logo
Optimised Toro Energy scoping study powers up WA uranium economics

Optimised Toro Energy scoping study powers up WA uranium economics

West Australian28-05-2025
Toro Energy has supercharged the project financials for its Lake Maitland uranium project near Wiluna in Western Australia, unveiling an updated scoping study forecasting a low-cost, long-life mining operation.
The latest numbers paint an encouraging picture for a standalone operation, improving its historic net present value (NPV) by 9 per cent to a hefty $908 million while slashing the project's payback period to 1.5 years.
The updated study was driven by a refined resource estimate and re-optimised pit design, allowing for a robust internal rate of return of 56 per cent on an estimated capital expenditure of $298M.
The study was completed by mining experts at SRK Consulting and metallurgical specialists Strategic Metallurgy to leverage a strong uranium price of US$85 (A$130) per pound and a vanadium price of US$5.67 per pound.
The assumptions align with what the company believes is a bullish projected uranium market, buoyed by supply shortages, geopolitical tensions and growing demands for clean nuclear energy.
Toro says its Lake Maitland project is forecast to produce 1.3 million pounds (Mlbs) of uranium and 0.75Mlbs of vanadium annually during a 16.3-year mine life, totalling a substantial 22Mlbs of uranium and 12.3Mlbs of vanadium.
The company says its operating costs are a standout, with C1 cash costs pegged at just US$15.46 per pound of uranium in the first five years, rising to US$22.67 over the life of mine. The all-in sustaining costs are equally competitive at US$20.68 per pound initially and US$28.37 over the life of the mine.
Total EBITDA is projected at a huge $2.33 billion, with undiscounted pre-tax cash flows of $1.96B, averaging $120M annually.
The study builds on a re-estimated resource at Lake Maitland of 33.3Mt grading 403 parts per million (ppm) uranium oxide for 29.6Mlbs contained uranium and 50Mt at 285ppm vanadium oxide for 31.4Mlbs contained vanadium.
The shallow hosted, clay-dominated resource contains both uranium and vanadium, with a strong 83 per cent correlation between the two, offering a strategic by-product bonus.
Toro's mining plan is straightforward, using conventional open-pit truck-and-shovel methods with minimal drill-and-blast due to the unconsolidated clay host. The high-grade core will be mined first to maximise early cash flows.
The company says it is confident it can secure traditional debt and equity financing thanks to its partnership with Japanese giants JAURD and ITOCHU, which could earn a 35 per cent stake in Lake Maitland for $60M upon a positive definitive feasibility study.
Lake Maitland's low costs and high margins make it stand out in a tightening market, should ancient regulations around uranium mining in WA ever be lifted.
With the scoping study complete and feasibility work on the horizon, Toro is charging towards project funding as it navigates political winds and, no doubt, hoping its Lake Maitland can cornerstone WA's uranium revival.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Asahi Kasei-owned builder NEX expands into land development
Asahi Kasei-owned builder NEX expands into land development

AU Financial Review

timean hour ago

  • AU Financial Review

Asahi Kasei-owned builder NEX expands into land development

Asahi Kasei Homes, which already owns one of the largest home builders in NSW in NEX Building Group, is taking advantage of lower borrowing costs in its home market of Japan to expand into land development in Australia. The Japanese home builder, part of Tokyo-listed Asahi Kasei Corporation, aims to develop sites initially with as few as 100 lots a year and boost that to a yearly 350-500 lots for low-and medium-density homes over the next decade, the company said.

Block judge Marty Fox teases US expansion and new reality show
Block judge Marty Fox teases US expansion and new reality show

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Block judge Marty Fox teases US expansion and new reality show

The Block judge Marty Fox has revealed plans to take Whitefox global, and hinted at a future reality series of his own. Fox, who founded Whitefox in 2017, travelled to the US last month to record an episode of his With The Fox podcast with celebrity real estate agent Ryan Serhant, known globally for his roles in Million Dollar Listing and Netflix's Owning Manhattan. 'To be sitting with the most well known agent on the planet for my podcast was a great insight for our listeners', Fox told the Herald Sun. 'He's broken into the most competitive market in the world, built a globally recognised brand from scratch, and turned over eye-watering numbers.' Serhant recently confirmed he had closed the biggest deal of his career — a nearly $200m transaction — and previously sold Florida's most expensive home for just under $140m. His client list has reportedly included celebrities, tech billionaires, royalty, and high-net-worth international buyers. Fox confirmed to the Herald Sun that Whitefox is now tracking toward $2.5bn-$3bn in annual sales, with offices set to open in London and Dubai within 12 months. A US research trip is scheduled for late 2026, and Fox said he and his family would move to Europe for 12 months from June 2027 to support the international rollout. 'It's 100 per cent happening' he said. 'Once we land in the US, it's game on.' Fox said the company's ambition is to become the first international, privately owned, non-franchised boutique luxury real estate brand, and confirmed he's already been approached about launching a Whitefox reality series. 'Once Whitefox is operating globally, the stories, the people, the brand itself, it's tailor-made for storytelling on screen,' he said. 'We've had multiple approaches.' During the podcast, Serhant admitted that leading a global company had taken a personal toll. 'I don't think the brain damage is worth the enterprise value for starting your own company,' he said. Fox said people see the cars, the fashion and the big results, but what they don't see is the emotional weight we carry for our clients. 'Real estate isn't just deals. It's divorce, death, financial hardship, relocation, heartbreak,' he said. 'And we need to help client's navigate these high pressure situations. The pair connected over similar childhoods, both moved schools more than seven times, and their shared belief in brand storytelling. Fox said his background in marketing helped shape Whitefox cinematic visual language from day one. 'We launched Whitefox in 2017, about two years before Ryan launched Serhant,' he said. Back in Australia, Fox has returned to screens for The Block 2025 — his third season as judge — filmed this year in Daylesford. He said the new format, with homes built from scratch, marked a major shift for the long-running renovation series. 'This year is the most exciting, true competition format The Block has ever done,' Fox said. 'For the first time, it's a completely level playing field. Contestants have to dig deep and problem-solve every week.' Fox told the Herald Sun his direct judging style remains unchanged from previous seasons. 'I give feedback in black and white. It's direct, but always practical. The contestants really appreciate that,' he said. 'They're there to make as much profit as possible, so I judge through the lens of delivering a product to market.' As Whitefox expands into the US, and with his growing media profile, Fox hasn't ruled out the possibility of judging a future international version of The Block or leading a reality series of his own, with him at the helm. Asked about standout auction moments, Fox named his 2020 Block auction for Harry and Tash, watched by more than two million people during Covid lockdown, and the agency's first-ever street auction in Perth. 'It 40 degrees, I was in shorts, and we had 120 people surrounding us,' Fox said. 'It went hundreds of thousands over reserve, and I knew right then, Whitefox had landed in Perth.' That auction helped spark Whitefox's national expansion, which now includes 15 company-owned offices across Australia and New Zealand. 'Melbourne, Gold Coast, Brisbane, Adelaide, and now we're about to open our second Perth office,' he said. The With The Fox episode featuring Ryan Serhant drops later this week.

Albanese eases Chinese fears over east coast gas reservation
Albanese eases Chinese fears over east coast gas reservation

AU Financial Review

time11 hours ago

  • AU Financial Review

Albanese eases Chinese fears over east coast gas reservation

BEIJING : Anthony Albanese has reassured Chinese gas companies that supply contracts won't be cancelled should the government establish an east coast gas reservation, but ruled out watering down foreign investment rules despite criticism from Beijing. Chinese fears over a potential threat to shipments of liquefied natural gas echo similar concerns from the Japanese government and industry about the mooted gas reservation and emerged when the prime minister met senior Chinese leaders including President Xi Jinping in Beijing on Tuesday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store