Tag Archive | "Nevsun Resources"

Nevsun Satus Update

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Nevsun Satus Update


Nevsun Resources Ltd. (TSX:NSU)(NYSE Amex:NSU) -

At the request of Market Surveillance of the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC), on behalf of the Toronto Stock Exchange, the Company wishes to advise that it is not aware of any material undisclosed development that would cause the significant upward movement of the Company’s share price.

The Company’s Bisha Project continues to be on target for plant commissioning in late 2010. We refer you to other recent news releases for information about the Bisha Project.

NEVSUN RESOURCES LTD.

Cliff T. Davis

President & Chief Executive Officer

For further information, please 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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Nevsun Pushes Towards Production in Eritrea

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Nevsun Pushes Towards Production in Eritrea


Nevsun Mine

Nevsun Mine

(The Northern Miner) – Nevsun pushes towards production in Eritrea Vancouver – Nevsun Resources (NSU-T) is now more than halfway through building Eritrea’s first mine, on schedule to commission the gold silver-copper-zinc operation before the end of the year.

The company began prestrip mining in March at Bisha, which sits 250 km west of the capital city Asmara. The prestrip is expected to take six month, as a hill adjacent to the deposit must be partially removed to make room for the open pit. Nevsun expects to start stockpiling ore early in the third quarter.

Installation of the semi-autogenous grinding (SAG) and ball mills should be finished by the middle of the year, structural steelwork is well advanced, and workers are laying down the impermeable liner of the tailings facility.

The Bisha mine will tap into a layered volcanogenic massive sulphide (VMS) deposit. The top layer, a goldrich gossan, contains 4 million proven and probable tonnes grading 7.99 grams gold per tonne and 32.85 grams silver per tonne. Those reserves will feed the 5,000-tonne-per-day mill for 2.5 years.

Next, the mill will churn through a 6.4-million tonne supergene layer grading 4.4% copper, 0.83 gram gold, and 35.98 grams silver for three years. Finally, the mine will reach the primary sulphide portion of the deposit, which currently contains 9.7 million proven and probable tonnes grading 7.21% zinc, 1.14% copper, 0.76 gram gold, and 54 grams silver.

The current mine plan only covers ten years of operation but Nevsun is confident Bisha will be active for much longer than that.

First, the pit was designed using very conservative metal prices, including US$400 per oz. gold. With prices currently more than double those used to build the pit shell, Nevsun is redesigning the pit to access the deeper, zinc-rich zone at the south end.

An area known as the Hangingwall Copper zone will likely add resources to the expanded pit, reducing the increase in strip ratio.

And Nevsun has completed some infill drilling at Harena, a satellite zone 9.5 km southwest of the Bisha deposit, and further work is planned to assess its potential for additional mill feed. In particular, the company is probing Harena’s southwest strike extension; the gravity and electromagnetic signatures that revealed mineralization at Harena continue to the southwest but have not yet been fully drill-tested. Nevsun also plans to drill other VMS targets on the Bisha property.

With Bisha’s cost requirements staying under control – in February Nevsun revised the original capex projection of US$250 up by just 4% to US$260 – the company has managed to retain a cash position of $29 million. And Nevsun expects Bisha to start producing positive cash flow in the first quarter of 2011.

Using metal prices of US$900 per oz. gold, US$2.25 per lb. copper, US75¢ per lb. zinc, and US$12 per oz. silver, Bisha should generate a 45% internal rate of return, enabling payback of development costs in 1.6 years.

Nevsun’s share price has spent April ranging between $2.85 and $3.20. The company has a 52-week share price range of $1.21 to $3.66 and has 193 million shares outstanding.

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How To Buy Gold Mining Stocks Right Now

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How To Buy Gold Mining Stocks Right Now


Irina Waqar, CEOWORLD - Gold is in a bull market because its core fundamentals are so outstanding. The gold price, like every other commodity or stock, is ultimately driven by supply and demand. For many years various central banks around the world, other countries’ equivalents of the US Federal Reserve, were willing to sell enough gold into the open markets to more than cover the huge structural supply deficit between mined supply and world demand.

Gold is a hot item for several reasons right now. For one thing, gold production is either flat or falling around the world. Inflation, flat supply and prevailing uncertainty in other investments is driving the price of gold ever higher.

The primary fundamental strategic reason to invest in gold at this particular moment in history is to ride the already in progress re-pricing of the Ancient Metal of Kings to a higher price level where supply and demand meet and offset one another and eliminate the gold shortage. Investing in gold is not like normal stock investments of investing in real estate for that matter. The real estate market is no where near as stable as the gold market and as such in no where near as reliable.

A must read: Top 5 Gold Stocks to buy and trade for 2010

Goldcorp (GG, News, Press Releases: 40.20 0.00 0.00%, yield: 0.45, cap: 29.501B, 1yr target: 49.54)- Goldcorp Inc. engages in the acquisition, exploration, development, and operation of precious metal properties in Canada, the United States, Mexico, and Central and South America. The company produces and sells gold, silver, and copper. It also holds interests in lead and zinc projects. The company was founded in 1954 and is headquartered in Vancouver, Canada.

Barrick Gold Corporation (ABX, News, Press Releases: 41.23 +0.28 +0.68%, yield: 0.98, cap: 40.591B, 1yr target: 50.29)- Barrick Gold Corporation primarily engages in the production and sale of gold, as well as related activities such as exploration and mine development worldwide. The company has a portfolio of 26 operating mines and a pipeline of projects located across various continents, including North America, South America, Australia, and Africa. It also produces copper and holds interests in oil and gas properties located in Canada.

Rubicon Minerals Corp. (RBY, News, Press Releases: 4.17 +0.09 +2.21%, yield: N/A, cap: 884.6M, 1yr target: 6.00)- Rubicon Minerals Corporation is a well-funded, top tier, gold exploration company deriving its strength from a hands-on management team with a track record of discovery. Rubicon’s focus is in highly prospective gold producing areas of North America. It controls over 65,000 acres of prime exploration ground in the prolific Red Lake gold camp of Ontario, Canada, which hosts Goldcorp’s high-grade, world class Red Lake Mine.

Royal Gold (RGLD, News, Press Releases: 51.3999 +0.4299 +0.84%, yield: 0.67, cap: 2.167B, 1yr target: 56.96)- Royal Gold, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, acquires and operates precious metals royalties. The company owns royalty interests in various production, development, evaluation, and exploration stage projects, which explore for gold, silver, copper, lead, and zinc metals. It holds royalty interests in properties located in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Africa, Argentina, Chile, Australia, the Russian Federation, Finland, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Colombia, Honduras, Nicaragua, the Republic of Guinea, and Central America.

Richmont Mines Inc. (RIC, News, Press Releases: 4.18 +0.01 +0.24%, yield: N/A, cap: 109.1M, 1yr target: 0.00)- Richmont Mines Inc.. The Group’s principal activity is to acquire, explore and develop mining properties, principally gold. The Group operates in many provinces: Quebec, Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador. The Group’s mining properties consist of Beaufor Mine and Island Gold Mine.

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX, News, Press Releases: 84.775 -1.275 -1.48%, yield: 0.17, cap: 36.501B, 1yr target: 103.07)- Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. engages in the exploration, mining, and production of mineral resources. It primarily explores for copper, gold, molybdenum, silver, and cobalt deposits. The company holds interests in various properties located in North and South America; Grasberg minerals district in Indonesia; and Tenke Fungurume minerals district in the Democratic Republic of Congo. As of December 31, 2009, its consolidated recoverable proven and probable reserves totaled 104.2 billion pounds of copper, 37.2 million ounces of gold, 2.59 billion pounds of molybdenum, 270.4 million ounces of silver, and 0.78 billion pounds of cobalt.

Nevsun Resources Ltd. (NSU, News, Press Releases: 3.12 0.00 0.00%, yield: N/A, cap: 601.0M, 1yr target: 1.30)- Nevsun Resources Ltd. was incorporated in British Columbia on July 19, 1965, originally under the name of Hogan Mines Ltd. Since inception, the Company has undergone four name changes until December 19, 1991 when it adopted the name of Nevsun Resources Ltd. Nevsun is focused on advancing its high grade gold, copper and zinc Bisha Project in Eritrea.

Newmont Mining (NEM, News, Press Releases: 53.97 +0.07 +0.13%, yield: 0.74, cap: 26.499B, 1yr target: 59.21)- Newmont Mining Corporation, together with its subsidiaries, engages in the acquisition, exploration, and production of gold and copper properties. Its assets or operations are located in the United States, Australia, Peru, Indonesia, Ghana, Canada, New Zealand, and Mexico. As of December 31, 2009, Newmont had proven and probable gold reserves of approximately 91.8 million equity ounces and an aggregate land position of approximately 33,400 square miles.

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Annual Report Extract: Nevsun Resources Liquidity and Obligations

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Annual Report Extract: Nevsun Resources Liquidity and Obligations


Nevsun Plant

Nevsun Eritrea

Nevsun ownership interest in the Bisha Project

On October 26, 2007 the Company and the State-owned Eritrean National Mining Corporation (ENAMCO) entered into an agreement to increase the State’s participation in the Bisha project. ENAMCO agreed to purchase at fair value a 30% paid participating interest to add to its 10% free participating interest provided by Eritrean mining legislation, resulting in a total State participation of 40% (30% contributing; 10% free carried).

The final amount to be paid by the State will be determined by an independent valuator and will be based on the net present value of 30% of the project, as evaluated upon the first shipment of gold from the mine. As a first provisional payment, ENAMCO paid the Company $25,000,000 during Q1 2008.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

The Company’s cash at December 31, 2009 was $29.1 million (December 31, 2008 – $40.7 million).

In January 2008 the Company received $25 million related to the provisional payment on acquisition by ENAMCO of its contributing interest in Bisha. ENAMCO continues to fund its share of all costs of the Bisha project and advanced $21.9 million to Bisha during 2009. The advances incurred $1,413,850 of interest, which was capitalized to property, plant and equipment. The interest and advances will be repaid out of operating cash flow, are not callable and have no specified repayment terms.

In May 2008 the Company received $20 million from the sale of its Mali assets. In July 2008 the Company also collected $3 million from PMI Gold Corporation related to the 2007 sale of its Ghana assets.

In September 2009 the Company received a $20 million loan from ENAMCO. In October 2009 it then raised $30.1 million by way of a non-brokered private placement of 11,500,000 common shares.

From these cash resources the Company used $83.8 million in its operating and investing activities during 2009 (2008 – $45.1 million). The Company has spent $122.4 million on the Bisha capital project and based on current estimates, as at December 31, 2009 required approximately $137.6 million to complete the project.

Subsequent to December 31, 2009 the Company raised a further $111.5 million by way of a non-brokered private placement of 52,000,000 common shares. The Company is confident the funds from this private placement, together with its existing cash and the ongoing one-third contribution by ENAMCO to Bisha will be sufficient to see the Bisha project through to cash positive operations.

In July 2009 the Company’s subsidiary, Bisha Mining Share Company (BMSC) had arranged debt facilities totalling $235 million for the Bisha project. The debt package was a mix of senior and subordinated facilities from a lending group comprised of seven institutions from Europe and South Africa.

In February 2010 the Company changed its approach to funding the Bisha project to ensure the project continued on schedule. While Bisha had already completed project debt agreements with European and South African lenders, these debt facilities had not yet been drawn and it became apparent that access to the debt in the required time frame was uncertain. The Company and ENAMCO concluded that the debt facilities were unreliable and inconclusive for the Bisha project.

As a result of the change in approach to funding the Bisha project, during Q1 2010 the Company expensed approximately $8 million of costs related to securing the debt financing that at December 31, 2009 were treated as deferred finance costs and were included in property, plant and equipment.

Contractual Obligations

As of December 31, 2009 the Company had the following contractual obligations:

Nevsuntable

-

The Company also has an environmental bond to cover remediation liabilities for Bisha in the amount of $2,000,000 at a cost of 1% per annum.

The Company has not entered into any specialized financial agreements to minimize its commodity risk, investment risk or currency risk. There are no off-balance sheet arrangements, except for the purchase price adjustment on the disposition of the 30% contributing interest in Bisha, acquired by ENAMCO (the Eritrean State mining company). Refer to note 10(a) of the annual consolidated financial statements for a description of the purchase price adjustment with ENAMCO.

Also refer to note 4 of the annual consolidated financial statements for a description of the Company’s financial instruments and risk management.

Financial Report 2009: http://www.nevsun.com/docs/financials/1209_NSU_MD&A_Final.pdf

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Nevsun Resources Financial Results 2009

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Nevsun Resources Financial Results 2009


Nevsun Resources

Nevsun Resources

Nevsun Resources Ltd. (TSX:NSU / NYSE Amex:NSU) is pleased to announce its recent financial position and its annual results for 2009. All amounts are expressed in United States dollars.

The Company’s cash position at the end of March 2010 is approximately $118 million.

For the year ended December 31, 2009 the Company has reported a loss of $5.5 million. The results compare to 2008 when the Company reported a loss of $5.7 million, including $2.0 million of income from discontinued operations.

Included in the Company’s MD&A are management’s report on the Company’s Bisha Project construction progress, as well as economics and cash flows for the project. The project is now over 50% complete and commissioning is expected to commence in late 2010. Photographs of the construction progress can be found at www.nevsun.com/properties/photo_gallery.

Complete details of the 2009 financial statements and management’s discussion and analysis can be found on the Nevsun website at www.nevsun.com as well as on Sedar at www.sedar.com and EDGAR at http://www.sec.gov/edgar/searchedgar/webusers.htm.

Forward Looking Statements:

The above contains forward-looking statements concerning cash position, construction progress and project economics. 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

President & Chief Executive Officer

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African Barrick Gold’s London Listing on Friday in Context

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African Barrick Gold’s London Listing on Friday in Context


By Barry Sergeant – Mineweb

JOHANNESBURG - Global Tier II gold miner African Barrick is set to list in London on Friday with the ticker symbol “ABG”, amid what specialists in the mining sector have described as a “vacuum” in the London space, long occupied by Randgold Resources, and to some extent by Petropavlovsk, with Russian interests, and more than just a gold play.

Given the underlying metrics, investors in London-listed precious metal stocks have also shown a ferocious appetite for Fresnillo, the Mexican miner which advertises itself as No 1 in global primary silver production. Given the demonstrable premium commanded by so many listed precious metal stocks listed around the world, it can be argued that mining the markets makes at least as much sense as all the bother, sweat and capital expended on actually mining.

Toronto-based Barrick, the world’s biggest gold producer, by value and output, is spinning off 25% of African Barrick, which mines at four addresses in Tanzania. African Barrick is currently marketing a 100m share offering out of 404m post initial public offering (IPO) capital, at GBP 5.50 to GBP 6.50 a share, for a potential market valuation range of USD 3.5 to 3.9bn.

“It’s amazing to us” says one London-based sales-trader, “that it has taken so long for a serious gold company to put up an alternative for European investors”.

African Barrick broker JPMorgan – also the name behind the Fresnillo listing early in 2008 – has Randgold Resources at two times net present value (NPV), Red Back

(another African miner) at 1.8 times, Petropavlovsk at 1.3 times, and African Barrick pitched, for now, at about 1.5 times, for about 800,000 ounces of gold production a year, increasing to a million ounces. Petropavlovsk only in 2009 merged with an iron ore outfit, and is now the subject of speculation that it could unbundle, given the significant global heave towards iron ore stocks.

Barrick could raise USD 875m to 975m from the African Barrick listing, and will also then have “acquisition currency” via the 75% it retains in African Barrick which, in itself, would have its own stock as acquisition currency after it lists. Possible targets for any predatory miner include Canada-listed Centamin Egypt, a long life 7m ounce resource Egyptian producer, with attributable 100,000 ounces annual production in 2011 increasing to 150,000 ounces, with an underground expansion, by 2012. Centamin trades at an estimated 1.5 times NAV, applying a 6% discount rate.

Canada-listed Banro, a DRC gold developer with a target 100,000 ounces of annual production by the end of 2011, is seen as modest value, with its 11m ounce resource. Banro is seen as the cheapest significant gold resource in Africa, trading at around USD 12.00 an ounce, compared to Moto’s takeover metric of USD 30.00 an ounce.

Moto, which holds a substantial resource in the north eastern DRC, was taken over jointly during 2009 by Randgold Resources and global gold major AngloGold Ashanti, for what turned out to be CAD 557m. There will be great interest in the upcoming mine build, given that the only significant mining investments in the country in the modern era have been far to the south, in southern Katanga Province. The Moto deposits, since renamed Kibali, were once mined, fairly lightly, by one-time Belgian colonizers.

For ardent gold stock specialists, activity in Africa has become more than of passing interest, given around 100 listed names that are active on the continent, and also sometimes elsewhere. Beyond the majors, such as Newmont, with significant interests in West Africa, about 20 or so stocks specialising in gold on the continent receive attention from professional investment analysts.

Among stocks that can be regarded as above-interesting, there is Australia-listed Mineral Deposits, which produced 160,000 ounces of gold in 2009 from its Sabodala gold mine in Senegal. The company has indicated production rising to 200,000 ounces a year by 2012, financed by internal cashflow and modest debt. The company is a potential consolidation play with neighbouring Oromin, and also Bassari Resources.

Canada-listed Nevsun Resources has for years been involved in making it above developer status, and is now doing that with its fully financed 200,000 ounces of gold a year profile kicking off around the end of the year from what some have described as its “stunning” Bisha Project, in Eritrea.

Very high grade gold oxides could produce cash flow of as much as USD 170m next year, before Bisha becomes a high grade open pit mine by 2014, featuring copper and also zinc, with silver, to boot. What kind of miner Nevsun would then be is a matter for some discussion, but, for now, the gold classification sticks.

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Tuesday’s Market Movers: Nevsun Resources

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Tuesday’s Market Movers: Nevsun Resources


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Continued Buying Pressure in Shares of Nevsun Resources

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Continued Buying Pressure in Shares of Nevsun Resources


SmarTrend identified an Uptrend for Nevsun Resources (AMEX:NSU) on February 10, 2010 at $2.40. In approximately 1 month, Nevsun Resources has returned 12.1% as of today’s recent price of $2.69.

Nevsun Resources is currently above its 50-day moving average of $2.37 and above its 200-day moving average of $2.19. Look for these moving averages to climb to confirm the company’s upward momentum.

SmarTrend will continue to scan these moving averages and a number of other proprietary indicators for any shifts in the trajectory of Nevsun Resources shares. Source(mysmartrend)

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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:

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hole #       From (m)  To (m)  Length (m)  Au (g/t) Ag (g/t)  Cu (%)  Zn (%)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-029          61.50   68.50        7.00      2.71    51.86    1.01    0.14
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
and           148.75  153.00        4.25      0.43    12.01    0.54    2.34
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-031          20.50   44.90       24.40      1.63     8.90    0.06    0.68
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.          30.00   35.75        5.75      3.31    10.56    0.03    0.47
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.          38.00   43.90        5.90      2.26    10.25    0.05    0.18
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-032          62.57  100.00       37.43      0.13     9.72    0.37    3.51
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.          68.00   75.00        7.00      0.11     6.43    0.13    4.21
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.          81.00   99.00       18.00      0.13     8.67    0.48    4.58
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-033         105.70  137.70       32.00      0.15    11.19    0.33    5.42
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.         106.70  114.70        8.00      0.12    18.88    0.16    7.91
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.         127.70  132.70        5.00      0.06     3.20    0.21    6.59
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-034         106.57  134.00       27.43      0.69    39.62    0.74    4.93
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.         110.50  121.40       10.90      0.23    19.38    0.52    6.38
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.         124.80  128.80        4.00      0.10     7.50    0.27    8.32
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
and            42.00   73.00       31.00      2.41    12.71    0.05    0.06
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.          49.50   57.00        7.50      3.71     4.60    0.02    0.05
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.          58.50   64.00        5.50      4.93     4.73    0.01    0.04
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.          67.00   71.50        4.50      3.47    12.67    0.16    0.04
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-038         150.30  162.60       12.30      0.50    30.91    1.13    3.85
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.         150.30  155.30        5.00      0.28    31.40    0.78    8.45
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-040          74.50   94.20       19.70      0.41    23.40    0.65    5.04
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.          75.30   83.50        8.20      0.57    34.21    0.97    8.58
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.          83.50   88.20        4.70      0.92    39.96    0.99    5.60
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-041         121.00  124.00        3.00      0.19    27.00    0.59    4.51
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
and           145.20  147.00        1.80      0.54    26.50    0.68    3.26
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-042         167.25  187.00       19.75      0.85    37.20    0.72    3.82
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.         167.25  172.00        4.75      0.35    57.40    1.11    5.81
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incl.         172.00  180.00        8.00      0.29    15.00    0.23    5.75
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H-043         149.55  160.00       10.45      0.38    19.04    0.51    4.79
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

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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