Chris Jones
Analyst · Crystal Equity Research. Please go ahead
Thanks, Jeff. And on to Slide 7, a little bit about our core values. We are based entirely upon continuous improvement and the safety of each other, our environment, our assets, the communities where we work and our reputation. Continuous improvement in cost, which is effective and efficient use of our shareholders assets focused on first quartile cost performance and integrity, meeting the highest level of performance every day, improving our processes and conservative promises well-kept. On to Slide 8. We are the owners of the leading graphite development property in the United States, and we developed a new environmentally sustainable process for purifying graphite and we've applied for a U.S. patent. Our Pilot Program is operated since the fourth quarter of 2020 and has provided materials in quantity for evaluation and valuable information for our definitive feasibility study presently underway and scheduled for completion at mid-year. On Slide 9, Pilot program results. We’ve purified almost 17,000 kilograms of material. This is the graphite material needed for battery graphite production. We have produced almost 2,000 kilograms of spherical purified graphite that includes refines we’ve generated as well. On Slide 10, we've produced 2,200 kilograms of the precursor material for making our DEXDG product. And our purified micronized graphite run begins on the 22nd of this month and should take less than two weeks. On Slide 11. Our pilot program has provided key inputs for the definitive feasibility study that was kicked off today. Our pilot program plans include we expect to run into quarter two of this year. And we expect to have more than 10,000 kilograms of products expected for further testing by Westwater and prospective customers. On Slide 12, we've engaged Samuel Engineering to lead a group of engineering contractors in the U.S. and Germany to complete a definitive feasibility study for our Coosa Project's commercial production facility. We expect this study to be completed mid-year with a plus or minus 15% estimate of capital costs and operating expenses. On Slide 13. Our key attributes for the project include proprietary technology, as we spoke about, for converting our graphite concentrate to a high purity product for battery manufacturers. And once again, we've applied for a patent with the U.S. Patent Office. The cost advantage, certainly on transportation here within the United States, but also with regard to the processing we intend to use as we go forward. And remember that we have a vanadium discovery on this particular property that has potential to improve project economics. And a sustainability effort that includes this environmentally sustainable process and remember that our graphite can save over 200,000 tons per year of CO2 emissions using our CSPG product in electric vehicles. On slide 14, a little bit of a refresher about the battery markets. We know about the transportation market. We know that adoption rates of electric vehicles have increased from 2% to now 4% of all cars sold in the United States. We expect a 23% annual growth rate over the next 10 years and the use of these batteries and electric vehicles and the graphite that goes into them. And this is predominantly lithium-ion batteries. Other energy storage systems, grid storage, important as we are holding this call now, where sections of the country are under rolling blackouts to preserve the ability to have electricity delivered to homes. These energy systems have the potential to minimize or eliminate those rolling blackouts in times of crisis. We expect an 11% growth rate over these next 10-years. And these are the enabling technologies for wind and solar power as well. In consumer electronics, like the phone in your hand or the laptop on your desk, we expect this is a large market by the way and we expect a 3% compounded annual growth rate in this well-established value chain. In addition to that specialty batteries for defense, aerospace, medical devices and et cetera represent another growth platform for our products. On Slide 15, graphite is a major component of all batteries, not just the lithium-ion batteries, where we are only 25% of the weight of that battery, flashlight batteries, non-rechargeable lithium batteries, lead acid batteries like those in the 96% of cars that are not electric on the roads right now, they all use graphite. And graphite has been defined by the United States government as critical to the United States security and prosperity to presidential orders continuing on through this administration as well. On Slide number 16, the Coosa Graphite Project provides key advantages. It's a near term source of domestic U.S. battery-grade graphite, customer qualification is underway. A 1-ton bulk sample order has been announced previously to this call. Westwater’s graphite will be produced using environmentally sustainable processes right here in the United States and we serve all battery markets. And once again, our vanadium discovery has a chance to contribute revenues, exploration for vanadium and further knowledge on our graphite deposit in Alabama, is beginning in the second quarter of 2021. On to Slide 17, our three products once again, ultra-PMG, this is the material, it's a conductivity enhancer, and it goes into all types of batteries. The largest market, of course, is lead acid, our ULTRA- DEXDG product is an improved version of the purified micronized graphite, and it goes into the very same markets as a conductivity enhancer with a higher performance level. And our ULTRA-CSPG, that's the stuff that makes a lithium-ion battery work, it is anode material. And if our CSPG is used in vehicles, we stand to save over 200,000 metric tons of CO2 emissions per year. On Slide 18, we talk about our proprietary purification technology. It has a more sustainable footprint than those technologies currently used in China where most graphite for lithium-ion battery comes from and were environmentally damaging and expensive to manage hydrochloric acid is used. Our process yields prophetic carbon grade of 99.95% and above. And that's a three-step process that allows for flexible feedstock with consistent performance. It consists of three process steps including caustic roasting of the graphite concentrate, acid leaching of the roasted sample, and thermal treatment of that sample as a final finishing. On Slide 19, we've raised a portion of the funding we need to construct the full-scale facility. As Jeff mentioned, we have over $100 million in our Treasury right now. More than enough money to fund our basic operations for the next couple of years and to partially fund our construction of the production facility under design in the feasibility study now. Other funding can come from loans, loan guarantees, direct equity investments by others or a joint venture and we're exploring all three. On Slide 20, business plan for the Coosa Graphite is basically made up of a project plan led by our feasibility study, and which is led by Samuel Engineering. Exploration drilling is expected to begin in Q2 for vanadium and further work on the graphite deposit definition. Full scale production is expected from purchase feedstock in 2022 producing battery-grade graphite. And we expect to begin mining the Coosa Graphite deposit in Alabama beginning in 2028. On Slide 20 -- I'm sorry on Slide 21. Our present estimate of economics includes a pretax NPV of $603 million for the project, an internal rate of return of 36%. Initial CapEx estimated from our PEA at $118 million with the plant commissioned once again in 2022 and revenues beginning in 2023. On Slide 22, a visual of our project plan for your further ratification. On Slide 23, we talk about the team. As Jeff told you, we've added Jay Wago, our VP of Marketing and Sales over the past several months to bolster our sales effort, and to begin to put products in the hands of our prospective customers. You already know about John Lawrence, our General Counsel and Corporate Secretary with more than 30 years of law and licensing across the nuclear fuel cycle. Cevat Er, our VP Technical Services, he joined in 2015, but he's got decades of experience taking projects from studying to feasibility to production. Dain McCoig on this call, our VP Operations, he joined us in 2004, and has a strong background in processing technology and project management. And we're happy to have him heading up our operations in Alabama. And Jeff Vigil, you've heard from him earlier on the call. He's got more than 40 years of financial experience in mining, manufacturing, and he leads our financial effort at present. And of course, me, I've been in the business for 40 years in different aspects of mining, and some manufacturing and project development work. And I'm happy to lead this high-power team. On Slide 24. Experience matters. Energy, minerals exploration and development require discipline and diligent capital stewardship. We've restructured and recapitalized the company positioning Westwater as a green energy materials company with a laser focus on battery-grade graphite products. We've got an experienced management team with a demonstrated history in finance, in green energy development from concept to production. And we've executed a proactive M&A program, including the sale of our non-core uranium properties to redeploy capital, expanding our resource base into green energy materials. On slide 25, well why Westwater is an investment? We have a battery-grade graphite development business with strong upside potential. Graphite has been designated a critical mineral by the United States government. We've got a proven management team with experience and energy minerals development and financial management, and you should for the year 2021, expect the following catalysts. Pilot plan operational results, Coosa exploration results, feasibility study results, and Coosa Graphite project development and project milestone achievement. With that, I'd like to open it up for questions. Arial?