
Antonio (Resource Talks)
13.6K posts

Antonio (Resource Talks)
@ResourceTalks
I have real conversations about mining and metals (the most expensive hobby that isn't all that fun to begin with).





One of the most useful questions in mining is also one of the most annoying: “If it’s that good, how come nobody’s doing it already?” I recently heard the story of a company that's looking to clean up old mines, reprocess waste piles, and make money doing it for decades, and it can be genuinely interesting. It can also be a trap for your brain, because who doesn't want to get paid to do the right thing. But that’s exactly when you ask the question. Not to be a jerk. To find the friction. If nobody’s doing it, there’s usually a reason. Metallurgy doesn’t cooperate, grades are lower than advertised, recoveries are ugly, contaminants create permitting headaches, logistics are nasty, the material is more variable than expected, liability is unclear, bonding is expensive, economics, etc, etc. The point of the question isn’t to conclude that it can or can’t work. It’s to force the real constraints into the open. Who owns the legacy liability? Who carries the closure obligations? What happens if you disturb material and the regulator decides you’ve inherited the mess? What’s the capex and sustaining capex, and how sensitive is the model to commodity price, reagent cost, and throughput? How consistent is the feed, and how do they prove it without cherry-picking? If the answer is “people tried, here’s why it failed, and here’s what’s different now,” you might be looking at a potential edge. Point is, when you hear a “win-win” pitch; ask. I did, in my recent interview with @SasqResources $SASQ.CN. The CEOs answer is in the clip below. Full interview on YT and wherever you get your podcasts.



















