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Posted: 2024-07-04 04:38:37

He said Latitude had considered going down the initial public offering (IPO) path, but Wellman’s experience and DiscovEx’s Sylvania copper-gold asset and joint venture (JV) holdings with Carnaby Resources – and that company’s Greater Duchess project in Queensland – made the partnership a more attractive proposition.

Latitude 66 managing director Grant Coyle said: “There are some definite synergies there and when you wrap all those up, we saw the value we could get with DiscovEx and some near-term value that is easier to unlock when you’re a bigger company. The diversification was important, too, because you never want to be a sole-asset exploration company.”

The new entity’s primary asset is its K-North deposits (K1, K2 and K3) featuring a mineral resource of some 650,000 ounces of gold going at an impressive grade of 2.7 grams per tonne and 5800 tonnes of cobalt reading an economic 0.08 per cent.

Latitude 66 is looking to make its KSB cobalt project in Finland a big player in the European Union.

Latitude 66 is looking to make its KSB cobalt project in Finland a big player in the European Union.

Coyle says the company’s near-term focus is on expanding the resource to more than 1 million ounces to underpin the project development he believes can be achieved within the next year through exploration of highly-prospective targets along strike and down-dip.

And the KSB project has several more tentacles, with additional exploration discoveries all the way down to K13 at its K-south region, just 15km away. Historic downhole EM and airborne magnetics have proven successful at the project as gold and cobalt discoveries have been associated with various sulphides that light up like a Christmas tree in those types of surveys.

Latitude is expecting assays imminently from drilling at its K9 prospect in the south. It has also completed downhole EM testing at the targets, which is now under review for follow-up drilling.

Resource expansion campaigns at K-North are ongoing and are expected to be wrapped up shortly.

The company seems to have its hands full with its new Finnish KSB project and the multiple drilling programs and a prefeasibility (PFS) study that are all planned for this year. And while its exploration drilling programs also continue to roll out at Sylvania, it will be keeping a close watch on Carnaby’s aggressive campaign at Greater Duchess.

Just this morning, Carnaby unveiled an exploration update that highlights further potential at the operation for the JV. Carnaby managing director Rob Watkins said fresh results from targeted reconnaissance mapping and rock chip and soil sampling highlighted several new and “highly-significant” targets that will form the basis of first-pass geophysical and exploration drilling programs in the second half of this year.

In all, the future looks to be a promising, yet hectic one for the new-look Latitude 66, which now has bait on its hooks ready to be plunged into the Finnish fish barrel.

And with the European Union outlining an ambitious new mission to have 10 per cent of its annual critical minerals needs mined domestically by 2030, the KSB project – and its cobalt that is essential for electric vehicles (EVs) – could well take on a greater importance.

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