Botswana gov’t eyes Lucara’s diamonds

Lucara Diamond recovered this 1,111-carat diamond, the second largest in history, at its Karowe Mine in Botswana. Photo courtesy Lucara Diamnond Corp.

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By Peter Kennedy
(with files from the Botswana Gazette)

Lucara Diamond Corp. [LUC-TSX; LUCRF-OTC] is attracting the attention of the government of Botswana, which has expressed an interest in taking an equity stake in the company, according to published reports.

“I have proposed….Lucara allow [the] government to invest in the company,” President Mokgweetsi Masisi told the Botswana Gazette. “As a country, we would benefit from such value,” he said.

According a report that is also posted in a Scotiabank investment newsletter, Masisi and Lucara CEO Eira Thomas met for a private discussion at a trade show in Las Vegas earlier this month. It was there that the President raised the idea, Scotiabank said in its report. While Masisi did not reveal how much the government intended to invest, he mentioned that he would discuss the possibility with his cabinet and all relevant authorities.

Lucara shares spiked up to $1.63 on June 24, 2019, from $1.54 on June 21, 2019, but were trading at $1.57 on Tuesday June 25 after inching up 0.64% or $0.01 late in the session.

News of Botswana’s interest comes after Lucara miners recently recovered a 127-carat top-white gem diamond from the company’s 100%-owned Karowe diamond mine in Botswana.

Since mining began at Karowe in 2012, a total of 129 diamonds in excess of 100 carats have been recovered, 33 in 2018 alone. That tally includes 12 diamonds larger than 300 carats in size, of which five were recovered in 2018. In addition, Lucara has sold 180 diamonds worth over $1 million each and 10 diamonds have been sold for in excess of $10 million each.

Shares of Lucara Diamond soared in November, 2015, after the Vancouver-based company said it had recovered a 1,111-carat, gem quality stone, named the Lesedi La Rona or “Our Light.”

The stone was described at the time as being is only slightly smaller than a tennis ball and the largest ever to be recovered from Botswana. It ranked as the second largest gem-quality stone to be recovered in the past 100 years.

“The recovery of the latest, high-value, top white 127-carat diamond attests to the remarkable nature of the Karowe orebody, which has consistently delivered large, high-value diamonds throughout its history,” Thomas said recently.

In 2018, Lucara recovered a record number of specials (diamonds over 10.8 carats in size), making it a banner year for the company.  In 2019, Thomas said mining will be largely focused on the high-value south lobe, including contributions from the newly refined EMPKS unit, which is now understood to be the source of both the historic Lesedi la Rona and the 813-carat Constellation, which sold for a record US$63.1 million.

The current mine plan is based on probable reserves from surface to a depth of 324 metres.

The Karowe diamond mine currently boasts open-pit reserves of 2.6 million carats extending out to 2026 and is in the process of completing a feasibility study that could expand mining underground to 2036 and beyond, Thomas said.

Lucara is a member of the Lundin group of companies. “At Lucara we produce close to half of all the diamonds weighing over 100 carats in the world,” said Chairman Lukas Lundin has said. “We should definitely see more (large stones) come out,” he said.

Karowe exceeded expectations by producing 366,086 carats in 2018 from 2.6 million tonnes of processed ore.

The diamonds are sold through regularly scheduled tenders throughout the year.

Karowe is a state-of-the-art operation, consisting of an open pit mine, crushers, AG mill and XRT, DMS and XRF recovery plant.


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