. |
“ppm” | means parts per million. |
“saprolite” | is a weathered or decomposed clay-rich rock. |
“sulphide” | refers to minerals consisting of a chemical combination of sulphur with a metal. |
“tailings” | are the residual waste material that it is produced by the processing of mineralised rock. |
“tpd” | means tonnes per day. |
“vein” | is a generic term to describe an occurrence of mineralised rock within an area of non-mineralised rock. |
“VTEM” | refers to versa time domain electromagnetic, a particular variant of time-domain electromagnetic geophysical survey to prospect for conductive bodies below surface. |
Note: Mineral resources and reserves are estimated in conformity with the widely accepted CIM Estimation of Mineral Resource and Mineral Reserves Best Practices Guidelines (the “Guidelines”) and are reported in accordance with the Canadian Securities Administrators’ National Instrument 43-101” and the definitions applicable to individual categories of reserves and resources are set out in the Guidelines. The Glossary above includes only a summary of these definitions and readers can access the full definitions at
http://web.cim.org/standards/menupage.cfm?sections=177&menu=178.