Tag Archive | "Nevsun Resources"

Eritrea: Market is Overreacting, Analyst Says

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Eritrea: Market is Overreacting, Analyst Says


PDAC

PDAC

Analyst and Chief Commentator Peter Grandich from Agoracom was invited to comment on small cap mining stocks by BNN Market Call during the PDAC 2010 Mining Conference in Toronto.

He said the market is overreacting and the share price of mining companies in Eritrea is undervalued as a consequence of negative media coverage.

This overshadows some of the progress being made by mining companies such as Sunridge Gold and Nevsun Resources in Eritrea.

Nevsun, for instance, has completed its non-brokered private placement financing and is planning to go into production in late 2010 despite all the dramatic ups and downs in recent years.

Grandich believes that the worst of the bad news is behind them and that better days lie ahead, unless further tidal waves of bad press will continue to dominate the media.

He says that the UN has adopted sanctions not against the country as a whole, but against certain politicians and the military in Eritrea. He will update his rating on Nevsun and Sunridge Gold later this month after the UN has announced its decision, whether it is going to continue, increase or remove the sanctions on Eritrea.

“If Sunridge’s projects would be somewhere else in the world it probably would be three to four times the price of today.

Its being penalized for being there, but if you are a believer like me eventually things will get better and they should be doing well in the long run,” says Grandich.

When he was asked to rate Eritrea on a risk scale against other places in the world he replied,

“You have to put it to the most riskiest when the UN has brought sanctions against them, but the good thing is the likelyhood of things getting better is high as things cannot get much worse.”

Experts believe the fact that Nevsun Resources managed to solve the question of financing will remove most of the fears that came from the UN sanctions against Eritrea.

Watch the episode on http://watch.bnn.ca/market-call/march-2010/market-call-march-9-2010/#clip274281

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Defining Mining in Eritrea Nevsun Building Eritrea’s First-Ever International Mine

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Defining Mining in Eritrea Nevsun Building Eritrea’s First-Ever International Mine


Eritrea Mining

Eritrea Mining

(The Northern Miner – Gwen Preston) Asmara, Eritrea — Despite brimming with geologic promise because of its location within the prolific Arabian-Nubian Shield, Eritrea has remained underexplored for years.

Continued violence and turmoil in the young nation left the international exploration community highly wary until recently. And the country’s location did not help: Eritrea is part of the Horn of Africa, sharing borders with Sudan, Ethiopia and Djibouti, and not too far from Somalia.

But its location could soon become a benefit. Eritrea boasts a long Red Sea coastline and recently revived its major port, known as Massawa, both of which make it a point of interest for the Middle East and Asia.

Across the Red Sea, Saudi Arabia is busy building a $2-billion smelter complex that is in need of ore, Asian markets are but a short ship voyage away, and Indian smelters would also enjoy access to concentrates from a nearby nation.

Mineral exploration companies from the Middle East, Asia and India are all in Eritrea, searching for the next high-grade volcanogenic massive sulphide (VMS) deposit. But it is a Canadian company, Nevsun Resources (nsu-v), that is leading the charge: Nevsun found the country’s first major VMS deposit and is now halfway through building a mine at Bisha.

At every step in its eight years in Eritrea, Nevsun has shouldered the challenge of being a first mover. In working from a mining code that had never before been tested by the building of an actual mine, Nevsun and the Eritrean government formulated a mine development agreement that defined the realities of mining in Eritrea and will be used as a template for all mine agreements in the country to come.

The United Nations’ late-2009 decision to impose limited sanctions on Eritrea, because of the country’s unwillingness to abide by regulations on its dealings with Djibouti and alleged arms dealings with Somalian rebels, looked set to derail Nevsun’s efforts earlier this year. Bank insurers balked at the sanctions and the company’s recently-negotiated debt facility fell through.

Nevsun’s determined management team went to the equity markets instead, and raised the funds it needs to complete Bisha mine construction. And, of course, with equity funding the mine’s cash flow will no longer be impeded by financing costs and debt repayment.

So Bisha is on track, on budget, and set to become Eritrea’s first operating mine before the end of the year.

Bisha mineralization

The Bisha mine is in Eritrea’s arid west, 250 km by road from its capital city Asmara. Flying from Asmara to Bisha reveals a varied landscape, from dry rolling plains to high, steep hills.

The clean modern buildings of the Bisha mine camp seem out of place in the seemingly empty desert. But close by lies the Bisha deposit, a significant VMS discovery and the basis of Eritrea’s first mine.

Discovered in 2003, Bisha is a layered VMS deposit. Lenses of mineralization are stacked one atop another in a steeply plunging orebody that is more than a kilometer long on surface but narrows as it descends. Nevsun has tracked the deposit to 450 metres depth; below that it remains open.

The top layer comprises gossan that is stripped of base metals but enriched in precious ones, especially gold. The 35-metre-thick oxide layer starts at surface and carries an average grade of 7.99 grams gold per tonne and 32.85 grams silver per tonne throughout its 4 million tonnes of proven and probable reserves.

Those 4 million tonnes will carry the Bisha mine through its first 2.5 years of operation. Working with what nature provided, the Nevsun team devised a mine plan that moves through three stages as the open pit reaches the three key mineralized layers. After churning through oxidized, gold-bearing gossan for just over two years to produce 900,000 oz. gold and 1.5 million oz. silver, the Bisha open pit will hit the supergene layer and the mill will shift gears to focus on copper.

Supergene layers occur at the base of oxide layers, which end at the water table. When the VMS deposit at Bisha originally formed, it would have been made entirely of sulphide minerals. As the deposit moved towards the surface, however, the upper layer encountered the water table. Percolating groundwater oxidized the primary sulphide minerals and then carried the minerals downwards. At the base of the water table, the oxidized minerals reacted again, converting back to sulphide minerals but this time forming secondary sulphides, which have higher metal contents than primary sulphide minerals.

The result is a layer of secondary sulphide mineralization enriched in base metals. At Bisha, the top of the VMS deposit originally held gold, silver and copper. Precious metals do not readily mineralize as sulphides or oxides, so the leaching process does not affect them much. But copper is almost always leached from oxide zones and at Bisha it has been perfectly re-deposited in a copper-rich supergene layer. The layer reaches from 35 to 65 metres depth, totalling 6.35 million proven and probable tonnes, and carries an average grade of 4.4% copper as well as 0.83 gram gold and 35.98 grams silver.

The supergene layer will feed the Bisha mine for three years, producing 538 million lbs. copper plus 80,000 oz. gold and 3 million oz. silver. Finally, the mine will start to tap into the primary sulphide portion of the deposit, which means the mill will shift focus again, this time to zinc.

According to Nevsun’s current plan, the Bisha open pit will reach 200 metres depth. To that depth, the pit’s primary sulphide layer contains 9.7 million proven and probable tonnes grading 7.21% zinc, 1.14% copper, 0.76 gram gold and 54 grams silver.

However, Nevsun knows the deposit continues to more than twice that depth at the south end. At the north, mineralization ends at just over 100 metres depth but halfway along the deposit’s 1.2-km strike, the zone suddenly opens up at depth. The deepest intercept to date returned 128 metres grading 0.66 gram gold, 49.1 grams silver, 0.96% copper, and 7.36% zinc, starting 289 metres downhole and including 84 metres of 0.71 gram gold, 63 grams silver, 0.92% copper, and 11.1% zinc.

The pit was planned using conservative metal prices, specifically US$400 per oz. gold, US$1.05 per lb. copper, and US50¢ per lb. zinc. With current prices significantly higher — 2.5 times higher for gold, more than three times higher for copper, and double for zinc — Nevsun is remodelling the pit to extend the mine life by going deeper.

Deepening the pit to chase the steeply-plunging deposit farther would increase the strip ratio, but Nevsun does not expect the increase to be dramatic. While details of the remodelled pit have not yet been released, the company has said deepening the pit to 400 metres from 200 metres would increase the strip to 5 to 1 from 4 to 1.

In addition, Nevsun has partially defined a zone adjacent to the Main Bisha deposit that could reduce the strip ratio back down. Known as the Hangingwall Copper zone, the additional mineralization is being considered waste rock in a pit remodel because it does not carry a defined resource.

Previous drilling returned several promising intercepts from the Hangingwall zone, such as 56.5 metres grading 0.81% copper, 19.3 metres of 2.11% copper, and 12 metres of 2.64% copper. The area has not been drilled since 2006. If Nevsun decides to deepen the pit, the company would better define the Hangingwall zone and the new resource would reduce the wasterock increase.

Plans for the pit may still be changing but plans for the mill, which is more than 50% complete, are solid.  The operation will churn through 5,500 tonnes of ore each day or 2 million tonnes a year. Nevsun actually oversized the plant, making it capable of processing 3 million tonnes annually, to give the company room to ramp up production if it wants.

During phase one, when the feed is oxide, ore will be crushed and leached in cyanide tanks, with gold then recovered via conventional carbon-in-leach technology and poured into doré bars. Before phase one is complete, Nevsun will install the flotation system needed for phases two and three. Copper and zinc will be recovered via flotation.

After producing 900,000 oz. gold and 1.54 million oz. silver in phase one, Bisha will shift to producing 180 million lbs. copper and 1 million oz. silver a year for three years. In the 4.5 years of phase three, the mine will kick out roughly 240 million lbs. zinc, 44 million lbs. copper, and 1 million oz. silver annually. Metal concentrates will be trucked from Bisha to the port at Massawa, roughly 400 km away by road.

The operation’s cash costs are fairly low. Including by-product credits, in phase one it will cost US$210 to produce an ounce of gold, in phase two it will cost US67¢ to produce a pound of copper, and in phase three it will cost US54¢ to produce a pound of copper and US50¢ for a pound of zinc. Nevsun’s original feasibility study for Bisha, completed in 2006, pegged capital costs at $250 million. With the mine almost

complete, Nevsun recently revised that number, but only slightly, to $260 million.

The company has already spent more than $130 million at Bisha. And with the recent close of a $117-million private placement, plus funding from the Eritrean government’s 30% participating stake in the mine, Nevsun has all the cash it needs to finish building the mine.

Eritrean partner

Yes, the Eritrean government has a stake in Bisha. The country’s mining code gives the government an automatic, carried 10% stake in every mineral project. The code also gives the government a right to buy another 30% participating stake in any project and, in late 2007, the Eritrean government decided to step up its ownership of Bisha.

It took several months for Nevsun and the government to finalize the terms of the deal. But by the end of 2007, the partners had become just that, with the signing of a mining agreement for Bisha. The agreement required the Eritrean government to start contributing its 30% share of costs right away but the government did not immediately have to hand over a chunk of cash to pay for its ownership position.

Instead, that payment is due when Bisha ships its first gold. When that shipment happens, an independent agency will essentially complete a new feasibility study on Bisha using actual capital costs. That study will determine the project’s value and the Eritrean government will have to pay for its 30% interest based on that valuation.

The Eritrean national mining company, ENAMCO, has already contributed $80 million towards Bisha. ENAMCO has handed over $25 million towards its ownership position, contributed $35 million towards construction costs, and loaned $20 million to Nevsun. The construction contribution is not applicable against the purchase price, so when the first gold is poured and the valuation completed, ENAMCO’s payment will be calculated as 30% of the project’s net present value (NPV), minus $45 million.

The valuation will use consensus life-of-mine metal prices, determined as the average of 10 predicting houses. Using current metal prices, the project generates a NPV of roughly US$1 billion.

“Of course the negotiations were difficult — there is a lot at stake,” says Cliffs Davis, Nevsun’s president and CEO. “But afterwards, one of the government’s key negotiators came over and said to me, ‘We hope that payment is a big one,’ because of course that would mean the project is set to provide the government with considerable cash through taxes, royalties, and its own portion of revenue. So the better the project, the better for both us and them.”

The reality of operating in Eritrea also impacted Nevsun’s financing efforts. In mid-2009 the company lined up a $235-million credit facility to develop Bisha. The loans were to come from a consortium of South African and European lenders. Everything was ready to go when the UN imposed sanctions on Eritrea in December.

According to the UN Security Council resolution, the sanctions stem from concerns that Eritrean nationals are providing “support to armed groups undermining peace and reconciliation in Somalia” and worries that the Eritrean government has “not withdrawn its forces following clashes with Djibouti in June 2008.” The sanctions are very specific; the U.N. imposed an arms embargo on the country, and placed travel restrictions and asset freezes on its political and military leaders. The news immediately pushed Nevsun’s share price down to the $2.55 area, from closer to $3.20. But Nevsun is actually not too concerned.

“Except for the impact of the market’s misconceptions, we don’t think the UN sanctions will have any significant implications on the abilities of mining companies to conduct business here,” says Davis. “The sanctions are very specific and the United Nations does not want these to become more general.”

The sanction did create one significant problem for Nevsun: the European lenders involved in the credit facility required support from the German government, which can give a partial guarantee to lenders. Nevsun waited several months for the Europeans to try to insure the loan but, by early February, the company realized time was running out. Nevsun was funding Bisha development with cash until the loans became available and the company’s cash position was dwindling.

So Davis found a way around the problem. A few days into February Nevsun announced a $117-million private placement; within two weeks the company had closed the deal, selling 52 million shares at $2.25 apiece. The funds will be sufficient to carry Nevsun and Bisha through commissioning into cash flow positive operations.

Expansion potential

The current Bisha mine plan only calls for mining the Main deposit but, in addition to the potential Hangingwall zone resource expansion, chances are good that Nevsun will define more resources in the area to extend the mine life. The company has already identified two new VMS discoveries within its Bisha mine licence.

Nevsun discovered the Northwest zone, which is 1.5 km north and slightly west of the Main Bisha deposit, in 2003 when a few initial drill holes returned low-grade massive sulphides. In 2005 the company returned to the area and pulled two significant, well-mineralized massive sulphide intercepts from the ground, including 22.1 metres grading 1.42% copper and 4.67% zinc in hole NW8.

In 2006 Nevsun punched four more holes into the Northwest zone that returned sphalerite-rich intercepts from the zone’s southwest. The results, such as 22 metres of 7.08% zinc and 12 grams silver, led Nevsun to believe the Northwest zone actually comprises a main, lower-grade massive sulphide body with a second, zincrich lens sitting just to the southwest. With all its energy focused on permitting and building the mine, Nevsun has not been able to return to the Northwest zone since 2006 but plans to ramp up expansion exploration once the mine is operational.

The second area that offers expansion potential is the Harena zone, which lies 9.5 km southwest of the Bisha Main deposit. Harena is developing into a third nearsurface massive sulphide zone with the potential to provide additional feed to the Bisha mill.

Discovered through geophysics and initially drilled in 2005, Nevsun returned to Harena in late 2009 to conduct infill drilling and recently released the results. The northeast-striking, 400-metre-long zone seems to carry gold, silver, copper and zinc.

Collared at the northeast end of the zone, hole 29 returned 7 metres grading 2.71 grams gold, 51.86 grams silver, 1.01% copper and 0.14% zinc from 62 metres depth. From 100 metres to the southwest hole 32 cut 37.4 metres grading 0.13 gram gold, 9.72 grams silver, 0.37% copper, and 3.51% zinc, starting 63 metres downhole and including 5.2 metres averaging 2.62 grams gold, 134.42 grams silver, 1.95% copper and 1.35% zinc. Then a line of holes across the centre of the zone, another 100 metres to the southwest, produced three promising intercepts: Hole 35 hit 31 metres of 2.41 grams gold and 12.71 grams silver; hole 36 returned 37.7 metres averaging 0.32 gram gold, 27.18 grams silver, 0.74% copper and 3% zinc; and hole 37 cut 23.5 metres of 0.61 gram gold, 30.52 grams silver, 1.09% copper and 4.5% zinc.

The Country Question

Eritrea is a difficult country to understand. Its history tells part of the story but the country’s trajectory since its very recent independence and its generally closed door policy makes its recent past appear dark and veiled to outsiders.

Eritrea was under Italian control, first as a colony and then as a province, from the late 1800s until 1941 when British armed forces expelled the Italians. The British controlled the country only until 1951 when, pursuant to a UN mandate, Eritrea was federated with Ethiopia. Eritreans initially welcomed the federation but, before long, Ethiopia started to exert more control over its northern neighbours than they wanted. Then, in 1962, Ethiopia annexed Eritrea as its 14th province.

The Ethiopians’ lack of regard for the Eritrean population soon prompted an independence movement that led to war. The bloody, 30-year war did not end until 1991. In 1993, following a UN-supervised referendum, Eritrea declared its independence and gained international recognition.

At first, the international community welcomed Eritrea as a prime candidate for a much needed African success story. The long liberation war had hard moulded Eritreans into a determined population led by a political party, the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF), that enjoyed popular support and endorsed liberal democracy, human rights and free markets.

Sadly, the dreams of 1993 and the reality of modern Eritrea are much different. Eritrea’s conflict with Ethiopia reignited in 1998 and led to another horrible war, this one lasting three years. In the aftermath of that war, a group within the government started to question the president’s authority and decisions. A dissident movement started to gain momentum, with independent newspapers and social groups challenging the EPLF’s monopoly on power.

But the dissident movement met a rapid end in September 2001 when the President ordered a nation- wide clamp down. Government forces arrested hundreds of critics, closed down all private media outlets, and placed limits on the general public’s activities.

The constitution, ratified by the government in 1997, has still not come into effect. The government has used the threat of war with Ethiopia as an excuse to repeatedly postpone elections, which were originally scheduled for 1998 but still have not occurred. The country today runs as a singleparty state.

Organized political opposition is forbidden, and military service is compulsory — at age 16 teenagers leave for two years of training and many Eritreans, especially men, stay in the service for the rest of their lives.

Eritrea’s troubles as an independent country are reflected in various international rankings of democracy and human rights. The country places 164th out of 179 countries on the United Nations’ Human Development Index. On the Worldwide Press Freedom Index 2008, Eritrea took the last rank in the world for the second year. Transparency International ranked Eritrea 126th out of 180 countries on its Corruption Perceptions Index. And in the Freedom of the World survey for 2008, in which Freedom House evaluates the state of global freedom as experienced by individuals, Eritrea is classified as being “Not Free,” and grouped with the world’s most repressive societies.

Within the country, however, the feeling is not one of repression. Perhaps the realities are well shielded, but, to a Western reporter, the country and its people appear functional and reasonably happy.

For the country with the biggest per capita defence budget in Africa, the military presence is surprisingly minimal. There are checkpoints at the entrances and exits to major cities, but their lack of guns and use of a thin rope as the main barrier make them feel more like a formality than a threat.

Foreigners require visas to enter the country and travel documents to move around within it. Eritreans are free to move around within the country but require permission to leave. The country is just about crime-free — a foreigner can walk the streets of the capital city in the middle of the night and usually be perfectly safe.

The main occupation in Eritrea is agriculture, most of which is sustenance farming. Half the population is Christian and half is Muslim; the two groups live in peace. There is as much

Western garb as traditional clothing and there is more female representation in the Eritrean National Assembly than there is in Canada’s parliament.

One of the most interesting aspects of this African nation is its determination to be self-sufficient.

From the time of independence, Eritrea has shunned foreign aid, choosing instead to try to develop the abilities to care for its own people. In terms of food it generally succeeds, even exporting some livestock and grain, though a drought last year necessitated some food aid.

And there are essentially no nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in the country. The lack of NGOs is in part because of Eritrea’s focus on independence, though the primary reason is that the EPLF has thrown most of them out.

Perception and reality clash constantly, in the eyes of an outsider visiting Eritrea. Is the government not actually as repressive as the rest of the world thinks it is? Or is the repression very real but hidden from view?

In a short stay those questions remained unanswered. In terms of its developing mining sector, however, those Eritreans involved in it appear thoughtful and reliable. The government knew very little about mining just eight years ago and now is poised to hold a 40% stake in a brand new, promising mine. Nevsun’s experiences dealing with the government have been positive, if sometimes slow, and the company truly believes it has found a solid partner in ENAMCO.

By the end of the year, Bisha’s mills should see their first ore and Nevsun will have done its all to define mining in Eritrea.

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Nevsun Resources to Exhibit at PDAC 2010

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Nevsun Resources to Exhibit at PDAC 2010


Nevsun Resources is pleased to announce that it will be exhibiting and presenting at the upcoming PDAC Investors Exchange on March 7-8, 2010. The Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada holds the most important event in the world of exploration, bringing together over 18,000 attendees from all over the globe.

Nevsun welcomes all investors, shareholders, financial professionals, and media to visit their booth #2201 and at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre from 10:00am-5:30pm on Sunday, March 7 and Monday, March 8. Cliff Davis, President & CEO, will additionally be presenting on March 8 at 3:20pm in Room 802AB.

Attendees will have the opportunity to discuss Nevsun’s ongoing progress, in addition to meeting Management and the Technical Team. For more information on the PDAC 2010 Convention, please visit PDAC.

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Nevsun Resources Drilling Results at the Harena VMS Deposit, Eritrea

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Nevsun Resources Drilling Results at the Harena VMS Deposit, Eritrea


Nevsun Resources

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA–(Marketwire – 02/10/10) – Nevsun Resources Ltd. (TSX:NSU - News)(AMEX:NSU - News) is pleased to report the final assays from the seventeen infill diamond drill holes at the Harena deposit within its Bisha exploration license in Eritrea.

Harena lies 9.5 km southwest from the Bisha Main deposit and the exploration license is contiguous to the Company’s Bisha Mining license.

Highlights

--  Third VMS near surface deposit on Bisha
--  Mainly base metal (zinc) with some gold
--  Additional feed for the Bisha mine

The infill drilling took place in the fall, 2009 and was carried out to confirm a previously identified discovery. Harena was originally selected as a potential exploration target based on an alteration anomaly defined on Landsat imagery. A subsequent airborne EM survey defined a moderate conductor over a limited strike length on what was interpreted to be the same stratigraphic horizon as the Bisha Main deposit. Diamond drilling in 2005 intersected various widths of oxide and sulphide mineralization over a strike length of 400 meters confirming the presence of a satellite VMS (volcanogenic massive sulphide) deposit. As a result of the Company’s efforts to advance the Bisha Main Zone through feasibility and development, the Harena area was left until the fall of 2009 for further exploration. The results are summarized as follows:

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Hole #       From (m)  To (m)  Length (m)  Au (g/t) Ag (g/t)  Cu (%)  Zn (%)
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H-029          61.50   68.50        7.00      2.71    51.86    1.01    0.14
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Incl.          67.50   68.50        1.00     16.60   155.00    0.79    0.03
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H-030         118.30  119.30        1.00      0.27    12.00    0.34    2.27
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and           148.75  153.00        4.25      0.43    12.01    0.54    2.34
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H-031          20.50   44.90       24.40      1.63     8.90    0.06    0.68
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Incl.          30.00   35.75        5.75      3.31    10.56    0.03    0.47
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Incl.          38.00   43.90        5.90      2.26    10.25    0.05    0.18
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H-032          62.57  100.00       37.43      0.13     9.72    0.37    3.51
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Incl.          68.00   75.00        7.00      0.11     6.43    0.13    4.21
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Incl.          81.00   99.00       18.00      0.13     8.67    0.48    4.58
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H-033         105.70  137.70       32.00      0.15    11.19    0.33    5.42
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Incl.         106.70  114.70        8.00      0.12    18.88    0.16    7.91
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Incl.         127.70  132.70        5.00      0.06     3.20    0.21    6.59
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H-034         106.57  134.00       27.43      0.69    39.62    0.74    4.93
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Incl.         110.50  121.40       10.90      0.23    19.38    0.52    6.38
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Incl.         124.80  128.80        4.00      0.10     7.50    0.27    8.32
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Incl.         128.80  134.00        5.20      2.62   134.42    1.95    1.35
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H-035          36.00   38.00        2.00      1.24    30.50    0.10    0.96
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and            42.00   73.00       31.00      2.41    12.71    0.05    0.06
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Incl.          49.50   57.00        7.50      3.71     4.60    0.02    0.05
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Incl.          58.50   64.00        5.50      4.93     4.73    0.01    0.04
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Incl.          67.00   71.50        4.50      3.47    12.67    0.16    0.04
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H-036          77.30  115.00       37.70      0.32    27.18    0.74    3.00
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Incl.          93.95  102.00        8.05      0.58    38.39    1.59    7.57
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Incl.         108.00  113.00        5.00      0.14     6.20    0.41    5.07
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H-037         131.50  154.50       23.50      0.61    30.52    1.09    4.50
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Incl.         131.50  142.90       11.40      0.33    33.64    1.08    8.51
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H-038         150.30  162.60       12.30      0.50    30.91    1.13    3.85
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Incl.         150.30  155.30        5.00      0.28    31.40    0.78    8.45
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H-040          74.50   94.20       19.70      0.41    23.40    0.65    5.04
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Incl.          75.30   83.50        8.20      0.57    34.21    0.97    8.58
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Incl.          83.50   88.20        4.70      0.92    39.96    0.99    5.60
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H-041         121.00  124.00        3.00      0.19    27.00    0.59    4.51
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and           145.20  147.00        1.80      0.54    26.50    0.68    3.26
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H-042         167.25  187.00       19.75      0.85    37.20    0.72    3.82
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Incl.         167.25  172.00        4.75      0.35    57.40    1.11    5.81
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Incl.         172.00  180.00        8.00      0.29    15.00    0.23    5.75
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H-043         149.55  160.00       10.45      0.38    19.04    0.51    4.79
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Holes 28, 39, and 44 showed no significant mineralization. Historic holes 1 through 27 were carried out and published in 2005. The drill hole locations were selected to infill drill the gossanous oxide cap and underlying sulphide structure on 50m spacings. All holes were done at 45 or 65 degrees. The results were positive, and have provided added confidence to the widths and grades of the third VMS near surface deposit on the Bisha concession.

A number of dykes have cut the near surface mineralization at Harena making determinations of actual widths of the zone somewhat difficult but have been estimated to range between 5m to 35m over a 400m strike length. The deposit is hosted by a sequence of felsic to intermediate volcanics with a distinct footwall often containing kyanite and andalusite. The footwall rocks are often noticeably chloritized.

Nevsun views the Harena deposit as a very likely source of supplemental feed for the processing plant at Bisha which is currently under construction. Supplemental feed can provide valuable cash flow as an extension to mine life without having to absorb start up plant capital expenses. A map is attached to this release showing the locations of the holes.

Darin Wasylik, Senior Geologist for Nevsun, a qualified person under National Instrument 43-101, supervised and directed all work associated with the drilling program.

Sample preparation and analysis were conducted at ALS Chemex of Vancouver, Canada.

The Bisha Main zone is a significant gold/copper/zinc deposit that has been developed through feasibility, engineering and construction. It is approximately 50% complete to production, with operations planned to commence in late 2010. The Bisha Main deposit is open at depth and there exists at least two additional satellite deposits within the Company’s exploration and mining licensed areas.

The State of Eritrea is a strong supporter of a responsible mining industry and is a partner with the Company in the ownership and development of the Bisha mine.

Forward Looking Statements: The above contains statements regarding positive drill results, indications that the Bisha concession may host multiple deposits, the Harena deposit as a potential source of supplemental feed and valuable cash flow, the close relationship between the interpreted graphitic horizon and the Harena massive sulphide, and additional prospects at the Harena area. Although we believe the expectations reflected in our forward looking statements are reasonable, results may vary, and we cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity, performance or achievements. Forward-looking statements are statements about the future and are inherently uncertain, and actual achievements of the Company or other future events or conditions may differ materially from those reflected in the forward-looking statements due to a variety of risks, uncertainties and other factors, including, without limitation, those described in the Management Discussion and Analysis of the Company. The Company’s forward-looking statements are based on the beliefs, expectations and opinions of management on the date the statements are made and the Company assumes no obligation to update such forward-looking statements in the future. For the reasons set forth above, investors should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements.

NEVSUN RESOURCES LTD.

Cliff T. Davis, President & Chief Executive Officer

Find Map on following link: http://media3.marketwire.com/docs/NEV210MAP.pdf

Contacts:
Kin Communications
604 684 6730 or Toll Free: 1 866 684 6730
ir@kincommunications.com
www.nevsun.com

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Nevsun Resources Ltd.: Private Placement

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Nevsun Resources Ltd.: Private Placement


HIGHLIGHTS:

$117 MILLION PRIVATE PLACEMENT (US$110 MILLION)

BISHA FINANCE OVERHANG REMOVED

Vancouver, BC- Nevsun Resources Ltd. (TSX:NSU)(NYSE Amex:NSU) -   Nevsun Resources Ltd. (”Nevsun”) is pleased to advise that it has arranged a non-brokered private placement financing of 52,000,000 common shares at Cdn $2.25 per share for Cdn$117 million (US$110 million). The private placement is scheduled to close on or before February 19, 2010 and is subject to certain conditions, including the receipt of all necessary regulatory approvals. The net proceeds from the offering will be used for Bisha mine development and general working capital purposes.

The Company is confident the funds from this private placement, together with its existing cash and the ongoing one-third contribution by the State of Eritrea to Bisha will be sufficient to see the Bisha project through to cash positive operations. The funding arrangements are in excess of estimated costs to complete so as to provide a reasonable cushion in the event of unforeseen events.

The Eritrean National Mining Corporation (ENAMCO) has reliably provided its one-third contributing share of financing to Bisha as the project has progressed. In addition the State continues to provide overall support for a responsible mining industry that is in the early stages of development within the country.

The change in approach to the funding of the Bisha project is to ensure the project continues on schedule. While Bisha had already completed project debt agreements with European and South African lenders, these debt facilities have not yet been drawn because the European lenders required the German government’s support via its UFK scheme (effectively a partial guarantee to European lenders).

The Company regrets that the European lenders and German government have been unable to follow through within our time requirements. The South African lender recently reconfirmed the availability of project debt (refer to Nevsun news release dated January 14, 2010) however it became apparent very recently that access to the debt in our time frame was uncertain. The Company and ENAMCO have concluded that the debt facilities are sufficiently unreliable and inconclusive for our project.

The Company has taken a prudent business approach to secure funding needed to complete the Bisha project on schedule and has no practical alternative but to proceed without the debt providers. While the Company would have preferred to stay with a leveraged project, the higher priority is to get the project built and producing cash. Due to the very robust nature of the project and assuming recent metals prices, the payback to the Company is now expected to be under one year.

As advised in news releases during January, the project is very well advanced (approaching 50% complete) and costs are re-estimated to be approximately $260 million, close to the original budget of approximately $250 million.

The securities being offered in the non-brokered private placement have not been, nor will they be, registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended, (the “U.S. Securities Act”), and such securities may not be offered or sold within the United States or to, or for the account or benefit of, U.S. persons absent registration under the U.S. Securities Act or an exemption therefrom. This release does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy the securities in the United States.

Forward Looking Statements: The above contains forward looking statements that are subject to a number of known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated in our forward looking statements. Factors that could cause such differences include: the closing date of the announced private placement, the total value of the private placement, the adequacy of funding for development of the Bisha project and the continuing availability of funding from the State of Eritrea. Forward-looking statements in this release include statements regarding future dates, plans for proceeds, expected costs to complete, percentage of completion and pay-back period using recent metals prices. Although we believe the expectations reflected in our forward looking statements are reasonable, results may vary, and we cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity, performance or achievements.

NEVSUN RESOURCES LTD.

Cliff T. Davis,

President & Chief Executive Officer

ir@kincommunications.com

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Sunridge Gold Provides update on Asmara Project Tour, Drilling Progress and Company Presentations

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Sunridge Gold Provides update on Asmara Project Tour, Drilling Progress and Company Presentations


Sunridge Gold Corp. (SGC/TSX.V) is pleased to report on the success of an analyst’s tour to Eritrea co-hosted by Sunridge and Nevsun Resources Ltd. The tour included site visits to Sunridge’s Asmara Project and Nevsun’s Bisha Project as well as a visit to the port of Massawa. The tour included representatives from the media as well as mining analysts on the buy side and sell side. The visitors also met with members of the Eritrean Ministry and Mines.

The visitors came away with a positive impression of Eritrea and the evident strong support of the Eritrean government to the industry.

Drilling Progress:

Sunridge expects to release the drill assay results from the 2009 drill program conducted at the 100% owned Debarwa project in mid February.

In addition the phase one drill program is well underway at the Daero Paulos, the large new copper prospect on the Asmara Project, Eritrea. The Daero Paulos target is part of the October 2, 2009 exploration funding agreement with Antofagasta Minerals S.A.

Company Presentations:

Michael Hopley, President and CEO of Sunridge will be giving a corporate presentation at the Mining Indaba Conference in Cape Town, South Africa this week. The Minister of Energy and Mines of the state of Eritrea, Ahmed Haj Ali, together with the Director General, Alem Kibreab are also attending the Indaba conference.

Greg Davis, Vice-President of Business Development, will then give a corporate presentation at the Africa Mining Congress being held in Livingstone, Zambia on February 5th, 2010.

About Sunridge:

Sunridge is a mineral exploration and development company focused on the acquisition, exploration, discovery and development of base and precious metal projects on the Asmara Project in Eritrea and exploration properties in Madagascar.

Sunridge has approximately 76 million shares outstanding and approximately $7 million in cash. Sunridge trades on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol SGC. For additional information on the Company and its projects please view the slide show on our website at www.sunridgegold.com or call Don Halliday or Greg Davis at the numbers listed below.

SUNRIDGE GOLD CORP.
“Michael Hopley”
Michael Hopley, President and Chief Executive Officer
For further information contact:
Don Halliday, Executive Vice President
Email: donh@sunridgegold.com
Tel: 604-899-1505 (direct)
Greg Davis, VP Business Development
Email: greg@sunridgegold.com
Tel: 604-688-1263 (direct)

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IDC Remains Committed to Funding Eritrea Project Despite UN Sanctions

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IDC Remains Committed to Funding Eritrea Project Despite UN Sanctions


South Africa’s State-owned Industrial Development Corporation (IDC) has reaffirmed its commitment to providing $89-million in project debt facilities for the Bisha gold project, in Eritrea, despite the imposition of a number of sanctions on the Eritrea government.

Head of the IDC’s mining and beneficiation strategic business unit Abel Malinga tells Mining Weekly that the corporation does not expect the sanctions to influence the project at all.

“As I understand it, the sanctions include an arms embargo, travel bans and asset freezes. They do not target the interests of mining companies operating in Eritrea or the develop- ment of mining projects in the country.”

Canada’s Nevsun Resources head of the Bisha project Stanley Rogers backs this statement, saying that there has been no slowdown whatsoever since the announcement and that the momentum of the project has continued. “I do not expect anything to change with respect to the Bisha project. Our production start date remains the same.

“For investors, the international price of gold is a more decisive factor than sanc-tions imposed on a single country,” he comments.

In July 2009, Nevsun signed extensive loan documentation with South Africa’s IDC and a group of European lenders for the funding of the Bisha project. Currently, the company is still waiting for European lenders to also reconfirm their commitment on the balance of the facilities agreed to at that time.

Malinga says that the IDC decided to sponsor the project owing to the fact that more than 60% of goods and services supplied to the project will be coming from South Africa.

“Before the IDC makes a commitment to funding a project outside South African borders, we ensure that at least 50% of the goods and services will be derived from South Africa.”

The IDC will provide funding in a one-off payment.

Bisha is Eritrea’s most advanced mining project. Its 27-million tons of ore is believed to contain one-million ounces of gold, 700-million pounds to 800-million pounds of copper and one-billion pounds of zinc. Pro-duction is expected by the end of the year.

Before sanctions were imposed in Dec-ember 2009, Nevsun spent a record $21,7-million on its Bisha project in the third quarter of 2009.

Meanwhile, Nevsun Resources has reached a significant milestone in the construction of its flagship Bisha project with the delivery of major equipment to the site in Eritrea.

By the end of December 2009, the company had received delivery of the semi- autogenous mill, the ball mill and the primary crusher. Installation of the mills and crusher has started.

Nevsun president and CEO Cliff Davis says that the installation of the mills forms the critical path activity and their timely arrival maintains the development time-line. The project continues to be on track for operation in late 2010.

The Bisha project is a high-grade gold/-copper/zinc volcanogenic massive sulphide deposit discovered in 2003, brought to feasibility in late 2006 and that began its official development stage at the start of 2009.

The project is positioned to become the first modern-day mine in this north-eastern African country, with yearly production projected to return payable metals of 1,06-million ounces of gold, 9,4-million ounces of silver, 734-million pounds of copper and 1 075-million pounds of zinc.

At current metal prices, the project is expected to generate enough cash in the first two-and-a-half years to repay all debt facilities, in addition to further mine expansion. The Bisha mine will be a low-cost gold producer for the first two years and a low-cost, high-grade copper and zinc producer for the remaining ten-year mine life. Further, resource potential exists at depth and from nearby discoveries within the company’s licence areas.

The project has the strong support of the government of Eritrea, which has a 40% ownership stake in the project company. “Nevsun looks forward to a very productive year in 2010,” concludes Davis. Source: (Mining Weekly)

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Eritrea: Nevsun Addresses Security Council Sanctions

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Eritrea: Nevsun Addresses Security Council Sanctions


Nevsunlogo

Nevsun

Nevsun Resources Ltd. (NSU-TSX/AMEX) announces that the United Nations Security Council has on December 23, 2009 passed a resolution to place sanctions on the State of Eritrea in regards to an arms embargo, certain travel restrictions and asset freezes.

A separate sanctions committee is responsible for designating the actions and parties to which the resolution applies. The implementation of this process may take some time and the details are not yet known. The resolution will be posted at the UN Security Council web site UN Security Council

Nevsun has been operating in Eritrea for over ten years and has developed a strong relationship with the government of Eritrea. The State is a partner in the development of the Bisha mine and it has been a strong supporter of a responsible mining industry within the country. The State has honored all of its commitments in our business arrangement and Nevsun is very pleased to have the State as its partner.

Nevsun believes that these sanctions should not have any direct impact on the Company or its Bisha project in Eritrea as the Company is focused solely on the development of the Bisha project.

It is however uncertain whether these sanctions could indirectly impact the Bisha debt facilities announced in July 2009. The Company is already in discussions with stakeholders to evaluate that possibility and has contemplated alternative finance sources if the sanctions do eventually negatively impact the debt facilities.

The Bisha project continues to be on track to commence operations in late 2010. Updates on the project will continue to be provided periodically.

Forward Looking Statements: The above contains forward-looking statements concerning the impact of the UN sanctions on the Company, its projects and debt facilities. Forward-looking statements are frequently, but not always, identified by words such as “expects,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “intends,” “estimates,” “potential,” “possible” and similar expressions, or statements that events, conditions or results “will,” “may,” “could” or “should” occur or be achieved. Forward-looking statements are statements about the future and are inherently uncertain, and actual achievements of the Company or other future events or conditions may differ materially from those reflected in the forward-looking statements due to a variety of risks, uncertainties and other factors, including, without limitation, those described in the Management Discussion and Analysis of the Company. The Company’s forward-looking statements are based on the beliefs, expectations and opinions of management on the date the statements are made and the Company assumes no obligation to update such forward-looking statements in the future. For the reasons set forth above, investors should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements.
NEVSUN RESOURCES LTD.
“Cliff T. Davis”
Cliff T. Davis
President & Chief Executive Officer
Nsu09-13.doc
For further information, Contact:
Kin Communications
Tel: 604 684 6730
Toll free 1 866 684 6730
Email: ir@kincommunications.com
Website: www.nevsun.com

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Proactive Investors Interview with Nevsun Resources CEO Cliff Davis

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Proactive Investors Interview with Nevsun Resources CEO Cliff Davis


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Vancouver Company Taking the Lead in Eritrea Gold Rush

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Vancouver Company Taking the Lead in Eritrea Gold Rush


Nevsun Resources gambling on a risky African venture that could produce huge dividends for itself and an impoverished African nation

By Krisendra Bisetty

For decades, foreign investors avoided a tiny African country whose struggle for independence and border war had left it damaged and dirt poor.

But one Vancouver company has set up a massive base in the Horn of Africa, as it leads a charge of global opportunity seekers into Eritrea, a country roughly a tenth of the size of B.C.

Eritrea’s 30-year fight with neighbouring Ethiopia ended in 1991 when rebels defeated government forces, and although its independence was shaken two years later by a border war that could erupt again, Cliff Davis thinks the rewards are worth the risks.

“The reason we’re in Eritrea is that there is a fabulous deposit there,” said Davis, president and CEO of Nevsun Resources Ltd. (TSX, Amex:NSU).

The company is betting a US$250 million gold mine it’s building in the impoverished country, which has no history of modern-day mining, will provide a significant payoff for shareholders and become Eritrea’s biggest revenue source.

“As we approach production, we will increase significantly in value as the market better understands the cash that will be generated from this mine,” said Davis. “Given that this would produce significant foreign currency, in terms of taxes for the government, it will have a very significant impact [on] its GDP.”

The development of the high-grade Bisha gold-copper-zinc deposit would also produce training and employment opportunities for locals.

In a country whose population is a little more than that of B.C. and where subsistence agriculture is about its only major economic activity – 80% of Eritrea’s people are involved in farming and herding – a gold mine is being viewed with awe.

“It’ll definitely be the biggest project of any sort in the country, and obviously a huge revenue source for the country,” said Stefan Ioannou, an analyst with Haywood Securities Inc. who toured the site earlier this year. “I think the government is pretty excited about it.”

Eritrea’s government took a 40% stake in the project through state-run Eritrean National Mining Corp. (Enamco).

That’s not necessarily a bad thing, Ioannou said, because it’s in the government’s best interests to get the mine operating sooner than later.

“Time and time again, in other jurisdictions where the government doesn’t have a significant interest in a project, they can care less if a project starts tomorrow or 10 years from now,” he said. “Even with a 60% ownership, the economics coming off this project are extremely robust and extremely good for Nevsun.”

Enamco has also provided US$60 million for Bisha, and Nevsun, which last month raised $32.7 million in a private-placement financing, has already raised the balance of the project capital through equity and debt financing.

Davis said concentrate and refining agreements have been finalized. The gold will be refined in Switzerland and Canada by two major international companies; the copper concentrate will be shipped to major smelters in Europe and India.

Bisha is an open-pit mine that’s about 40% built. It will be Nevsun’s second African mine and is expected to be in operation in late 2010 with staged production of approximately 900,000 ounces of gold, 700 million pounds of copper and one billion pounds of zinc.

However, Nevsun sold a small gold mine in Mali last year after encountering operating challenges.

In Eritrea, where the last and only mine – and a small one at that – operated in the early part of the last century, the challenges include sourcing skills and materials from outside the country, including from South Africa.

Those challenges could delay construction, said Ioannou. “I anticipate delays, but that’s not to say it won’t get built.”

Although mining in Eritrea has been largely overlooked amid the “ongoing war” with Ethiopia, he added Bisha’s discovery sparked a lot of interest in the country and brought in the likes of Vancouver companies Sunridge Gold Corp. (TSX-V:SGC) and NGEx Resources Inc. (TSX:NGQ), which is in the Lundin Group stable.

NG stands for “No Guts. No Glory,” a favourite motto of the group’s founder, the late Adolf Lundin.

“It’s really opened up the entire country,” Ioannou said of Bisha. “There’s no doubt about it. It’s a world-class project.”

kbisetty@telus.net

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Latest Update From Analyst on Nevsun and Sunridge Gold

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Latest Update From Analyst on Nevsun and Sunridge Gold


Peter Grandich

Peter Grandich from Agoracom says, I’ve updated my Model Portfolio.

Many are asking about KMK. All I can say at this time is to point back at all I’ve said up until now and note it remains 100% the same. Stay tuned!

I’m going to keep NSU on hold for a little while longer to see what further news comes out over Eritrea. Sunridge Gold is a hold just for the very short term.

Evolving Gold has put in a significant bottom and with the financing to close shortly, I don’t think we can get aggressive buying opportunities much under a dollar anymore.

Although it’s a client company and therefore I don’t publish regular buy and sell comments, Heatherdale Resources has charged out of the gate so any speculators looking for an entry point could raise their buy limit to $1.30. Source: (Agoracom)

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Nevsun Interview

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Nevsun Interview


Bisha

Bisha

ASMARA, Nov 19 (Reuters) – Canada’s Nevsun Resources pumped $21.7 million during the third quarter into its Eritrean Bisha project, the project’s general manager said on Thursday.

Set to become the nation’s first producing mine, Bisha’s 27 million tonnes of ore is believed to contain 1 million ounces of gold, 700-800 million pounds of copper and 1 billion pounds of zinc.

Apart from small-scale artisanal mining and some minor extraction by Italians during the colonial era, Eritrea’s mining potential is largely unexploited.

“We are by far the most advanced project in the country. November 2010 is the big drive for gold production,” Stanley Rogers, Bisha general manager, told Reuters.

In the last quarter we increased spending to a new high and doubled the number of people we have on site to 400. This is inevitable as we near production,” he said.

Actual expenditure on the Bisha project so far is $93 million, with a current budget of $250 million. It is on track and roughly half way through development,” Rogers said.

The Bisha mine, which lies to the west of the capital Asmara toward the border with Sudan, was the first mine to operate in Eritrea for 70 years, Rogers said.

“We were the first to build a relationship with the government, which paved the way for other companies to follow us,” he added.

The Eritrean government has a 40 percent stake in the project.

There are more than a dozen foreign companies exploring in Eritrea, with licenses held by groups from Australia, Canada, China, Libya and the United Kingdom.

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Fair Asmara 27°
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