Prairie Mining says near deal with Chinese banks to fund Polish mine
Oct 27,2017 JLKJ
Prairie Mining says near deal with Chinese banks to fund Polish mine
LONDON,
Oct 12 (Reuters) – London-listed Prairie Mining is in advanced talks with
Chinese lenders to finance its coking coal mine project in Poland, its chief
executive said.
Prairie, which is also listed in Australia,
is developing the Jan Karski mine in south eastern Poland and bought the
Debiensko mine last year with a view to becoming a supplier of cheap coking
coal in Europe where most steelmakers import their coal.
Upfront capital costs for the development of
the Jan Karski mine totals $630 million with Chinese lenders expected to
financing 85 percent of it, Chief Executive Ben Stoikovich told Reuters.
The company signed a deal with state-owned
China Coal No. 5 Construction Ltd in November last year for the construction of
the mine and to help secure Chinese funding.
"We want their technology, we want
their expertise and that is why we have partnered with them," Stoikovich
said, adding that China Coal had a good track record of developing mines
quickly and at competitive costs.
Chinese coking coal futures jumped over 160
percent in 2016 as years of oversupply came to an end but prices are mostly
flat this year.
Prairie's London-listed shares are up about
50 percent this year, adding to gains of around 200 percent in 2016. The price
was unchanged at 33 pence on Thursday.
The company is also embarking on a drilling
programme to inform its redevelopment plan for the newly acquired Debiensko
mine. The mine, which was mothballed in 2000, will be modernised to make it a
low cost producer at a cost of about $500 million.
"The mine tended to use old fashioned
mining methods," Stoikovich said. "We are going in with a very
Australian view – how do we automate this as much as possible."
In addition to tapping Chinese banks for
funding, Prairie could look at raising cash from London investors for further
development in future, Stoikovich said.