 |
| |

Harry Barr Puts Pacific North
West Capital At The Forefront Of
PGM Exploration In Canada
By Charles Wyatt
www.Minesite.com
Hardly
surprising that Canadian listed
Pacific North West Capital
has decided to switch its focus
back onto platinum group metals.
Recently it appeared that nickel
might take up the running, but
now that platinum has broken
through the US$2,000 per ounce
barrier and palladium is pushing
up towards US$500 per ounce -
both a long way north of where
they were in 2005 and 2006 -
there is not much choice.
Ironically, Anglo
Platinum is the company's joint
venture partner at the River
Valley project near Sudbury in
Ontario and poor old Anglo
Platinum has just had to
announce that it will lose
around 150,000 ounces of
platinum production this year
due to power shortages in South
Africa. As this amounts to 2.25
per cent of total world
production it is little wonder
that the metal price has gone
into orbit. Not that this trend
will be without setbacks. There
was evidence of profit taking
earlier in the week, while the
imposition of clearing margin
deposits by the Tokyo Commodity
Exchange after an increase in
price volatility, is also taking
a toll.
Metals prices have to be viewed
over a year or two to discern
underlying trends, so it is
interesting to read Rio Tinto's
views, particularly those
pertaining to North America.
Vivek Tulpulé, its chief
economist, writes, "it is
arguable that even as negative
sentiment in relation to the US
economy and credit markets has
continued to increase in 2008,
the market's perceptions about
the fundamentals in most
resource markets do not appear
to have been much affected." In
other words the outlook is still
bullish as the US becomes
decoupled from the rest of the
world. It's also worth bearing
in mind that the power problems
in South Africa will not be
cured in a month or two, or even
a year or two. A historic lack
of government support and
funding means that it will take
ten years or more to bring that
country's power industry up to
scratch.
Anglo Platinum will therefore be
redoubling its efforts to find
more new sources of platinum
group metals, and, as a tried
and tested partner
Pacific North West Capital
is in a strong position to take
advantage. The two companies
have been working together since
2000. At that time Pacific North
West was exploring Agnew Lake,
said to be the best preserved of
the four large intrusions which
comprise the East Bull/River
Valley Suite. Agnew Lake is some
60 kilometres west of Sudbury in
Ontario, whereas the other key
property, River Valley, is a
similar distance to the north
east. Agnew Lake covers most of
the layered Shakespeare-Dunlop
mafic intrusion, which is of
similar age and composition to
that of the River Valley layered
intrusion. These days River
Valley is making most of the
running. The two partners
operate on a 50:50 basis, but
Anglo Platinum can take its
interest up to 60 per cent by
taking the project to
feasibility and to 65 per cent
by taking it to production.
According to Pacific North
West's president Harry Barr, a
total of US$22 million has been
spent on the River Valley
project by Anglo Platinum - so
it's not playing games. As a
result of all this work the
current resource in the
indicated and inferred
categories amounts to 30.5
million tonnes containing
953,900 ounces palladium at an
average grade of 0.97grammes per
tonne, 325,500 ounces platinum
at 0.34 grammes per tonne, and
59,500 ounces of gold at 0.061
grammes pert tonne. Quite
modest and not very high grade,
but it still has a lot going for
it when compared with the
Bushveld Complex. Before it was
taken over by Impala in a £297m
deal last year, Aim-traded
African Platinum had resources
of around 100 million ounces of
platinum group metals, but
production was a big ask,
entailing sinking twin shafts
1,300 metres to intercept the
UG2 reef.
River Valley is a very different
proposition. Some high grade
zones have already been
established and one of the tasks
to be carried out this year,
according to Harry Barr, is to
decide whether these zones can
be mined efficiently and whether
it would be economically viable
to transport the ore direct to a
smelter in Sudbury. Cash flow
would transform investor
perception of the company, and
Harry points out that both North
American Palladium and
Stillwater - the only platinum
group metals producers in North
America at present - have seen
their shares double in recent
weeks as metals prices advanced.
Two other priorities for 2008
will be to carry out some deeper
drilling as far down as 500
metres to test for increasing
grade, as well as carrying out
more aggressive infill drilling
across the property. There is a
possibility that the
mineralization currently
identified may just be the near
surface expression of something
many times bigger with higher
grades and different styles of
mineralization.
Mention of Stillwater is
appropriate as Pacific North
West also has a joint venture
with that company at the
Goodnews Bay platinum project in
Alaska. In the past this area
has had a history of placer
production, and the partners are
now seeking the source rock by
drilling targets identified in
2007. Stillwater is due to spend
US$4 million by 2010 to earn a
50 per cent interest and can go
up to 65 per cent if it arranges
finances to take the project
into production.
But this isn't the sum total of
Pacific North West's involvement
in platinum group
Metals Exploration. It
is also looking for projects
elsewhere in Alaska and has
recently acquired one on the
Coldwell Complex, near Marathon
in northern Ontario, on the
largest composite alkaline
intrusive complex in North
America, a complex which has
much in common geologically with
the Bushveld Complex in South
Africa. Last, but not least is
the joint venture agreement with
SOQUEM to research platinum
properties in Quebec.
Harry Barr's strategy to place
his company at the forefront of
platinum group
Metals Exploration in
North America is therefore
paying off - at an ideal moment.
This is true also from a
personal viewpoint as he has
shed his management
responsibilities at
CanAlaska Uranium,
Freegold Ventures and
El Nino Ventures over
recent months, and is now free
to concentrate on the platinum
metals which have long been
close to his heart. Pacific
North West may be the last play
in which the great promoter
appears, but it could be the one
for which he will be remembered.
|
|
|
For further
information, please visit
www.pfncapital.com or call Toll free
1.800.667.1870
|
|
Not to be
construed as an offer to buy or sell
securities of Pacific North West Capital
Corp. |
CALLING ALL
ADVERTISERS TARGET YOUR AUDIENCE ..
through Banner Ads and/or Hot Links with CANADIAN MINING NEWS
Online!
HOME

|