Summary
Description of Business
The Company owns seven properties, four of which
have gold resources, and it has one material property, its KSM Project. The Company holds a 100% interest in each of its properties other
than a small portion of the Iskut project located near Stewart, British Columbia, Canada (the “Iskut Project”), in
which it owns a 95% interest. The Quartz Mountain Project is subject to an option agreement under which the optionee may acquire a 100%
interest in such project. At the date of this Prospectus, approximately 90% of the mineral resources at all of the Company’s projects
combined are at the KSM Project. The Company’s principal work in 2022 on the KSM Project has been on early construction works for
establishing site access, including building roads, camps and fish habitat compensation sites. Its main exploration efforts in 2022 were
focused on the Iskut Project, the 3 Aces Project and the Snowstorm Project (as defined herein). The Company did not carry out significant
work at its Courageous Lake Project in 2022, while it focuses on the KSM Project, Iskut Project, 3 Aces Project and Snowstorm Project.
The Company considers that each of the Iskut Project, the 3 Aces Project and the Snowstorm Project have good potential for a meaningful
discovery. At the Iskut Project, 2022 exploration work focused on drilling targets below the existing resource at Bronson Slope. At Snowstorm,
the Company completed drilling in Q2 and has conducted a thorough review of exploration results to date and initiated evaluation of the
Goldstorm Property. At the 3 Aces Project, due to delays in receiving the required permit, the Company only started work at the 3 Aces
Project in September and undertook a program designed to test the Company’s 3-dimensional model of the mineralization at the Hearts
zone.
At
the KSM Project, the Company is principally directing in its early construction efforts towards
keeping advancement of the KSM Project on track to achieve a ‘substantially started’
designation under its Provincial environmental assessment certificate (“EAC”),
including completing construction of the Glacier and Taft Creeks fish habitat offsetting
ponds, completing the initial 9 km segment of the Coulter Creek Access Road along with an
associated camp, building the initial 17 km of the Treaty Creek Access Road, including the
Bell-Irving River Bridge, constructing a camp near the beginning of the Treaty Creek Access
Road and further construction of the site for the Mitchell Valley camp. The Company has also
entered into an agreement with the British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority (“BC
Hydro”) whereby BC Hydro is constructing a switching station that will permit the
Company to draw hydro power from the Northwest Transmission Line. See “Use of Proceeds
– Business Objectives and Milestones” for further discussion on the Company’s
early construction activities at the KSM Project, including the scheduling of those activities
so that the Company can achieve a “substantially started” designation as well
as details on the Company’s agreement with BC Hydro.
KSM
Project
Overview
Location
The
KSM Project is located within the coastal mountains of northwest British Columbia, approximately 21 kilometers south-southeast of the
former Eskay Creek Mine and approximately 65 kilometers by air north-northwest of Stewart, British Columbia. (See Figure 1.) The provincial
government has recognized the significance of historical mining activity in this area, which includes the past producing Eskay Creek,
Snip, Granduc, and Premier mines. More recently the Red Chris Mine and the Brucejack Mine commenced mining operations.
Access
to the property is by helicopter from Bell II Crossing on the Stewart Cassiar Highway or Stewart, British Columbia. Mobilization of equipment
and personnel is staged from kilometer 54 on the private Eskay Creek Mine Road (about 25 km from the KSM Project) and from Bell II Crossing
on the Stewart Cassiar Highway (about 40 km from the KSM Project).
The
proposed pit areas lie within the headwaters of Sulphurets Creek, which is a tributary of the Unuk River and flows into the Pacific through
Alaska. The proposed process plant and tailings management facility (“TMF”) will be located within the tributaries
of Teigen and Treaty Creeks. Teigen and Treaty Creeks are tributaries of the Bell-Irving River, which is itself a major tributary of
the Nass River. The Nass river flows to the Pacific Ocean entirely within Canada.
The
Deposits
At
the time the Company acquired the KSM Project in 2001, the project consisted of two distinct zones (Kerr and Sulphurets) which had been
modeled separately by Placer Dome (CLA) Limited (“Placer Dome”). Subsequent drilling and engineering work by the Company
has defined two new very large zones, the Mitchell Zone and the Iron Cap Zone, as well as dramatically expanding the mineralized zone
beneath the Kerr zone.
Figure
1 - KSM Project Location Map
From
2008 to 2012 Seabridge focused on further exploration and delineation of the four known deposits at the KSM Project. In 2012 Seabridge
changed its exploration focus at KSM to a search for higher temperature core zones that typically concentrate high-grade metals within
very large porphyry systems such as KSM. Exploration since 2011 has resulted in the discovery of two core zones, Deep Kerr (a down dip
continuation of Kerr deposit mineralization) and Iron Cap Lower Zone (a down dip continuation of Iron Cap deposit mineralization), an
extension of the Mitchell zone and other promising core targets.
In
2020 the Company acquired the East Mitchell Property (formerly known as the Snowfield Property), a single mineral claim covering 1,267
Ha adjacent to the Mitchell deposit, from Pretium Resources Inc. for US$100 million, a 1.5% net smelter returns (“NSR”)
royalty on East Mitchell Property production and a future contingent payment of US$20 million of which US$15 million can be credited
against future royalty payments. The East Mitchell Property hosts a large gold/copper mineral resource and was acquired with a view to
incorporating it into the Company’s KSM Project.
Regulatory
Approvals
In
July, 2014, the Company’s provincial Environmental Assessment (“EA”) Application for the KSM Project under the
British Columbia Environmental Assessment Act was approved. The Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA) issued its Comprehensive
Study Report in July 2014, as required by the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, which concluded that the KSM Project would
not have significant impacts to the environment. The EA Application and Environmental Impact Statement (“EIS”) review
process involved Alaskan regulators throughout and the CEAA Study Report also concluded that the KSM Project would not have significant
impacts to the environment situated downstream of the Alaska border. In December 2014 the Federal Minister of the Environment issued
a positive project decision which endorsed the conclusions of the Comprehensive Study Report.
The
provincial EA approval was for a term of five years, it was extended for a further five year
term in March, 2019 and for another two years in November, 2021, and now expires on July
29, 2026. The EAC will be extended indefinitely if the BC Environmental Assessment Office
declares the Company has “substantially started” construction of the KSM Project.
The federal approval is for an indefinite term (as long as the Provincial EAC remains in
effect). The Company believes that the EA Application and EIS materials and subsequent extension
approvals demonstrate that the KSM Project, as designed, is and continues to be an environmentally
responsible and a generally socially accepted project. The EAC approves the mine development
plan set forth in the Preliminary Feasibility Study within the 2016 PFS Plan (defined below).
Specific amendments will be required to the EAC to proceed with the mine development plan
set forth in the 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report (defined below).
The
KSM Project received a license under the International Rivers Improvement Act (Canada) on October 21, 2016, authorizing the construction,
operation and maintenance of the Water Storage Facility (WSF) and ancillary water works for the KSM Project within the Unuk River watershed
in northwestern British Columbia.
In
June, 2017, the Company also announced it had been given a regulatory amendment to Schedule 2 of the Metal Mining Effluent Regulations
under the Fisheries Act (Canada) which authorizes the use of North Treaty Creek for the discharge from the KSM tailings management
facility, subject to strict bonding and fishery habitat offsets.
In addition, the Company received the authorization
required under the Canada Navigable Waters Act for building the Bell-Irving River Bridge in November, 2021.
Land
Status
The
KSM Property comprises four discrete tenure blocks (see Figure 2) and a group of placer claims. Tenure blocks of the KSM Property include
mineral leases and both cell and legacy claims, all of which are owned by KSM Mining ULC (“KSMCo”), a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Company. The tenure blocks are referred to as:
| (a) | the
KSM tenures containing 21 mineral claims totaling 7,364.85 Ha and 2 mining leases of 11,247.00
Ha (the westernmost block in Figure 2); |
| (b) | the
Seabee claims covering 18,674.30 Ha within 46 mineral claims (the large block in the east
of the KSM Project lying mainly to the west of Highway 37 in Figure 2); |
| (c) | the
Tina claims composed of 11 mineral claims covering 3,052.44 Ha (the block between the KSM
tenures and the Seabee claims in Figure 2); and |
| (d) | the
Treaty Creek Switching Station claims with 2 claims totalling 160.25 Ha (the small block
lying to the east of Highway 37 in Figure 2). |
The
four claim blocks include 80 mineral claims (cell and legacy) and 2 mining leases with a combined area of 40,499 ha. The mineral resources
are positioned within the KSM tenures and include the original claims purchased from Placer Dome and the BJ claims. The East Mitchell
Property, which is included in the KSM tenures, lies immediately to the east of KSM mining leases. These tenures are shown in Figure
2 for clarity.
Figure
2 - KSM Project Claim Map
The
Seabee and Tina claim blocks are located about 19 km northeast of the Kerr-Sulphurets-Mitchell-Iron Cap mineralized zones. These
claim blocks are currently being considered for proposed infrastructure siting. The Treaty Creek Switching Station claims, adjacent to
the Northwest Transmission Line (“NTL”) and to the east of the Seabee claims, are being used for power infrastructure
siting.
Placer
claims only cover areas on part of the westernmost KSM Claims covering an area of 1,553 hectares. The Company’s placer claims lie
along Sulphurets Creek and Mitchell Creek in areas where certain of the KSM Project’s proposed infrastructure will be located.
These
claims are 100% owned by the Company through its wholly-owned subsidiary, KSM Mining ULC. Newmont Corporation retains a 1% net smelter
returns (“NSR”) royalty that is capped at $4.5 million.
Under
the Benefits Agreement (as defined herein) with the Nisga’a Nation and the Co-operation and Benefits Agreement (the “CBA”)
with the Tahltan Nation, the Company has agreed to pay each Nation annual payments. The combined annual payments to these Nations are
payable in two forms; payments that are a percentage of the tax payable (the “Mineral Tax”) under the Mineral Tax
Act (British Columbia) (the “Mineral Tax Act”), which is a tax on net operating profit of the KSM Project, and
payments that are based on net smelter returns of the KSM Project. The combined payments payable to both Nations are as follows:
| (a) | with
respect to years 1-7 of mining operations, a 0.1% NSR royalty and either (i) 5% of the amount
of Mineral Tax payable in respect of any Capital Recovery Year (defined below), or (ii) 11%
of the amount of Mineral Tax payable in respect of any Post-Capital Recovery Year (defined
below); |
| (b) | with
respect to years 8-20 of mining operations, a 0.4% NSR royalty and either (i) 7.75% of the
amount of Mineral Tax payable in respect of any Capital Recovery Year, or (ii) 13.75% of
the amount of Mineral Tax payable in respect of any Post-Capital Recovery Year; and |
| (c) | with
respect to period after 20 years of mining operations, a 0.5% NSR royalty and either (i)
7.75% of the amount of Mineral Tax payable in respect of any Capital Recovery Year, or (ii)
13.75% of the amount of Mineral Tax payable in respect of any Post-Capital Recovery Year. |
For
the purposes of the description above, a “Capital Recovery Year” is a year in which the Company is able to apply sufficient
amounts in the KSM Capital Account (as determined under the Mineral Tax Act) to fully offset operating profit, and a “Post-Capital
Recovery Year” is a year in which the Company is unable to apply sufficient amounts in the KSM Capital Account (as determined
under the Mineral Tax Act) to fully offset operating profit.
The
Company has granted two options to a subsidiary of Royal Gold, Inc. under which such subsidiary can acquire a 1.25% NSR Royalty and a
0.75% NSR Royalty on gold and silver produced from the KSM Property for $100 million and $60 million, respectively, subject to certain
conditions.
KSMCo
sold to Sprott Private Resource Streaming and Royalty (B) Corp. a US$225 million Secured Note under which Sprott has agreed it will use
all of the principal amount repaid on maturity of such Secured Note to purchase a 60% gross silver royalty on the KSM Project (or, in
certain circumstances, a 75% gross silver royalty on the KSM Project), subject to certain rights of Sprott to redeem the Secured Note
and be repaid the principal, and in some circumstances a premium, instead of purchasing the royalty.
Pretium
Exploration Inc. holds a 1.5% net smelter returns royalty on the East Mitchell Property (mineral claim 509216). Two of the pre-converted
claims (Xray 2 and Xray 6), the areas of which have now been converted into part of mining lease 1031440, and one pre-converted claim
(Xray 8), the area of which is now within the East Mitchell Property (mineral claim 509216) are also subject to an effective 1% NSR royalty
capped at US$650,000. The Treaty Creek Switching Station Claims and certain fractional claims within the Seabee claims are subject to
royalties, however none of the mineral resources at the KSM Project are located on the claims subject to these royalties and they are
intended for infrastructure siting.
In
addition, a sale of the original claims that were purchased in 2001 is subject to a right of first refusal held by Glencore Canada Corporation.
The
property is located on Crown land; therefore, all surface and access rights are granted under, and subject to, the Land Act (British
Columbia) and the Mineral Tenure Act (British Columbia). Approximately 13 km of the proposed 23 km Mitchell-Treaty tunnels (the
“MTT”) pass under Crown Land subject to mineral claims held by third parties. The Company has been granted a licence
of occupation, a form of land tenure that grants it rights to occupy the area through which the proposed MTT will pass, subject to the
rights of the third party mineral claims holders. In the Company’s opinion, these rights are addressed by the Company’s obligations,
under the management plan associated with the licence of occupation, to segregate and deliver to such claims holders all earth and rock
material removed from the third party claims during construction of the MTT.
The
four gold-copper deposits, and the proposed waste rock storage areas, lie within the Unuk River drainage in the area covered by the Cassiar-Iskut-Stikine
Land and Resource Management Plan approved by the British Columbia Government in 2000. A part of the proposed ore transport tunnel lies
within the boundaries of the Nass South Sustainable Resource Management Plan that was completed in 2012. The proposed sites for the tailings
management and plant facilities lie outside of the boundaries of any provincial land-use planning process.
Relationships
with Indigenous Groups in KSM Region
The KSM Project site is located in a region historically
used by several indigenous groups. Part of the KSM Project, including the proposed plant and TMF but excluding the mineral deposits and
their immediately-related infrastructure, lies within the boundaries of the Nass Area, as defined in the Nisga’a Final Agreement.
In this area, consultation, led by the federal and provincial governments, is required with the Nisga’a Lisims Government
under the terms of their Final Agreement. Similarly, the Tahltan Nation has asserted rights and title over the area of the proposed plant
and TMF but excluding the mineral deposits. Tsetsaut Skii km Lax Ha (“TSKLH”), an indigenous group asserting independent
nation status which the Company understands is viewed by the Crown as being a wilp of the Gitxsan Nation (as opposed to an independent
nation on its own), assert aboriginal rights and title over the entire KSM Project footprint. This territorial assertion by the TSKLH
is inconsistent with the boundaries asserted by them in the proceedings relating to the Supreme Court of Canada decision in Delgamuukw
v. British Columbia. The previously asserted territorial area had a northern boundary to the south of the KSM Project infrastructure
on the eastern side of the KSM Project and only overlapped the KSM Project footprint on the eastern edge in the area of the BC Hydro switching
station and the initial part of the Treaty Creek Access Road. Additionally, the Gitanyow Huwilp (the collective houses of the Gitanyow
Nation) may have some interests within the broader region potentially affected by the KSM Project, in particular downstream of the plant
site and TMF. Accordingly, the Company has been directed to engage with the Tahltan Nation, as well as with both the Tsetsaut Ski km Lax
Ha as a wilp of the Gitxsan Nation and the Gitanyow Nation on the basis of potential effects of the plant site and TMF and related downstream
effects.
On
June 16, 2014, the Company entered into a comprehensive Benefits Agreement with the Nisga’a Nation in respect of the KSM
Project (the “Benefits Agreement”). The Benefits Agreement establishes a long-term co-operative relationship between
Seabridge and the Nisga’a Nation under which the Nisga’a Nation will support development of the KSM Project,
participate in economic benefits from the KSM Project and provide ongoing advice. Highlights of the Benefits Agreement include:
| ● | Nisga’a
Nation agreement to provide letters in support of the KSM Project to British Columbian and
Canadian regulators, as well as potential investors in Seabridge or the KSM Project. |
| ● | Financial
payments upon the achievement of certain KSM Project milestones and annual production payments
based on a percentage of net profits, with the percentage of net profits payable increasing
when the KSM Project is not recovering capital costs, as determined under the terms of the
Agreement. |
| ● | Strong
commitments to education and training of Nisga’a citizens so that they will
be better able to take advantage of the economic benefits the KSM Project offers. |
|
● |
Mutual co-operation on completing the operational permitting processes for the KSM Project. |
| ● | A
framework for the Nisga’a Nation and Seabridge to work together to achieve employment
targets and to ensure Nisga’a businesses will have preferred access to certain
contracting opportunities. |
| ● | Mutual
co-operation on responding to social impacts which Nisga’a Villages may experience
as a result of the KSM Project. |
The
Benefits Agreement with the Nisga’a Nation will remain in effect throughout the life of the KSM Project and will apply to
future partners in the KSM Project. This Benefits Agreement was signed on behalf of the Nisga’a Nation by the Nisga’a Lisims
Government Executive.
In June, 2014, the Company entered into an agreement
with the Gitanyow Huwilp in respect of the KSM Project. Under the agreement, Seabridge agreed to provide funding for certain programs
relating to wildlife, fish and water quality monitoring to address some of the concerns raised by the Gitanyow Huwilp, as well as for
a committee to establish a means of maintaining communications about KSM Project related issues. This Agreement was signed by seven of
the eight wilps of the Gitanyow Nation and by the Gitanyow Hereditary Chiefs Office.
In
September, 2013, the Gitxsan Hereditary Chiefs Office provided a letter to British Columbia and federal regulators expressing support
for the KSM Project. The Company has engaged directly with the TSKLH with respect to the KSM Project and is making efforts to establish
a good relationship with the TSKLH. However, the ongoing disagreement between the government and the TSKLH regarding their status as
a Nation and their territorial boundary has created a difficult environment in which to build a good relationship and progress on establishing
a co-operative relationship with TSKLH has been elusive.
In
July, 2019, the Company entered into the CBA with the Tahltan Central Government, the Iskut band and the Tahltan Band in respect of the
KSM Project. The CBA establishes a comprehensive framework for the parties to work together on the KSM Project, including detailed provisions
on environmental management of the land, robust participation by the Tahltan Nation in the economic opportunities offered by the KSM
Project and financial payments related to the performance of the KSM Project. It includes commitments to fund education of Tahltan members,
commitments to work to achieve employment targets, processes for awarding contracts on a preferred basis to Tahltan businesses and a
procedure for resolving disputes, including disputes on permitting issues. The CBA with the Tahltan Nation will apply to future partners
in the KSM Project.
The
Company believes that, after considering:
| ● | the
location of the KSM Project in relation to areas of asserted aboriginal rights and title, |
| ● | the engagement/consultation the Company and the governments have undertaken
with indigenous groups, |
| ● | the
agreements the Company has negotiated with indigenous groups, and |
| ● | the
information the Company has learned about historic indigenous use of the area on which KSM
Project infrastructure is located, |
the
Supreme Court of Canada decision of June 26, 2014 in Tsilhqot’in Nation v. British Columbia, which declares aboriginal title
for the first time in a certain area in Canada and outlines the rights associated with aboriginal title, is unlikely to significantly
impact the KSM Project.
Historic
KSM Technical Studies
In June 2012, an updated Preliminary Feasibility
Study for the KSM Project (the “2012 KSM PFS Report”) was completed. The mine development plan in the 2012 KSM PFS
Report was the one approved in the EA Application and EIS review processes, with certain enhancements to the KSM Project infrastructure
to improve environmental protection and various mitigation measures. Since the date of the 2012 KSM PFS Report, Seabridge has continued
exploration activities at KSM which led to the discovery of the large higher-grade zones below the Kerr and Iron Cap deposits. In early
2016, the Company decided to update the 2012 KSM PFS Report to present the same development plan as in the 2012 KSM PFS Report at a pre-feasibility
level using more current market values in the financial analysis but, in addition, incorporating into that development plan the infrastructure
enhancements committed to in the EA Application and EIS processes and to incorporate other design improvements identified by the Company.
Accordingly, the prefeasibility study level development plan (the “2016 PFS Plan”) does not include material from higher-grade
discoveries at Kerr and Iron Cap since 2013. Given the positive impact the new higher grade material was expected to have on the KSM Project
economics, the Company also decided to complete a study that would present an analysis of the integration of the additional material into
the proposed KSM Project design as an alternative development plan (the “2016 PEA Plan”) at a preliminary economic
assessment level and include the results in the new prefeasibility report. The report, which presents both the 2016 PFS Plan and the 2016
PEA Plan, (the “2016 KSM PFS/PEA Report”) was completed in November, 2016, has an effective date of October 6, 2016.
Subsequent
to completing the 2016 KSM PFS/PEA Report, the Company completed additional drilling at its Kerr and Sulphurets deposits with great success.
In November, 2020, the Company announced the completion of a new technical Report that presented a new resource estimate for the KSM
Project which incorporated all drilling on the KSM Project to December 31, 2019.
The
Current KSM PFS and PEA
The
East Mitchell Property hosts a large gold/copper mineral resource and was acquired in December, 2020, with a view to incorporating it
into the Company’s KSM Project. After the acquisition of the East Mitchell Property, the Company decided to complete a new PFS
that evaluates the KSM Project using only open pit mining of just the Mitchell, East Mitchell and Sulphurets deposits (the “2022
PFS”). The new report, entitled “KSM (Kerr-Sulphurets-Mitchell) Prefeasibility Study and Preliminary Economic Assessment,
NI 43-101 Technical Report” has an effective date of August 8, 2022 (the “2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report”)
and is available among Seabridge’s documents at www.sedar.com. The 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report also includes a Preliminary
Economic Assessment (the “2022 PEA”) with a stand-alone mine plan that evaluates a potential future expansion of the
KSM mine development set forth in the 2022 PFS to the Iron Cap and Kerr deposits after the 2022 PFS mine plan has been completed. None
of the Mineral Resources incorporated into the 2022 PEA mine plan have been used in the 2022 PFS mine plan.
The
2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report incorporates the work of a number of industry-leading consulting firms. The principal consultants who contributed
to the 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report, and their Qualified Persons (as defined in NI 43-101) who prepared the 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report
are listed below along with their areas of responsibility:
| ● | Tetra
Tech, under the direction of Hassan Ghaffari P.Eng (surface infrastructure, capital estimate
and financial analysis), John Huang P.Eng. (metallurgical testing review, permanent water
treatment, mineral process design and operating cost estimation for process, general and
administrative (“G&A”) and site services, and overall report preparation) |
| ● | Wood
Canada Limited, under the direction of Henry Kim P.Geo. (Mineral Resources) |
| ● | Moose
Mountain Technical Services under the direction of Jim Gray P.Eng. (open pit Mineral Reserves,
open pit mining operations, mine capital and mine operating costs, MTT and rail ore conveyance
design, tunnel capital costs) |
| ● | W.N.
Brazier Associates Inc. under the direction of W.N. Brazier P.Eng. (Electrical power supply,
energy recovery plants) |
| ● | ERM
(Environmental Resources Management) under the direction of Rolf Schmitt P.Geo. (environment
and permitting) |
| ● | Klohn
Crippen Berger Ltd. under the direction of David Willms P.Eng (design of surface water diversions,
diversion tunnels, tailings management facility, water storage dam and RSF and tunnel geotechnical) |
| ● | BGC
Engineering Inc. under the direction of Derek Kinakin P.Geo., P.L.Eng., P.G. (rock mechanics,
geohazards and mining pit slopes) |
| ● | WSP
Golder, under the direction of Ross Hammett P.Eng (Block Cave mining) |
The 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report supersedes
the previous reports and the following (to, but not including, “Early Construction Works” but excluding “Recommendations
– Future Development Activity”) summarizes the information set forth in the 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report.
Accessibility,
Climate, Local Resources, Physiography and Infrastructure
The
Property lies within the rugged coastal mountains of northwestern BC, with elevations ranging from 520 m in Sulphurets Creek Valley,
to over 2,300 m at the highest peaks. The climate is generally that of a temperate or northern coastal rainforest, with sub-arctic conditions
at high elevations. The length of the snow-free season varies from about May through November at lower elevations, and from July through
September at higher elevations.
Construction
has commenced on KSM’s 30 km long Treaty Creek access road (“TCAR”) that will connect the KSM Process Tailings
Management Area (“PTMA”) to Highway 37, and the initial segment of the 33 km long Coulter Creek access road (“CCAR”)
that will connect the mine area to Highway 37 via the 59 km long Eskay Creek mine resource road.
KSM will connect to BC Hydro’s existing
Northwest Transmission Line at BC Hydro’s Treaty Creek Switching Station (“TCT”). This TCT, located adjacent
to the NTL and Highway 37, 18 km south of Bell 2 Lodge, is scheduled to be completed at the end of 2024. KSM Mining has completed its
design for a 30 km long 287 kV transmission line to interconnect the TCT and the KSM plant site. This KSM transmission line is currently
anticipated to start construction in 2023 with completion and commissioning planned for late 2024 to be ready for connection to the TCT.
There
are multiple deep-water loading facilities for shipping bulk mineral concentrates located in the ice-free Port of Stewart, BC. Those
port facilities are currently used by the Red Chris Mine. The nearest railway is the Canadian National Railroad (CNR) Yellowhead route,
which is located approximately 220 km southeast of the Property. This line runs east-west, and can deliver concentrate to deep water
ports near Prince Rupert and Vancouver, BC.
Exploration
History
There
is evidence that prospectors were active in the area prior to 1935. The modern exploration history of the area began in the 1960’s,
with brief programs conducted by Newmont Exploration of Canada Ltd., Granduc Mines Ltd., Phelps Dodge Corp., and the Meridian Syndicate.
All of these programs were focused towards gold exploration. The Sulphurets Zone was first drilled by Granduc Mines in 1968; Kerr was
first drilled by Brinco Ltd. in 1985; Mitchell Creek by Newhawk Gold Mines Ltd. in 1991; and Iron Cap by Esso Minerals in 1980. These
companies and others undertook exploration during the 1980s and 1990s, with Placer Dome producing an initial resource estimate at Kerr
in the mid-1990s.
There
is no recorded mineral production, nor evidence of it, from the KSM Project. Immediately west of the KSM Project, small-scale placer
gold mining has occurred in Sulphurets and Mitchell Creeks.
During
2003-2005, under its option to earn up to a 65% interest in the KSM Project from Seabridge, Falconbridge Ltd. (“Falconbridge”)
conducted geophysics, surface mapping, surface sampling and completed approximately 4,100 m of drilling at the KSM Project.
Drilling
Since
2006, Seabridge has been conducting exploration and advancement activities at the KSM Project, including annual drilling campaigns. A
total of 968 core holes for a total of 377,348 m were used in determining the mineral resource estimate for the KSM Project, including
holes from previous operators. The majority of KSM drilling information to the end of 2021 was collected by Seabridge (67%). The remaining
33% of the drilling data were collected by Pretium and Silver Standard (24%), Placer Dome (5%) and Falconbridge/Noranda (about 1%), with
the balance collected by five other companies (3%).
Figure
3 is a drill hole location map for the entire KSM district, showing all of the drilling data that were available to estimate Mineral
Resources that are the subject of the 2022 KSM PFS (drilling through 2021). The drill holes are colour coded (blue represents non- Seabridge
and red represents Seabridge drilling).
Figure
3 - KSM Drill Hole Locations
Source:
Seabridge 2022
Drilling at the Kerr deposit has identified a
mineralized area measuring roughly 2,400 m north-south by 800 m east-west, and about 2,200 m vertically. The drill hole spacing in the
upper open pit resource area is approximately 50 m to 75 m. Drill hole spacing through the block cave resource, which has been classified
as nearly all Inferred material, ranges between 100 m to 200 m.
Drilling at the Sulphurets deposit has identified
a mineralized area measuring roughly 2,200 m northeast-southwest by 550 m northwest-southeast, and about 330 m vertically. The drill
hole spacing in the open pit resource area ranges between 50 m to 75 m.
Drilling at the Mitchell deposit has identified
a mineralized area measuring roughly 1,600 m east-west by 1,500 m down-dip, and 850 m thick. The drill hole spacing in the upper open
pit resource area is approximately 75 m to 100 m. Drill hole spacing through the block cave resource, which has been classified predominantly
as Inferred material, ranges between 100 m to 200 m.
Drilling at the Iron Cap deposit has identified
a mineralized area measuring roughly 1,500 m northeast-southwest, by 1,500 m northwest-southeast, and about 850 m thick. The drill hole
spacing in the upper block cave resource shapes ranges from 70 m to 75 m. Drill hole spacing through the lower block cave resource, which
has been classified predominantly as Inferred material, ranges from 100 m to 200 m.
Geological Setting and Mineralization
The KSM Property lies within “Stikinia”,
a long-lived volcanic island-arc terrane that extends over much of the Canadian Cordillera. It was accreted onto the Paleozoic basement
of the North American continental margin in the Middle Jurassic. Early Jurassic sub-volcanic intrusive complexes in the Stikinia terrane
host several large Cu-Au porphyry deposits including the KSM deposits.
The Kerr deposit is centered on a north-south
trending, steep westerly dipping tabular intrusive complex with a strike extent of 2,400 m, a width of 800 m, and vertical extent of
2,200 m. Mineralization extends several ten’s of meters into the host sedimentary rocks. The Sulphurets deposit is composed of
stacked thrust fault panels of Triassic and Jurassic volcano-sedimentary strata intruded by a number of dykes and stocks. It forms a
lens dipping 30 degrees northwest extending 2,200 m horizontally, 550 m down dip, with a thickness of up to 330 m. The Mitchell Zone
is underlain by intrusive, volcanic, and clastic rocks that are exposed in an erosional window below the shallow dipping Mitchell Thrust
Fault (“MTF”). Mineralization is genetically and spatially related to the Early Jurassic Mitchell intrusive complex
of diorite, monzodiorite, and granodiorite stocks and dykes. Mineralization also permeates into surrounding sedimentary and volcanic
rocks, and in total extends 1,000 m east-west and 850 m north-south, with a vertical extent of 1,100 m. The Mitchell complex comprises
three successive intrusive phases accompanied by the development of different hydrothermal assemblages, veining and mineralization. The
East Mitchell deposit is the upper portion of the Mitchell deposit, displaced some 1.5 km to the southeast by the MTF during Cretaceous
age compressive deformation that produced the regional Skeena Fold and Thrust belt. The Iron Cap deposit is also structurally above the
MTF. It is a tabular body striking north-south and dipping 60 degrees to the west, extends 1,500 m along strike, 1,500 m down dip, and
is 800 m in thickness.
The KSM deposits feature many characteristics
typical of gold-enriched, diorite hosted calc-alkaline porphyry copper deposits, with gold, molybdenum, and silver at low concentrations,
occurring as fine disseminations in quartz veinlet stockworks with accompanying pyrite, pervasively dispersed over hundreds of metres.
All of the deposits are at least partially exposed at the surface, are largely unoxidized, and have had significant portions eroded away
by glacial processes.
Sampling, Analysis and Data Verification
Seabridge has employed relatively consistent
sampling methods over the years with minor modifications over the past five years regarding some assaying protocols. Initially, Seabridge
used Eco Tech as their primary assay laboratory from 2006 to 2011 when Eco Tech was bought out by ALS Chemex, who has acted as Seabridge’s
primary assay laboratory since that time to the present. Over the years, Seabridge’s quality control protocols have included the
submission of certified standard reference materials (“SRMs” or “standards”) blanks, and duplicate
field samples. Typically, 5% to 10% of the assay pulps from the primary laboratory were submitted to a secondary accredited assay laboratory
for check assay comparison purposes. More detail regarding these procedures is outlined in the 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report.
Sample security, sample preparation, analytical
procedures, and QA/QC protocols/results associated with Seabridge’s 2006 to 2021 KSM drilling campaigns were considered adequate
and consistent with standard industry practices and the assays are considered suitable to be used to estimate Mineral Resources.
Mineral Processing and Metallurgical Testing
Several wide-ranging metallurgical test programs
have been carried out since 2007 to assess the metallurgical responses of the mineral samples from the KSM deposits, especially the samples
from the Mitchell deposit.
The primary economic metals at KSM are gold and
copper. Primary copper bearing mineral is chalcopyrite. Gold and silver are associated primarily with chalcopyrite and pyrite. There
is variability in the pyrite to chalcopyrite ratio between the deposits.
The test results indicate that the mineral samples
from the KSM deposits are amenable to the proposed KSM flowsheet including:
| ● | copper-gold-silver-molybdenum
bulk rougher flotation followed by gold—silver bearing pyrite flotation; |
| | |
| ● | regrinding
the bulk rougher concentrate followed by three stages of cleaner flotation to produce a copper-gold-silver-molybdenum
bulk cleaner flotation concentrate; |
| | |
| ● | molybdenum
separation of the bulk cleaner flotation concentrate to produce a molybdenum concentrate
and a copper-gold concentrate containing associated silver; |
| | |
| ● | cyanide
leaching of the gold- silver bearing pyrite flotation concentrate and the scavenger cleaner
tailing to further recover gold and silver values as doré, the cyanide recovery circuit
includes sulphidization, acidification, recycling, and thickening of precipitate (SART) and
acidification, volatilization of hydrogen cyanide gas, and re-neutralization (AVR) processes
to recover weak acid dissociable cyanide for reuse and dissolved copper for sale with copper
concentrate; and |
| | |
| ● | the
flotation tailing will be sent to the flotation tailing storage cells with the TMF; the leach
residue will be destructed for residual cyanide prior to being sent to the lined CIL Residue
Cell, supernatants from both the cells will be reclaimed separately to the process plant
for reuse as process makeup water. |
Primary crushing is by gyratory crushers at the
Mitchell ore processing complex (the “Mitchell OPC”). Coarse ore from the primary crushers is transported by train
through the MTT to the processing facility in the PTMA. The MTT will also be used for electrical power transmission and the transport
of personnel and supplies for mine area operations.
Coarse ore from the train is conveyed to two
coarse ore stockpiles, followed by secondary cone crushing and tertiary crushing by high-pressure grinding roll (“HPGR”).
Fine ore from the HPGR is fed to ball mills followed by copper-gold-silver-molybdenum bulk rougher flotation and pyrite flotation of
copper rougher tailings. Bulk flotation concentrates are reground prior to cleaning flotation that produces bulk copper-gold-silver flotation
concentrate and molybdenum concentrate products and a gold-silver bearing pyritic product for cyanide leaching. Final products include
a copper-gold-silver concentrate, gold-silver doré, and a molybdenum concentrate.
Mineral Resources
The 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report includes updated
mineral resource estimates for the KSM Project. The four mineralized zones, Kerr, Sulphurets, Mitchell and East Mitchell, and Iron Cap,
were modeled separately. As more understanding was gained after each annual drilling campaign, individual block models were created for
each area. Grade interpolation parameters have also evolved over time, reflecting changes required for modeling deeper mineralization
intersected below the Kerr and Iron Cap deposits. A variety of basic descriptive statistics and spatial analyses were completed for each
area upon the completion of annual drilling campaigns. These investigations include the generation of grade distribution tables, grade
histograms, cumulative probability plots, grade box plots, grade contact plots, down-hole variograms, and directional variograms. In
addition, new drill hole results were typically compared against the previous grade model to assess model performance.
The Mineral Resources for the various KSM mineralized
zones are constrained within conceptual open pit and block cave mining shapes to support reasonable prospects for eventual economic extraction
as outlined in the CIM Definition Standards for Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves (CIM, 2014). The conceptual open pit and underground
mining shapes were generated for each resource area based on calculated block model NSR values. The NSR values were generated for each
deposit. Moose Mountain Technical Services generated conceptual pits for the Kerr, Sulphurets, Mitchell and East Mitchell deposits using
MineSight® software and Lerchs-Grossmann algorithms. WSP Golder developed conceptual block cave footprints for Kerr and Iron Cap
using the block NSR values and Geovia’s PCBC™ Footprint Finder software. The footprint polygons were extruded vertically
based on guidance from WSP Golder.
The following gold, copper, silver, and molybdenum
metal prices were used for determining block NSR values, US$1,300/oz, US $3.00/lb, US $20.00/oz, and US $9.70/lb, respectively. Open
pit and underground mining costs of Cdn$1.80 to 2.20/tonne and Cdn$6.00 to Cdn$7.00/tonne were used to establish conceptual open pit
and underground resource shapes, along with a processing and G&A cost of Cdn$9.00/tonne for Kerr, Sulphurets and Iron Cap, and Cdn$10.75
to Cdn$11.20/tonne for Mitchell and East Mitchell.
The draw point extraction elevations were extruded
vertically to create 3D solids that were used for resource tabulation. Conceptual caves were clipped against surface topography (Iron
Cap) or conceptual resource pit (Kerr). Mineral Resources are determined, at Cdn$10.75 to Cdn$11.25 and Cdn$16 NSR cutoffs for open-pit
constrained and underground mining constrained Mineral Resources, respectively.
The table below summarizes the estimated Measured,
Indicated, and Inferred Mineral Resources for each zone.
KSM Project Mineral Resources (Inclusive of Mineral Reserves)
Measured Resources
| |
| | |
| | |
Gold | | |
Copper | | |
Silver | | |
Molybdenum | |
Project | |
Cut Off Grade (g/t) | | |
Tonnes (000) | | |
Grade (g/t) | | |
Ounces (000) | | |
Grade (%) | | |
Pounds (millions) | | |
Grade (g/t) | | |
Ounces (000) | | |
Grade (ppm) | | |
Pounds (millions) | |
KSM: | |
NSR: | | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| |
Mitchell | |
$ | 10.75 | | |
| 691,700 | | |
| 0.68 | | |
| 15,124 | | |
| 0.19 | | |
| 2,876 | | |
| 3.3 | | |
| 72,831 | | |
| 52 | | |
| 79 | |
East Mitchell | |
$ | 11.25 | | |
| 1,012,800 | | |
| 0.65 | | |
| 21,098 | | |
| 0.11 | | |
| 2,514 | | |
| 1.8 | | |
| 59,233 | | |
| 89 | | |
| 198 | |
KSM Total | |
| | | |
| 1,704,500 | | |
| 0.66 | | |
| 36,222 | | |
| 0.14 | | |
| 5,390 | | |
| 2.4 | | |
| 132,064 | | |
| 74 | | |
| 277 | |
Indicated Resources
| |
| | |
| | |
Gold | | |
Copper | | |
Silver | | |
Molybdenum | |
Project | |
Cut Off
Grade
(g/t) | | |
Tonnes (000) | | |
Grade (g/t) | | |
Ounces (000) | | |
Grade (%) | | |
Pounds (millions) | | |
Grade (g/t) | | |
Ounces (000) | | |
Grade (ppm) | | |
Pounds (millions) | |
KSM: | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| |
Mitchell | |
$ | 10.75-
| | |
| 1,667,000 | | |
| 0.48 | | |
| 25,935 | | |
| 0.14 | | |
| 5,120 | | |
| 2.8 | | |
| 149,160 | | |
| 66 | | |
| 241 | |
East Mitchell | |
$ | 11.25 NSR Pits | | |
| 746,200 | | |
| 0.42 | | |
| 10,080 | | |
| 0.08 | | |
| 1,390 | | |
| 1.7 | | |
| 41,814 | | |
| 79 | | |
| 130 | |
Sulphurets | |
| | | |
| 446,000 | | |
| 0.55 | | |
| 7,887 | | |
| 0.21 | | |
| 2,064 | | |
| 1.0 | | |
| 14,339 | | |
| 53 | | |
| 52 | |
Kerr | |
$ | 16 | | |
| 374,000 | | |
| 0.22 | | |
| 2,660 | | |
| 0.41 | | |
| 3,405 | | |
| 1.1 | | |
| 13,744 | | |
| 5 | | |
| 4 | |
Iron Cap | |
| NSR UG | | |
| 423,000 | | |
| 0.41 | | |
| 5,576 | | |
| 0.22 | | |
| 2,051 | | |
| 4.6 | | |
| 62,559 | | |
| 41 | | |
| 38 | |
KSM Total | |
| | | |
| 3,656,200 | | |
| 0.44 | | |
| 52,138 | | |
| 0.17 | | |
| 14,030 | | |
| 2.4 | | |
| 281,616 | | |
| 58 | | |
| 465 | |
Measured plus Indicated Resources
| |
| | |
| | |
Gold | | |
Copper | | |
Silver | | |
Molybdenum | |
Project | |
Cut Off
Grade
(g/t) | | |
Tonnes (000) | | |
Grade (g/t) | | |
Ounces (000) | | |
Grade (%) | | |
Pounds (millions) | | |
Grade (g/t) | | |
Ounces (000) | | |
Grade (ppm) | | |
Pounds (millions) | |
KSM: | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| |
Mitchell | |
$ | 10.75 | | |
| 2,358,700 | | |
| 0.54 | | |
| 41,059 | | |
| 0.15 | | |
| 7,996 | | |
| 2.9 | | |
| 221,991 | | |
| 62 | | |
| 320 | |
East Mitchell | |
$ | 11.25
-NSR Pits | | |
| 1,759,000 | | |
| 0.55 | | |
| 31,178 | | |
| 0.10 | | |
| 3,904 | | |
| 1.8 | | |
| 101,047 | | |
| 85 | | |
| 328 | |
Sulphurets | |
| | | |
| 446,000 | | |
| 0.55 | | |
| 7,887 | | |
| 0.21 | | |
| 2,064 | | |
| 1.0 | | |
| 14,339 | | |
| 53 | | |
| 52 | |
Kerr | |
$ | 16 | | |
| 370,000 | | |
| 0.22 | | |
| 2,660 | | |
| 0.41 | | |
| 3,405 | | |
| 1.1 | | |
| 13,744 | | |
| 5 | | |
| 4 | |
Iron Cap | |
| NSR
UG | | |
| 423,000 | | |
| 0.41 | | |
| 5,576 | | |
| 0.22 | | |
| 2,051 | | |
| 4.6 | | |
| 62,559 | | |
| 41 | | |
| 38 | |
KSM Total | |
| | | |
| 5,356,700 | | |
| 0.51 | | |
| 88,360 | | |
| 0.16 | | |
| 19,420 | | |
| 2.4 | | |
| 413,680 | | |
| 63 | | |
| 742 | |
Inferred Resources
| |
| | |
| | |
Gold | | |
Copper | | |
Silver | | |
Molybdenum | |
Project | |
Cut Off Grade (g/t) | | |
Tonnes (000) | | |
Grade (g/t) | | |
Ounces (000) | | |
Grade (%) | | |
Pounds (millions) | | |
Grade (g/t) | | |
Ounces (000) | | |
Grade (ppm) | | |
Pounds (millions) | |
KSM: | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| |
Mitchell | |
$ | 10.75 | | |
| 1,282,600 | | |
| 0.29 | | |
| 11,819 | | |
| 0.14 | | |
| 3,832 | | |
| 2.5 | | |
| 102,228 | | |
| 47 | | |
| 133 | |
East Mitchell | |
| NSR Pits | | |
| 281,100 | | |
| 0.37 | | |
| 3,372 | | |
| 0.07 | | |
| 403 | | |
| 2.3 | | |
| 21,112 | | |
| 61 | | |
| 38 | |
Sulphurets | |
| | | |
| 223,000 | | |
| 0.44 | | |
| 3,155 | | |
| 0.13 | | |
| 639 | | |
| 1.3 | | |
| 9,320 | | |
| 30 | | |
| 15 | |
Kerr | |
$ | 16 | | |
| 1,999,000 | | |
| 0.31 | | |
| 19,823 | | |
| 0.40 | | |
| 17,720 | | |
| 1.8 | | |
| 114,431 | | |
| 23 | | |
| 103 | |
Iron Cap | |
| NSR
UG | | |
| 1,899,000 | | |
| 0.45 | | |
| 27,474 | | |
| 0.30 | | |
| 12,556 | | |
| 2.6 | | |
| 158,741 | | |
| 30 | | |
| 126 | |
KSM Total | |
| | | |
| 5,684,700 | | |
| 0.36 | | |
| 65,643 | | |
| 0.28 | | |
| 35,150 | | |
| 2.2 | | |
| 405,832 | | |
| 33 | | |
| 415 | |
Note:
| 1. | The effective date for the Mineral Resource
Estimate for Mitchell and East Mitchell is March 31, 2022, and for Kerr, Sulphurets and Iron
Cap is December 31, 2019. |
| 2. | The Mineral Resource estimates have been
reviewed and approved by Henry Kim P.Geo., an independent Qualified Person. Mr. Kim verified
the databases supporting the mineral resource estimates and conducted a personal inspection
of the property and reviewed drill core from a range of representative drill holes at site
and at the core storage facilities in Stewart, B.C. with Seabridge geology staff. |
| 3. | Mineral Resources were prepared in accordance
with CIM Definition Standards for Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves (May 10, 2014) and
CIM Estimation of Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves Best Practice Guidelines (Nov 29,
2019). |
| 4. | Mineral Resources were constrained within
minable shapes depending on their mining methods. |
| 5. | Mineral Resources are reported inclusive of those Mineral Resources
that were converted to Mineral Reserves. Mineral Resources that are not Mineral Reserves
do not have demonstrated economic viability. |
| 6. | Following metal prices were used to determine
Mineral Resources: US$1300/oz Au, US$3/lb Cu, US$20/oz Ag, and US$ 9.7/lb Mo. |
| 7. | For other key assumption parameters,
methods used for: Mitchell and East Mitchell, see 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report. |
| 8. | Numbers may not add due to rounding. |
Note: United States investors are cautioned that
the requirements and terminology of NI 43-101 may differ from the requirements of the SEC, including Regulation SK-1300. Accordingly,
the Company’s disclosures regarding mineralization may not be comparable to similar information disclosed by companies subject
to the SEC’s mining disclosure standards. Mineral Resources are reported inclusive of Mineral Reserves. Mineral Resources which
are not Mineral Reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability. It is reasonably expected that the majority of Inferred Mineral
Resources could be upgraded to Indicated Mineral Resources with continued exploration.
Mineral Reserves
Mineral Reserves for the 2022 PFS are based on
open pit mining of the Mitchell, East Mitchell and Sulphurets deposits. Waste to ore cut-offs were determined using an NSR for each block
in the model. NSR is calculated using prices and process recoveries for each metal accounting for all off-site losses, transportation,
smelting and refining charges. Metal prices of US$1,300/oz gold, US$3.00/lb copper, US$20.00/oz silver and US$9.70/lb molybdenum and
a foreign exchange rate of US$0.79 to Cdn$1.00 have been used in the NSR calculations.
Lerchs-Grossman (“LG”) pit
shell optimizations were used to define open pit mine pit limits in the 2022 PFS. Production is limited by the permitted tailings volume
of 2.29 Bt. Open pit designed phases use updated geotechnical studies based on most recent site investigation programs.
Mineral reserves have been estimated using the
updated pit designs. The open pit minimum NSR cut-off grade is based on an estimated process operating cost of Cdn$11.00/t. Process operating
costs include plant processing (including crushing/ore transport costs where applicable), G&A, surface service, tailing construction,
and water treatment costs. A premium cut-off grade of Cdn$25.00/t is used until the end of Year 5 to maximize the net present value (NPV)
and minimize the time to payback of initial capital.
The table below summarizes the estimated Proven
and Probable Mineral Reserves for the KSM mineral deposits.
KSM Proven and Probable Mineral Reserves as
of May 26, 2022
| |
| |
| | |
Diluted
Grades | | |
Contained
Metal | |
| |
| |
Ore
(Mt) | | |
Au
(g/t) | | |
Cu
(%) | | |
Ag
(g/t) | | |
Mo
(ppm) | | |
Au
(Moz) | | |
Cu
(Mlb) | | |
Ag
(Moz) | | |
Mo
(Mlb) | |
Proven | |
Mitchell | |
| 483 | | |
| 0.74 | | |
| 0.20 | | |
| 3.3 | | |
| 49 | | |
| 11.5 | | |
| 2,161 | | |
| 51 | | |
| 53 | |
| |
East Mitchell | |
| 814 | | |
| 0.69 | | |
| 0.11 | | |
| 1.8 | | |
| 91 | | |
| 18.1 | | |
| 2,043 | | |
| 47 | | |
| 163 | |
| |
Sulphurets | |
| 0 | | |
| 0.00 | | |
| 0.00 | | |
| 0.0 | | |
| 0 | | |
| 0.0 | | |
| 0 | | |
| 0 | | |
| 0 | |
| |
Total
Proven | |
| 1,297 | | |
| 0.71 | | |
| 0.15 | | |
| 2.4 | | |
| 75 | | |
| 29.6 | | |
| 4,203 | | |
| 98 | | |
| 215 | |
Probable | |
Mitchell | |
| 452 | | |
| 0.59 | | |
| 0.15 | | |
| 2.5 | | |
| 74 | | |
| 8.6 | | |
| 1,458 | | |
| 36 | | |
| 74 | |
| |
East Mitchell | |
| 392 | | |
| 0.46 | | |
| 0.09 | | |
| 1.7 | | |
| 84 | | |
| 5.8 | | |
| 784 | | |
| 21 | | |
| 73 | |
| |
Sulphurets | |
| 151 | | |
| 0.68 | | |
| 0.26 | | |
| 1.0 | | |
| 70 | | |
| 3.3 | | |
| 874 | | |
| 5 | | |
| 23 | |
| |
Total
Probable | |
| 995 | | |
| 0.55 | | |
| 0.14 | | |
| 1.9 | | |
| 77 | | |
| 17.7 | | |
| 3,116 | | |
| 62 | | |
| 170 | |
Proven + | |
Mitchell | |
| 935 | | |
| 0.67 | | |
| 0.18 | | |
| 2.9 | | |
| 61 | | |
| 20.1 | | |
| 3,619 | | |
| 87 | | |
| 126 | |
Probable | |
East Mitchell | |
| 1,206 | | |
| 0.62 | | |
| 0.11 | | |
| 1.8 | | |
| 89 | | |
| 23.9 | | |
| 2,826 | | |
| 68 | | |
| 236 | |
| |
Sulphurets | |
| 151 | | |
| 0.68 | | |
| 0.26 | | |
| 1.0 | | |
| 70 | | |
| 3.3 | | |
| 874 | | |
| 5 | | |
| 23 | |
| |
Total
Proven + Probable | |
| 2,292 | | |
| 0.64 | | |
| 0.14 | | |
| 2.2 | | |
| 76 | | |
| 47.3 | | |
| 7,320 | | |
| 160 | | |
| 385 | |
Notes:
| 1. | The Mineral Reserve estimates were reviewed
by Jim Gray, P.Eng. (who is also the independent Qualified Person for these Mineral Reserve
estimates), reported using the 2014 CIM Definition Standards and 2019 CIM Estimation of Mineral
Resources and Mineral Reserves Best Practice Guidelines, and have an effective date of May
26, 2022. |
| 2. | Mineral
Reserves are based on the 2022 PFS all open pit Life of Mine plan. |
| 3. | Mineral
Reserves are mined tonnes and grade, the reference point is the mill feed at the primary
crusher and includes consideration for operational modifying factors. |
| 4. | Mineral
Reserves are reported at NSR cut-off grades that vary between of $11/t and $25/t using the
following assumptions: metal prices of US$1300/oz Au, US$3.00/lb Cu, US$20/oz Ag, and US$
9.70/lb Mo at a currency exchange rate of 0.79 US$ per CAD$; Copper concentrate terms are
96% payable Cu; 97.8% payable Au; 90% payable Ag, molybdenum concentrate terms are 99% payable.
Offsite costs (smelting, refining, transport, and insurance) are C$281 per tonne of copper
concentrate and C$5527 per tonne of molybdenum concentrate; doré terms are $2/oz offsite
costs (refining, transport and insurance), 99.8% Au payable, and 90% Ag payable; metallurgical
recovery projections vary depending on metallurgical domain and metal grades and are based
on metallurgical test work. |
| 5. | The
NSR cut-off grade is varied from Cdn11/t to Cdn25/t and covers the estimated process operating
cost of $10/t for ore processing, G&A, surface service, tailings, and water treatment
costs. |
| 6. | Mineral
Reserves account for mining loss and dilution. |
| 7. | Mineral
Reserves are a subset of the mineral resource. |
| 8. | Numbers have been rounded as required
by reporting guidelines. |
Mine Production Plan (PFS)
The open pit only mine production plan starts
in the higher grade Mitchell pit. Production from the high grade upper East Mitchell zone is introduced in Year 3. Waste mined from the
Sulphurets, East Mitchell and Mitchell pit is placed in the Mitchell rock storage facility (“RSF”) until Mitchell
pit is mined out by Year 25. Final waste from East Mitchell is backfilled into the mined out Mitchell pit from Year 25 onward along with
some waste rehandled from the Mitchell RSF.
The updated mine plan reduces overall footprint
by not using the McTagg RSF as required in the 2016 KSM PFS/PEA Report and by utilizing mined out pits for backfilling waste rock.
Autonomous mine operations where applicable and
an integrated remote operations centre reduce on-site personnel.
Electrification of the haul truck fleet with
trolley assist reduces carbon emissions and overall mine energy costs by replacing diesel with low cost energy from electricity.
Mill feed ramps up to 130,000 tonnes per day
by Year 2 followed by a 50% increase to 195,000 tonnes per day from Year 3 onwards. Average annual mill feed throughput for the 33 years
of mine life is estimated at 69.5 million tonnes.
At Mitchell, a near-surface higher grade gold
zone crops out allowing for gold production in the first seven years that is substantially above the mine life average. The mine plan
is specifically designed for mining highest gold grade first to facilitate a quick capital investment payback. The project’s post-tax
payback period is approximately 3.7 years for the Base Case or 11% of mine life. Metal production for the first seven years, compared
to life of mine average production, is estimated as follows:
Average Annual Metal Production
| |
Years 1-7 Average | |
Life of Mine Average |
Average Grades: | |
| |
|
Gold (grams per tonne) | |
0.89 | |
0.64 |
Copper (%) | |
0.21 | |
0.14 |
Silver (grams per tonne) | |
3.0 | |
2.2 |
Molybdenum (parts per million) | |
52 | |
76 |
Annual Production: | |
| |
|
Gold (ounces) | |
1,413,000 | |
1,027,000 |
Copper (pounds) | |
251 million | |
178 million |
Silver (ounces) | |
3.8 million | |
3.0 million |
Molybdenum (pounds) | |
2.1 million | |
4.2 million |
Note:
Annual production shows total metal contained in copper concentrate, doré, and molybdenum concentrate.
Figure
3 – KSM Project Layout
Infrastructure
Mitchell-Treaty Tunnels (MTT)
The MTT, two parallel 22 km tunnels, connects
the mine site in the Mitchell Valley to the Processing Plant and Tailings Management Area in the North Treaty Valley. All mined ore from
the Mitchell OPC will be transported to the Treaty OPC through the MTT, and personnel and freight will be transported between the PTMA
and the Mine Site via the train system. The MTT also includes electric power cables to service the Mitchell mining area. The twinned
tunnel configuration provides higher capacity with the haulage loop and rail cross-overs allow sections of the tunnel to be isolated
for periodic tunnel maintenance. Under normal operations, the North Tunnel will be designated for westbound travel and the South Tunnel
will be designated for eastbound travel.
Mine to Mill Ore Transport System
Ore will be crushed at the Mitchell OPC, loaded
onto trains and transported to the Treaty coarse ore stockpile (COS) via the 22.9 km twin MTT. The trains are autonomous and controlled
from a control centre at Treaty. The electric drives rely on regenerative braking which is input back into the grid.
The ore transport is configured to start operations
at a nominal production rate of 130,000 tpd and ramps up to 195,000 tpd for the start of Year 3.
The train system will also handle personnel,
freight, and fuel requirements between Treaty and Mitchell. The power cable for the mine will also be in the MTT.
Power Supply
Electric service for the KSM Project will be
from BC Hydro’s Northern Transmission Line (“NTL”) that was completed in 2014.
The new 344 km long, 287 kV, NTL runs from the
Skeena Substation on the BC Hydro 500 kV grid near Terrace, BC, to Cranberry Junction, from which point it roughly parallels BC Highway
37 to its terminus at Bob Quinn Lake. A 30 km long, 287 kV transmission extension from the NTL will be constructed, originating at the
Treaty Creek Switching Station (BC Hydro designation TCT) and terminating at the Treaty processing plant. This spur line will parallel
the Treaty Creek access road in a common corridor. Land tenure for the right-of-way has been obtained and construction of the TCT is
currently underway. The Treaty Creek Switching Station on the NTL will be approximately 18 km south of Bell II.
The Sept. 2018 System Impact Study (SIS) by BC
Hydro provides for a site maximum demand of 245 MW based on 3 power supply queue positions, which were a result of two increases in the
mine power supply based on two updates to the SIS, as the planned KSM size and load grew from the initial submission. As it stands, KSM
has 245 MW reserved for its use.
Tailings Management
The TMF would be constructed in three cells:
the North and South cells for flotation tailing, and a lined cell for CIL tailing. The cells are confined between four dams (North, Splitter,
Saddle, and Southeast dams) located within the Teigen-Treaty Creek cross-valley. In total, the TMF is designed to have a capacity of
2.29 Bt.
De-pyritized flotation tailing is to be stored
in the North and South cells. The pyrite bearing CIL tailing is to be stored in a lined central cell.
The cyclone sand dams will be constructed over
earth fill starter dams using the centerline construction method with compacted cyclone sand shells and low-permeability glacial till
cores. The Saddle and Splitter dam cores incorporate geomembranes to limit seepage from the CIL residue tailings. The dams will be progressively
raised over their operating life to an ultimate elevation of 1,068 m.
Seepage from the impoundment will be controlled
with low-permeability zones in the tailings dams and dam foundation treatment. Seepage and runoff from the tailings dams will be collected
downstream at seepage collection dams and pumped back to the TMF. The ponds behind the collection dams will also be used to settle solids
eroded by runoff from the dam and fines from cyclone sand construction drain-down water.
Mine Site Water Management
The overall site water management strategy, including
the discharge from the Water Storage Facility (“WSF”) via the High-density Sludge (“HDS”) water
treatment plant (“WTP”) was the strategy that was reviewed and approved during the EA Application and EIS review process.
Two main diversion tunnel routes will be required
to route non-contact water from the Mitchell and McTagg valleys around the mine site.
Lined surface diversion channels will be constructed
progressively during operations, along the contact of the RSF and the hillside, to divert surface flows.
All contact water from the mine site areas (open
pits, RSFs, roads, infrastructure) will be directed to the WSF, located in the lower Mitchell Creek area. The WSF will be formed with
a 165 m high rock fill asphalt core dam built to full height by Year -1 and is sized to store annual freshet flows and volumes resulting
from a 200-year wet year. The core zones of the WSF dam will be founded on competent sedimentary rock foundations. Seepage will be controlled
by the asphalt core in the dam and the dam foundation will be grouted. A seepage collection pond will collect seepage water beyond the
toe of the main dam and return it to the WSF.
Mine area contact water will be treated with
a High Density Sludge (HDS) lime water treatment plant (“WTP”). A Selenium WTP will be constructed and operational
by Year 5 to treat up to 500 L/s of seepage principally from the RSF and select point sources within Mitchell Valley with selenium loaded
waters, compared to lower concentrations within the WSF. The HDS WTP and the WSF will be operational before mill start-up to allow pre-production
activity in the Mitchell Valley and Mitchell pit area.
Three major tunnels will be excavated during
the construction period:
| ● | Mitchell
Treaty Twinned Tunnels (MTT) |
| | |
| ● | Mitchell
Diversion Tunnel (MDT) |
| | |
| ● | McTagg
Diversion Tunnel (MTDT) |
These tunnels are classified as either infrastructure
tunnels (MTT) or water tunnels (MDT and MTDT). Additional tunnels will be constructed at various times during mine operations for diversion
of contact water around mine facilities in Mitchell Valley or noncontact water around the east side of the TMF.
Access Roads
Current proposed permanent access roads include
the existing 59 km long resource access route from Highway 37 to the former Eskay Creek Mine. The proposed 33 km long CCAR will commence
near the southern limit of this existing road, and extend south then west to the proposed Mine Site.
The TCAR will leave Highway 37 approximately
19 km south of Bell 2, and head west. The TCAR network provides access to the Treaty OPC, the TMF, and the MTT Saddle Area. It will include
a 30 km two-lane access route from Highway 37 to an intersection at approximately km 17 and continue up the Treaty River valley to the
Saddle Area. The North Treaty Access Road branches off the TCAR at the km 17 intersection and leads to the Treaty OPC, TMF, and Treaty
MTT portal.
Geohazards
Geohazard and risk assessments were completed
for the proposed facilities within the KSM footprint. As expected for a mountainous, high-relief property site, snow avalanche and landslide
hazards exist, with the potential to affect mine construction, operations, and closure. Mitigation strategies have been identified to
reduce the high and very high risk scenarios to a target residual risk not exceeding moderate. Further risk reduction will be achieved
where practical and cost-efficient and as part of the detailed design of specific facilities.
Capital Cost Estimate (2022 PFS)
An initial capital of US$6.432 billion is estimated
for the 2022 PFS. Initial capital includes all costs to build the facilities that mine, transport, and process ore to produce first concentrate
and doré. All currencies in are expressed in US dollars, unless otherwise stated. Costs have been converted using a fixed currency
exchange rate of US$0.77 to Cdn$1.00. The expected accuracy range of the capital cost estimate is +25%/-10%.
A summary of the 2022 PFS initial and sustaining
capital costs is shown in the Table below.
Capital Costs (US$ million)
| |
Initial | | |
Sustaining | | |
Total | |
| |
US$ M | | |
US$ M | | |
US$ M | |
Direct Costs | |
| | |
| | |
| |
Mine | |
| 1,420 | | |
| 1,766 | | |
| 3,187 | |
Process | |
| 2,003 | | |
| 309 | | |
| 2,312 | |
Tailings Management Facility | |
| 513 | | |
| 630 | | |
| 1,143 | |
Environmental | |
| 15 | | |
| 8 | | |
| 23 | |
On-site Infrastructure | |
| 39 | | |
| - | | |
| 39 | |
Off-site Infrastructure | |
| 76 | | |
| 11 | | |
| 87 | |
Power Supply/Energy Recovery | |
| 121 | | |
| 46 | | |
| 167 | |
Total Direct Capital | |
| 4,188 | | |
| 2,770 | | |
| 6,958 | |
Indirect cost | |
| 1,090 | | |
| 97 | | |
| 1,188 | |
Owner’s cost | |
| 204 | | |
| - | | |
| 204 | |
Contingency | |
| 949 | | |
| 343 | | |
| 1,293 | |
Total Capital | |
| 6,432 | | |
| 3,210 | | |
| 9,642 | |
This estimate was prepared with a base date of
Q1/Q2 2022. The estimate does not include any escalation past this date. Budget quotations were obtained for major equipment; vendors
provided equipment prices, delivery lead times, spare allowances, and freight costs to a designated marshalling yard in northern BC,
with some exceptions for delivery points to different BC locales. The quotations used in this estimate were obtained in Q1/Q2 2022, and
are budgetary and non-binding. For non-major equipment, costing is based on in-house data, quotes from previous studies. No cost escalation
is included.
All equipment and material costs include Incoterms
FCA. Other costs such as spares, taxes, duties, freight, and packaging are covered separately in the estimate as indirect costs.
Capital costs exclude reclamation and closure
costs that are accounted for in the economic analysis.
Sustaining capital costs were also estimated
leveraging the same basis of information applied to the initial capital estimate with respect to vendor quotations, labour, and material
costs. The sustaining capital costs total US$3.210 billion and consist of:
| ● | open
pit mine development, principally mobile fleet replacement |
| | |
| ● | TMF
expansions, mainly comprising dam raises and CIL basin expansions |
| | |
| ● | indirect
costs, including construction indirects, spares, freight, and logistics, EPCM, vendor assistance,
and contingency. |
Operating Cost Estimate (2022 PFS)
Average mine, process and G&A operating costs
over the project’s life (including waste mining and on-site power credits, excluding off-site shipping and smelting costs) are
estimated at US$11.36 per tonne milled (before base metal credits). The cost estimates are based upon budget prices in Q1/Q2 2022 or
data from the database of the consulting firms involved in the cost estimates. When required, certain costs in this report have been
converted using a fixed currency exchange rate of Cdn$1.00 to US$0.77. The expected accuracy range of the operating cost estimate is
+25%/-10%.
A breakdown of estimated unit operating costs
is as follows:
LOM Average Unit Operating Costs (US$ Per Tonne
Milled)
Mining | |
| 3.31 | |
Process | |
| 6.31 | |
G&A + Site Services | |
| 1.06 | |
Tailings Storage/Handling | |
| 0.11 | |
Water Management/Treatment | |
| 0.50 | |
Energy Recovery | |
| -0.07 | |
Provincial Sales Tax | |
| 0.13 | |
Total Operating Costs | |
| 11.36 | |
The mining operating costs are LOM average unit
costs calculated by dividing the total LOM operating costs by LOM milled tonnages. The costs exclude mine pre-production costs.
The electric service to the KSM Site (including
all terms and conditions such as rates and metering requirements, connection charges, and many aspects of the KSM connecting transmission
line) will be in accordance with the latest edition of BC Hydro Electric Tariffs, in particular:
| ● | Rate
Schedule 1823 – Transmission Service – Stepped Rate |
| | |
| ● | Rate
Schedule 1901 – Deferral Account Rate Rider |
| | |
| ● | BC
Hydro Electric Tariff Supplement No. 5 (TS5) Agreement for Customers Taking Electricity under
1821 (1821 is now 1823) (TS5 is a template for the Electricity Supply Agreement with the
format set as per the tariffs and is not subject to change) |
| | |
| ● | BC
Hydro Electric TS6 Agreement for Transmission Service Customers (TS6 is a fill in the blanks
template for the Facilities Agreement with the format set as per the tariffs and is not subject
to change) |
| | |
| ● | BC
Hydro Electric Tariff Supplement No. 74 (TS74) Customer Baseline Load Determination Guidelines. |
The cost of power for KSM, delivered to the 25
kV bus bars of the Treaty ore processing complex, has been estimated as Cdn $0.0596 per kWh, based on rates effective in Q1 of 2022)
including applicable taxes and energy cost savings due to BC Hydro’s Power Smart program. The KSM power cost includes the transmission
line losses from the metering point at the Treaty Creek Switching Station, plus Substations No. 1 and No. 2 transformer losses and peaking
power cost. The calculated power cost as estimated for the 2022 PFS is somewhat below regular rates due to a large reduction or elimination
of costly Tier 2 energy in accordance with an efficient plant design as accepted by BC Hydro’s “Power Smart” program
based on a study approved by BC Hydro.
Economic Evaluation (2022 PFS)
The economic evaluation was prepared on both
a pre-tax financial and a post-tax financial model.
A Base Case economic evaluation for the 2022
PFS was prepared incorporating historical three-year trailing averages for gold, copper and silver metal prices of as of June 20, 2022.
Molybdenum price is based on a recent study for a primary molybdenum project. Two alternate cases are also presented: (i) The Recent
Spot Case incorporating spot prices at about the effective date of the 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report for gold, copper, silver and the US$/Cdn$
exchange rate; and, (ii) The Alternate Case that incorporates lower metal prices than used in the Base Case to demonstrate the 2022 PFS’s
sensitivity to lower metal prices. The pre-tax and post-tax estimated economic results in U.S. dollars for all three cases are shown
in the Table below.
Projected Economic Results (US$)
| |
2022 PFS Base Case | | |
2022 PFS Recent Spot Case | | |
2022 PFS Alternate Case | |
Metal Prices: | |
| | |
| | |
| |
Gold ($/ounce) | |
| 1,742 | | |
| 1,850 | | |
| 1,500 | |
Copper ($/pound) | |
| 3.53 | | |
| 4.25 | | |
| 3.00 | |
Silver ($/ounce) | |
| 21.90 | | |
| 22.00 | | |
| 20.00 | |
Molybdenum
($/lb) | |
| 18.00 | | |
| 18.00 | | |
| 18.00 | |
US$/Cdn$
Exchange Rate: | |
| 0.77 | | |
| 0.77 | | |
| 0.77 | |
Cost Summary: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Operating Costs Per Ounce of Gold Produced (years 1 to
7) | |
$ | 35 | | |
$ | -83 | | |
$ | 118 | |
Operating Costs Per Ounce of Gold Produced (life of mine) | |
$ | 275 | | |
$ | 164 | | |
$ | 351 | |
Total Cost Per Ounce of Gold Produced (inclusive of all
capital and closure) | |
$ | 601 | | |
$ | 490 | | |
$ | 677 | |
Initial Capital (billions) | |
$ | 6.4 | | |
$ | 6.4 | | |
$ | 6.4 | |
Sustaining Capital (billions) | |
$ | 3.2 | | |
$ | 3.2 | | |
$ | 3.2 | |
Unit Operating
Cost (US$/tonne) | |
$ | 11.36 | | |
$ | 11.36 | | |
$ | 11.36 | |
Pre-Tax Results: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Net Cash Flow (billions) | |
$ | 38.6 | | |
$ | 46.1 | | |
$ | 27.9 | |
NPV @ 5% Discount Rate (billions) | |
$ | 13.5 | | |
$ | 16.4 | | |
$ | 9.2 | |
Internal Rate of Return | |
| 20.1 | % | |
| 22.4 | % | |
| 16.5 | % |
Payback Period (years) | |
| 3.4 | | |
| 3.1 | | |
| 4.1 | |
Post-Tax Results: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Net Cash Flow (billions) | |
$ | 23.9 | | |
$ | 28.6 | | |
$ | 17.1 | |
NPV @ 5% Discount Rate (billions) | |
$ | 7.9 | | |
$ | 9.8 | | |
$ | 5.2 | |
Internal Rate of Return | |
| 16.1 | % | |
| 18.0 | % | |
| 13.1 | % |
Payback Period (years) | |
| 3.7 | | |
| 3.4 | | |
| 4.3 | |
Note:
| 1. | Operating and total cost per ounce of
gold are after copper, silver and molybdenum credits. |
| 2. | Total cost per ounce includes all start-up
capital, sustaining capital and reclamation/closure costs. |
| 3. | Results include consideration of Royalties
and Impact Benefit Agreements. |
| 4. | The post-tax results include the B.C.
Mineral Tax and provincial and federal corporate taxes. |
Sensitivity analyses were carried out on gold,
copper, silver, and molybdenum metal prices, exchange rate, capital expenditure and operating costs. The analyses are presented in the
2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report graphically as financial outcomes in terms of pre-tax NPV, IRR and payback period. The KSM Project NPV is
most sensitive to gold price and exchange rate followed by operating costs, copper price and capital costs. The IRR is most sensitive
to exchange rate, capital costs and gold price followed by copper price and operating costs. In general, sensitivity to metal price is
roughly equivalent to sensitivity to metal grade. Financial outcomes are relatively insensitive to silver and molybdenum prices.
Recommendations
2022 PFS Recommendations
It is recommended that Seabridge focus on advancing
development of the KSM Property as described in the 2022 PFS by completing the data collection required to conduct a Feasibility Study.
The majority of the US$21.7 million to US$27.3 million of estimated Feasibility Study data collection is related to geotechnical site
investigations for TMF, site infrastructure, mine water management tunnels, and water storage dam.
Deferral of Feasibility Study Data Collection
The
Company plans to continue to pursue a joint venture or sale of the KSM Project. Since it
does not intend to build or operate the KSM Project and the KSM Project includes multiple
deposits and provides a joint venture partner (or purchaser) significant flexibility in the
design of the KSM Project in accordance with its priorities and risk tolerance, the Company
believes that it does not make sense for it to start into work on a feasibility study on
the KSM Project on its own. The work is expected to be work the joint venture partner will
undertake. The 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report includes recommendations on additional work that
could be completed to advance the KSM Project, including budget estimates. The work that
a joint venture partner might choose to complete might include none, some or all of this
recommended work and might include significantly more work or take a different approach to
developing the KSM Project, and so the timing and cost for a joint venture partner to conclude
the recommended work or a feasibility study is impossible to predict. Certain data collection
work and studies that are likely required regardless of the ultimate KSM Project design and
steps towards satisfying conditions in its environmental assessment certificate have been
undertaken and work on them is likely to continue as the Company determines it to be worthwhile,
subject to available funding.
In addition, the Company has commenced certain
early construction works to advance the KSM Project as the Company is seeking a joint venture partner. These works are focused on establishing
site access and camps and initial work towards infrastructure on the critical path of the construction schedule. See “Early
KSM Construction Works”.
2022 Preliminary Economic Assessment
The 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report also includes
a Preliminary Economic Assessment of a stand-alone mine plan and has been undertaken to evaluate a potential future expansion of the
KSM mine to the Iron Cap and Kerr deposits after the 2022 PFS mine plan has been completed. The 2022 PEA is primarily an underground
block cave mining operation supplemented with a small open pit and is planned to operate for 39 years with a peak mill feed production
of 170,000 t/d, demonstrating that KSM has multigenerational long-life mining project potential with flexibility to vary metal output.
None of the Mineral Resources incorporated into the 2022 PEA mine plan have been used in the 2022 PFS mine plan.
The 2022 PEA starts with the development of an
Iron Cap block cave mine supplemented with a small open pit at Kerr. Development of a Kerr block cave mine begins when Iron Cap development
tapers off. Kerr block cave mill feed starts 6 years after the start of Iron Cap mill feed. Mill feed delivery to the process plant is
ramped up to 170,000 tpd by Year 12 but after year 23 tapers down to around 80,000 tpd for the final 13 years. Over the entire 39-year
mine life, mill feed will be delivered to a flotation concentration mill circuit. The flotation plant will produce a gold/copper/silver
concentrate and separate molybdenum concentrate for transport by truck to a nearby seaport at Stewart, B.C.
Mineral Resources (2022 PEA)
The 2022 PEA uses the mineral resource estimates
for the Kerr and Iron Cap deposits disclosed above. The NSR cutoff for the PEA open pit is Cdn$10.75/t. In addition, the mineral resources
are constrained by conceptual mining shapes.
The 2022 PEA is preliminary in nature and includes
Inferred Mineral Resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations applied to them that
would enable them to be categorized as Mineral Reserves, and there is no certainty that the results of the 2022 PEA will be realized.
Mineral Resources in the 2022 PEA mine plan are not Mineral Reserves and do not have demonstrated economic viability.
2022 PEA Mine Design (2022 PEA)
Kerr open pit has been designed to supplement
block cave mill feed during the ramp up of the PEA block cave production.
Waste to mill feed cut-offs are determined using
a NSR for each block in the model. The pit delineated resources for the 2022 PEA use an NSR cut-off of Cdn$10.75/t. NSR is calculated
using prices and process recoveries for each metal accounting for all off-site losses, transportation, smelting and refining charges.
Metal prices of US$1,200 per ounce gold, US$2.70 per pound copper, and US$17.50 per ounce silver and a foreign exchange rate of US$ 0.83
per Cdn$1.00 are used in the NSR calculations.
The underground block caving mine designs for
Iron Cap and Kerr are based on modeling using GEOVIA’s Footprint Finder (FF) software. The ramp-up and maximum yearly mine production
rates are established based on the rate at which the drawpoints are constructed and the assumptions are conservatively less than the
demonstrated maximum industry rate and the initial and maximum production rates at which individual drawpoints can be mucked. The values
chosen for these inputs are based on industry averages adjusted to suit the anticipated conditions.
The Iron Cap block cave mine includes an estimated
development duration of 4 years, a production ramp-up period of 6 years, steady state production at 32.9 million tonnes per
year for 17 years, and then a production ramp-down period of 6 years. The Iron Cap block cave is located adjacent to the MTT, the
transportation conduit between mine and mill.
The Iron Cap mine is designed as a partially
electrified mine with partial automation where battery electric vehicles replace diesel production loaders on the extraction level and
trains replace trucks on the haulage level. The height of draw averages around 500m, ranging from 200m on the west limit that is developed
early in the mine life to 750m on the east edge of the design that is developed late in the mine life.
The Kerr block cave has an estimated development
duration of five years, a production ramp-up period of 5 years, and steady state production at 29.2 million tonnes per year for 20 total
years with a seven year production dip to as low as 15.0 million tonnes during the transition from the first to second lift.
The Kerr block cave has been designed as a conventionally
developed and operated block cave mine leaving additional upside for improvement by electrification.
The mining NSR shut-off is Cdn$20 per tonne for
the Iron Cap block cave and Cdn$18 per tonne for the Kerr block cave. The mill feed contained in the mine plan for the 2022 PEA including
dilution and mining losses are stated as follows.
Mill Feed from the PEA Mine Plan
| |
| |
| |
| | |
Average Grades | | |
Contained Metal | |
Zone | |
Mining Method | |
Classification | |
Tonnes (millions) | | |
Gold (g/t) | | |
Copper (%) | | |
Silver (g/t) | | |
Gold M oz’s | | |
Copper M lbs | | |
Silver M oz’s | |
Iron Cap | |
Block Cave | |
M+I | |
| 58 | | |
| 0.62 | | |
| 0.28 | | |
| 3.2 | | |
| 1.1 | | |
| 354 | | |
| 5.9 | |
| |
| |
Inferred | |
| 685 | | |
| 0.58 | | |
| 0.36 | | |
| 3.0 | | |
| 12.7 | | |
| 5,424 | | |
| 65.4 | |
Kerr | |
Open Pit | |
M+I | |
| 117 | | |
| 0.26 | | |
| 0.51 | | |
| 1.4 | | |
| 1.0 | | |
| 1,315 | | |
| 5 | |
| |
| |
Inferred | |
| 7 | | |
| 0.74 | | |
| 0.09 | | |
| 1.5 | | |
| 0.2 | | |
| 14 | | |
| 0 | |
| |
Block Cave | |
M+I | |
| 48 | | |
| 0.25 | | |
| 0.53 | | |
| 1.3 | | |
| 0.4 | | |
| 557 | | |
| 2.0 | |
| |
| |
Inferred | |
| 777 | | |
| 0.31 | | |
| 0.49 | | |
| 1.7 | | |
| 7.8 | | |
| 8,339 | | |
| 43.6 | |
Total Mill Feed | |
M+I | |
| 223 | | |
| 0.35 | | |
| 0.45 | | |
| 1.8 | | |
| 2.5 | | |
| 2,226 | | |
| 13 | |
Mined | |
Inferred | |
| 1,469 | | |
| 0.44 | | |
| 0.43 | | |
| 2.3 | | |
| 20.7 | | |
| 13,777 | | |
| 109 | |
Note: The 2022 PEA is preliminary
in nature and includes Inferred Mineral Resources that are considered too speculative geologically to have the economic considerations
applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as Mineral Reserves, and there is no certainty that the results of the 2022
PEA will be realized. Mineral Resources are not Mineral Reserves and do not have demonstrated economic viability.
Production (2022 PEA)
The 2022 PEA assumes that the 2022 PFS plan has
been completed. Open pit mining equipment will be relocated to the Kerr deposit to begin prestripping while the Iron Cap block cave is
being developed. Year 1 of the 2022 PEA mine life coincides with the first year of mill feed from the Iron Cap deposit. Mill feed from
Kerr block cave begins in Year 7. The 2022 PEA production plan produces 14.3 Billion pounds of copper, 14.3 Million ounces of gold, 68.2
million ounces of silver, and 13.8 million pounds of molybdenum from 1.7 Billion tonnes of mill feed over a 39 year mine life. The production
schedule is shown in the graph below.
2022 PEA Mill Feed Production Schedule
Average annual production is summarized estimated
as follows:
Average Annual Metal Production
| |
Life of Mine Average | |
Average Grades: | |
| |
Gold (grams per tonne) | |
| 0.43 | |
Copper (%) | |
| 0.43 | |
Silver (grams per tonne) | |
| 2.2 | |
Molybdenum (parts per million) | |
| 24 | |
Average Annual Production: | |
| | |
Gold (ounces) | |
| 368,000 | |
Copper (pounds) | |
| 366
million | |
Silver (ounces) | |
| 1.8
million | |
Molybdenum (pounds) | |
| 0.4
million | |
Note:
Annual production shows total metal contained in copper concentrate, doré, and molybdenum concentrate.
Cost allowances for tailings storage and management
have been included in the 2022 PEA. Tailing management is envisioned as a combination of technically viable storage approaches that will
be refined in future studies to comprise appropriate and responsible solutions depending on best selected locations and available technology.
Capital Costs (2022 PEA)
Initial capital cost for the 2022 PEA is estimated
at US$1.5 billion with sustaining capital over the 39 year mine life estimated at US$12.8 billion dominated by block cave development
capital. Initial capital includes all capital until the first year of mill feed (Year 1). Capital estimates are summarized as follows:
2022 PEA Capital Costs (US$ million)
| |
Initial | | |
Sustaining | | |
Total | |
| |
US$ M | | |
US$ M | | |
US$ M | |
Direct Costs | |
| | |
| | |
| |
Mine | |
| 828 | | |
| 6,678 | | |
| 7,506 | |
Process | |
| 0 | | |
| 651 | | |
| 651 | |
Tailings Management Facility | |
| 74 | | |
| 664 | | |
| 738 | |
On-site Infrastructure | |
| 26 | | |
| 573 | | |
| 599 | |
Power Supply/Energy Recovery | |
| 0 | | |
| 112 | | |
| 112 | |
Total Direct Capital | |
| 927 | | |
| 8,678 | | |
| 9,606 | |
Indirect cost | |
| 253 | | |
| 1249 | | |
| 1,502 | |
Contingency | |
| 320 | | |
| 2824 | | |
| 3,145 | |
Total Capital | |
| 1,500 | | |
| 12,752 | | |
| 14,252 | |
Note:
Numbers may not add due to rounding
Operating Costs (2022 PEA)
Average mine, process and G&A operating costs
over the 2022 PEA’s life (including waste mining and on-site power credits, excluding off-site shipping and smelting costs) are
estimated at US$11.98 per tonne milled (before base metal credits). A breakdown of estimated unit operating costs is as follows:
2022 PEA LOM Average Unit Operating Costs
(US$ Per Tonne Milled)
Mining | |
| 4.99 | |
Process | |
| 4.31 | |
G&A + Site Services | |
| 1.89 | |
Tailings Storage/Handling | |
| 0.15 | |
Water Management/Treatment | |
| 0.68 | |
Energy Recovery | |
| -0.09 | |
Provincial Sales Tax | |
| 0.05 | |
Total Operating Costs | |
| 11.98 | |
Economic Analysis (2022 PEA)
A Base Case economic evaluation using a discounted
cash flow analysis was undertaken incorporating historical three-year trailing averages for gold, copper and silver metal prices of as
of June 20, 2022. This approach is used because it is consistent with the 2022 PFS Base Case. Molybdenum price is based on a recent study
for a primary molybdenum project. Two alternate cases are also presented: (i) an Alternate Case that incorporates lower metal prices
than used in the Base Case to demonstrate the project’s sensitivity to lower prices; and, (ii) a Recent Spot Case incorporating
recent spot prices for gold, copper, silver and the US$/Cdn$ exchange rate. The pre-tax and post-tax estimated economic results in U.S.
dollars for all three are as follows:
2022 PEA Projected Economic Results (US$)
| |
2022 PEA Base Case | | |
2022 PEA Alternate
Case | | |
2022 PEA Recent Spot Case | |
Metal Prices: | |
| | |
| | |
| |
Gold ($/ounce) | |
| 1,742 | | |
| 1,500 | | |
| 1,850 | |
Copper ($/pound) | |
| 3.53 | | |
| 3.00 | | |
| 4.25 | |
Silver ($/ounce) | |
| 21.90 | | |
| 20.00 | | |
| 22.00 | |
Molybdenum ($/lb) | |
| 18.00 | | |
| 18.00 | | |
| 18.00 | |
US$/Cdn$ Exchange Rate: | |
| 0.77 | | |
| 0.77 | | |
| 0.77 | |
Cost Summary: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Operating Costs Per Pound of Copper Produced
(life of mine) | |
$ | 0.38 | | |
$ | 0.59 | | |
$ | 0.32 | |
Total Cost Per Pound of Copper Produced (inclusive of all capital) | |
$ | 1.44 | | |
$ | 1.64 | | |
$ | 1.38 | |
Pre-Tax Results: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Net Cash Flow (billions) | |
$ | 29.8 | | |
$ | 19.4 | | |
$ | 40.9 | |
NPV @ 5% Discount Rate (billions) | |
$ | 9.7 | | |
$ | 5.8 | | |
$ | 13.9 | |
Internal Rate of Return | |
| 24.0 | % | |
| 17.4 | % | |
| 30.4 | % |
Payback Period (years) | |
| 4.7 | | |
| 7.5 | | |
| 3.9 | |
Post-Tax Results: | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
Net Cash Flow (billions) | |
$ | 18.5 | | |
$ | 11.9 | | |
$ | 25.6 | |
NPV @ 5% Discount Rate (billions) | |
$ | 5.8 | | |
$ | 3.3 | | |
$ | 8.4 | |
Internal Rate of Return | |
| 18.9 | % | |
| 13.5 | % | |
| 24.0 | % |
Payback Period (years) | |
| 6.2 | | |
| 8.7 | | |
| 4.4 | |
Note:
| 1. | The 2022 PEA is preliminary in nature
and includes Inferred Mineral Resources that are considered too speculative geologically
to have the economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized
as Mineral Reserves, and there is no certainty that the results of the 2022 PEA will be realized.
Mineral Resources are not Mineral Reserves and do not have demonstrated economic viability. |
| 2. | Results include consideration of Royalties
and Impact Benefit Agreements. |
| 3. | Operating and total cost per pound of
copper produced are after gold, silver and molybdenum credits. |
| 4. | The post-tax results include the B.C.
Mineral Tax and provincial and federal corporate taxes. |
| 5. | Cash flows are discounted to the start
of the 2022 PEA development. |
| 6. | Payback years are measured from the first
year of mill feed. |
The 2022 PEA financials are more sensitive to
changes in copper price and exchange rate than changes in capital costs and operating costs.
Early KSM Construction Works
Under the B.C. Environmental Assessment Act,
a project’s EAC is subject to expiry if the project has not been “substantially started” by the deadline specified
in the EAC. Once the ’substantially started’ designation is achieved, the EAC is no longer subject to expiry.
At the KSM Project, the Company’s principal
current activities are directed towards ensuring that the KSM Project will be able to achieve the ‘substantially started’
designation by the July 29, 2026 deadline. This has necessitated initiating construction of infrastructure in 2021 and continuing it
concurrently with the Company’s search for a partner for the KSM Project. The early construction work is focused on site access,
camps, power supply and preparing for construction of infrastructure on the critical path for construction and includes completing construction
of the Glacier and Taft Creeks fish habitat offsetting ponds, completing the initial 8.6 km segment of the CCAR, building the initial
17 km of the TCAR, including the Bell-Irving River Bridge, and the access road from the 17 km mark of the TCAR to the PTMA, construction
of a camp near the beginning of the TCAR and preparing the site where the Mitchell Valley camp will be constructed. In addition, in February,
2022, KSMCo entered into a Facilities Agreement with BC Hydro covering the design and construction of the Treaty Creek Switching Station
(the “TCT”) by BC Hydro to supply construction phase hydro-sourced electricity to the KSM Project. The TCT, located
where KSM’s Treaty Creek Access Road meets Highway 37, south of Bell 2, is now scheduled to be completed in mid-2025. KSMCo has
completed its design for a 30 km long 287 KV transmission line to interconnect the TCT and the KSM plant site. This KSM transmission
line is scheduled to be constructed in 2024 with completion and commissioning planned for early 2025 to be ready for connection to the
TCT. The construction of the transmission line, FLT1 and the purchase of construction power equipment are presently intended to be included
as part of the Company’s early construction activities, but the balance of the estimated cost to complete is presented in the 2022
PFS. The system reinforcement security is eligible to be forgiven annually, typically over a period of less than 8 years, based on project
power consumption.
As of October 31, 2022, the Company has completed
construction of the Bell-Irving River Bridge, the camp near the beginning of the TCAR, approximately 16 km of the TCAR and 3.5 km of
the CCAR and the preparation work for the site of the camp in the Mitchell valley. In addition, most of the work is complete on the Glacier
Creek fish habitat offsetting ponds and site clearing work has been advanced by BC Hydro at the location of the TCT.
As part of its efforts to fund these activities,
in March, 2022, KSMCo, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company and owner of the KSM Project, sold a US$225,000,000 Secured Note that
is to be exchanged at maturity for a silver royalty on the KSM Project, and Seabridge sold concurrently a Contingent Right, to Sprott
Private Resource Streaming and Royalty (B) Corp. and Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan for US$225 million (approximately C$285 million
at the current exchange rate).
Independent Geotechnical Review Board
In January, 2015, the Company established an
Independent Geotechnical Review Board (“IGRB”) for the KSM Project to review and consider the KSM Project’s
TMF and WSF with a focus on their structural stability and integrity. The IGRB is in place to provide independent, expert oversight,
opinion and advice to Seabridge on the design, construction, operational management and ultimate closure of the TMF and WSF. The IGRB
has unimpeded access to all technical data necessary to enable them to assess KSM’s TMF and WSF on an ongoing basis to ensure that
these structures meet internationally accepted standards and practices which effectively minimize risks to employees, lands and communities.
There are four core members of the IGRB and four
support members whose expertise will be called upon as needed. The IGRB comprises the following leading experts in their fields:
Name |
|
Education
and Experience |
Dr. Andrew Robertson (Chairman, Core Member) |
|
B.Sc. in Civil Engineering,
a Ph.D. in Rock Mechanics and 50 years of experience in mining geotechnics, of which 42 years were gained while practicing from his
home base in Vancouver, Canada. |
Dr. Gabriel Fernandez (Core Member) |
|
Civil Engineer, M.S. in
Soil, Ph.D. in Geotechnical Engineering and has over 45 years of experience. |
Mr. Terry Eldridge (Core Member) |
|
P.Eng., FEC and has over
35 years of experience in the investigation, design, construction and closure of mine waste management facilities. |
Mr. Anthony Rattue (Core Member) |
|
P.Eng. and has over 45
years of experience in geotechnical engineering. |
Dr. Leslie Smith (Support Member) |
|
Professor in the Department
of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of British Columbia, where he holds the Cominco Chair in Minerals and
the Environment, and has 45 years of experience in hydrogeology in the topic areas of groundwater flow and contaminant transport,
numerical modeling, groundwater – surface water interactions, and applications of hydrogeology in mining. |
Dr. Ian Hutchison (Support Member) |
|
Ph.D. in Civil Engineering
and has over 45 years of experience in the planning design and construction of mining and heavy civil engineering facilities in North
and South America and Southern Africa. |
Mr. Jim Obermeyer (Support Member) |
|
M.S. in Civil Engineering
with a specialty in Geotechnical Engineering, a licensed professional engineer in Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, Montana and Wyoming,
and has 45 years of experience in Civil and Geotechnical Engineering and managing and coordinating multidisciplinary projects. |
Dr. Jean Pierre Tournier (Support Member) |
|
Ph.D. in Civil Engineering
- Soil Mechanics and has 40 years of experience in the design and construction of hydroelectric developments. |
The initial IGRB review of Seabridge Gold’s
TMF and WSF design was conducted between March 9 and 12, 2015 and was developed to answer five questions: (1) Are dams and structures
located appropriately; (2) Are dam sections, materials, construction methods and sequencing appropriate for the site; (3) What are the
greatest design, construction and operating risks; (4) Are the facilities designed to operate effectively, and: (5) Are the facilities
designed to be safe? The Board concluded that it was satisfied with the project’s designs and responded favourably to all five
questions, as highlighted in the Board’s first report which was released in April 2015. Additionally, the Board presented a series
of recommendations for Seabridge to consider during the ongoing engineering design of TMF and WSF as advancement continues.
Since 2015 the IGRB has held seven more meetings
and the Company has issued Reports 1 through 6 and is reviewing the report for the seventh meeting, which occurred in November, 2021.
The Company is waiting to receive the finalized report for the eighth meeting, which occurred in October, 2022.
All IGRB reports issued are posted to the Company’s
KSM Project website at www.ksmproject.com.
Courageous Lake Project
The Courageous Lake Project is a gold project
located approximately 240 kilometers northeast of Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories, Canada. The property is comprised of 84 Territorial
mining leases, 1 Territorial mining claim, 3 federal (AANDC) mining leases and 1 federal (AANDC) mining claim having a combined area
of 50,228 hectares. Seabridge has a 100% interest in the project, subject to a 2% NSR on certain portions of the property.
Tetra Tech coordinated the preparation of the
technical report entitled “Seabridge Gold Inc. – Courageous Lake Prefeasibility Study” with an effective date of September
5, 2012, as revised and reissued on November 11, 2014 (the “Courageous Lake Report”) in respect of the Courageous
Lake Project. The Courageous Lake Report is available under the Company’s profile at www.sedar.com.
Iskut Project
The Iskut Project is located about 20 kilometers
from the KSM Project. The land package has undergone intermittent exploration with the majority of the work carried out in the late 1980s
and early 1990s. This early work was undertaken by over 30 independent operators and their efforts have highlighted numerous targets
which have seen little to no follow up work in the past 20 years. SnipGold completed a resource estimate for the Bronson Slope Porphyry
Deposit on the Iskut property in 2010. The Iskut Project includes the Johnny Mountain Mine site, which is now closed, and is adjacent
to the Snip Mine.
Exploration activities by Seabridge at the Iskut
Project are being conducted under the supervision of William E. Threlkeld, Registered Professional Geologist, Senior Vice President of
the Company.
Snowstorm Project
The Snowstorm project is located in Humboldt
County, Nevada and is comprised of 977 mining claims and 11,340 acres of land holdings strategically located at the projected intersection
of three of the most important gold trends in Northern Nevada: the Carlin Trend, the Getchell Trend and the Northern Nevada Rift Zone
(the “Snowstorm Project”). Snowstorm is contiguous and on strike with several large, successful gold producers including
the Getchell/Turquoise Ridge Joint Venture operated by Barrick Gold, Newmont Mining’s Twin Creeks and Hecla Mining’s Midas
operations. The project was purchased in early 2017 with an extensive package of data generated by previous operators over ten years.
The Company’s first drill program at the Snowstorm Project was undertaken in 2019, identifying the favourable stratigraphic host
for a Getchell-style deposit as well as structures similar to those which fed the deposits to the south.
RISK FACTORS
Investing in the Common Shares is speculative
and involves a high degree of risk due to the nature of the Company’s business and the present stage of exploration and development
of its mineral properties. The principal risk factors to which the Company business and its Common Shares are subject are presented in
detail in the 2021 AIF. The following is an abbreviated list of risk factors. These risk factors, as well as risks currently unknown
to the Company, could materially adversely affect the Company’s future business, operations and financial condition and could cause
them to differ materially from the estimates described in forward-looking statements relating to the Company, or its business, property
or financial results, each of which could cause investors to lose part or all of their investment. Before deciding to invest in any Common
Shares, investors should carefully consider the risks included herein and incorporated by reference in this Prospectus and those described
in any Prospectus Supplement.
Risks Relating to the Common Shares
The trading price for the Company’s
securities is volatile.
The
market prices for the securities of mining companies, including the Company, have historically been highly volatile. The market has from
time to time experienced significant price and volume fluctuations that are unrelated to the operating performance of any particular
company. In addition, because of the nature of Seabridge's business, certain factors such as the Company's announcements and the public's
reaction, operating performance and the performance of competitors and other similar companies, fluctuations in the market prices of
the Company's resources, government regulations, changes in earnings estimates or recommendations by research analysts who track Seabridge's
securities or securities of other companies in the resource sector, general market conditions, announcements relating to litigation,
the arrival or departure of key personnel and the factors listed under the heading "Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements"
can have an adverse impact on the market price of the Common Shares. For example, since January 1, 2022, the closing price of the Common
Shares on the TSX has ranged from a low of $13.83 to a high of $28.00 and on the NYSE has ranged from a low of US$10.026 to a high of
US$22.22.
Any
negative change in the public's perception of the Company's prospects could cause the price
of the Company's securities, including the price of the Common Shares, to decrease dramatically.
Furthermore, any negative change in the public's perception of the prospects of mining companies
in general could depress the price of Seabridge's securities, including the price of the
Common Shares, regardless of the Company's results. Following declines in the market price
of a company's securities, securities class-action litigation is often instituted. Litigation
of this type, if instituted, could result in substantial costs and a diversion of Seabridge's
management's attention and resources.
Sales of a significant number of Common Shares
in the public markets, or the perception of such sales, could depress the market price of the Common Shares.
Sales of a substantial number of Common Shares
or other equity-related securities in the public markets by the Company or its significant shareholders could depress the market price
of the Common Shares and impair Seabridge’s ability to raise capital through the sale of additional equity securities. Seabridge
cannot predict the effect that future sales of the Common Shares or other equity-related securities would have on the market price of
the Common Shares. The price of the Common Shares could be affected by possible sales of the Common Shares by hedging or arbitrage trading
activity which the Company expects to occur involving the Common Shares.
Risks Relating to the Company
The Company has a history of net losses
and negative cash flows from operations and expects losses and negative cash flows from operations to continue for the foreseeable future.
The Company has a history of net losses and negative
cash flows from operations and the Company expects to incur net losses and negative cash flows from operations for the foreseeable future.
As of December 31, 2021, the Company’s deficit totaled approximately $150 million. None of the Company’s properties
has advanced to the commercial production stage and the Company has no history of earnings or positive cash flow from operations.
The Company expects to continue to incur net
losses unless and until such time as one or more of its projects enters into commercial production and generates sufficient revenues
to fund continuing operations or until such time as the Company is able to offset its expenses against the sale of one or more of its
projects, if applicable. The development of the Company’s projects to achieve production will require the commitment of substantial
financial resources. The amount and timing of expenditures will depend on a number of factors, including the progress of ongoing exploration
and development, the results of consultant analysis and recommendations, the rate at which operating losses are incurred and the execution
of any sale or joint venture agreements with strategic partners, some of which are beyond the Company’s control. There is no assurance
that the Company will be profitable in the future.
The Company has discretion concerning the
use of cash resources, including the net proceeds of an offering under a prospectus supplement, as well as the timing of expenditures.
The Company has discretion concerning the application
of cash resources and the timing of expenditures and shareholders may not agree with the manner in which the Company elects to allocate
and spend cash resources. The results and the effectiveness of the application of cash resources are uncertain. The failure by the Company
to apply cash resources effectively could have a material adverse effect on the business of the Company. Management of the Company will
have discretion with respect to the use of the net proceeds from an offering and investors will be relying on the judgment of management
regarding the application of these proceeds. Management of the Company could spend most of the net proceeds from an offering in ways
that the Company’s security holders may not desire or that do not yield a favourable return. Prospective investors will not have
the opportunity, as part of their investment in the Common Shares, to influence the manner in which the net proceeds of an offering are
used. At the date of this Prospectus, the Company intends to use the net proceeds from an offering as indicated in the discussion under
“Use of Proceeds”. However, the Company’s needs may change as the business of the Company evolves and the Company may
have to allocate the net proceeds differently than as indicated in the discussion under “Use of Proceeds”. As a result, the
proceeds that the Company receives in an offering may be used in a manner significantly different from the Company’s current expectations.
The Company’s indebtedness may adversely
affect its cash flow and ability to advance its business.
The Company has indebtedness arising from its
sale of a US$225,000,000 Secured Note. As a result of this indebtedness, the Company will be required to make quarterly interest payments
of approximately US$3.66 million to the holder of the Secured Note and may issue common shares or raise money in the capital markets
to fund its debt service costs both of which would be dilutive to current shareholders. Although the terms of the Secured Note are intended
to result in all of the principal amount of the Secured Note being used on maturity to purchase, by way of offset, a royalty on silver
produced from the KSM Project, in certain circumstances the holder of the Secured Note may require the Company to repay the principal
amount and the Company will have to raise the amount needed to repay the principal in capital markets, settle the principal by issuing
common shares to the holder or by selling assets. The Company’s indebtedness could have adverse consequences for the Company, including:
limiting its ability to obtain additional financing for working capital, capital expenditures, exploration and development, debt service
requirements, acquisitions and general corporate or other purposes; restricting the Company’s flexibility and discretion to operate
its business; and having to raise capital to pay interest or principal at unattractive prices or in poor financial markets; limiting
its ability to adjust to changing market conditions; placing the Company at a competitive disadvantage compared to competitors that have
less debt or greater financial resources; making the Company vulnerable in a downturn in general economic conditions; and preventing
the Company’s ability to make expenditures that are important to our growth and strategies.
The ability of the Company to meet its debt service
requirements may depend on its ability to raise capital in financial markets. There can be no assurance that the Company will be able
to raise funds in amounts sufficient to pay amounts when due or to fund any other liquidity needs. If the Company is unable to meet the
obligations to pay interest or principal under the Secured Note, the holder may exercise its rights under the security arrangements associated
with the Secured Note, which could result in a loss or substantial reduction in the value of the KSM Project, the principal asset of
the Company.
If the Company is unable to service its indebtedness
or fulfil its other obligations under the Secured Note, the Company may have to raise capital in ways that it might not otherwise select,
such as reducing or delaying expenditures, selling assets, restructuring or refinancing indebtedness or seeking equity capital in poor
market conditions.
The Company believes that it may be classified
as a “passive foreign investment company” for the current taxable year, which would likely result in materially adverse U.S.
federal income tax consequences for U.S. investors.
The
Company believes that it was classified as a passive foreign investment company ("PFIC")
for the taxable year ending December 31, 2021 and expects that it may be classified as a
PFIC for the current taxable year and in future taxable years. If the Company is classified
as a PFIC for any taxable year during which a U.S. taxpayer holds Common Shares, it would
likely result in adverse U.S. federal income tax consequences for such U.S. taxpayer. The
adverse consequences of the PFIC regime may be mitigated if a U.S. taxpayer who holds Common
Shares is able to make a "qualified electing fund" election or a "mark-to-market"
election. The Company has made available and expects to continue to make available the information
necessary for a U.S. taxpayer who holds Common Shares to make and maintain a QEF election.
U.S. taxpayers who hold Common Shares should consult their own tax advisors regarding the
likelihood and consequences of the Company being classified as a PFIC for U.S. federal income
tax purposes.
The Company has spent the proceeds of the
issuance of flow-through shares on expenditures it believes to be Canadian exploration expenses (“CEE”) and renounced such
expenditures to investors in flow-through shares, but the CRA has reduced the amounts of CEE renounced and reassessed investors. The Company
intends to challenge the CRA’s conclusions but there is a risk that the Company may not be successful in challenging the CRA’s
decision, thus having an adverse impact on the Company’s balance sheet.
The CRA has advised that it is going to reduce
the amount of expenditures renounced as CEE by the Company in the three years ended December 31, 2016, December 31, 2015 and December
31, 2014 by approximately $19.6 million. The Company is challenging the CRA’s re-assessment vigorously and, if necessary, will
proceed to litigation on the issue. The Company has already effectively indemnified all reassessed investors by depositing funds with
the CRA in the amount required by CRA’s reassessment. Although the Company believes it will ultimately prevail on the merits, if
the Company is not successful in its challenge, there is a risk that the CRA’s conclusions will require the Company to record a
charge in its financial statements and the Company may have difficulties collecting refunds made to the reassessed investors.
USE
OF PROCEEDS
Unless otherwise specified in the Prospectus
Supplement, the net proceeds of any offering of Securities under a Prospectus Supplement will be used for general corporate purposes,
including funding future exploration and advancement work on the Company's mineral properties and payment of interest on its debt. In
its most recently completed financial year (as in most years) the Company had negative cash flow from operating activities. As the Company
typically has no cash flow from operating activities, the allocation of net proceeds of an offering to general corporate purposes for
the purpose of funding its operating activities involves using net proceeds of an offering to fund negative cash flow from operating
activities in future periods. The portion of the Company’s expenditure on general corporate purposes from the net proceeds of any
offering that is to be spent on operating activities will vary depending on the purposes of the Offering and will be set forth in greater
detail in the Prospectus Supplement relating to that offering. For more information regarding risks related to the Company’s history
of negative cash flow from operating activities, see “Risk Factors – Risks Relating to the Company”. More detailed
information regarding the use of proceeds from a sale of Securities will be included in the applicable Prospectus Supplement.
All
expenses relating to an offering of Securities and any compensation paid to underwriters, dealers or agents, as the case may be, will
be paid out of the Company’s general funds, unless otherwise stated in the applicable Prospectus Supplement.
Business Objectives and Milestones
Early in each calendar year the Company establishes
a set of business objectives which it sets forth in its Annual Report. For 2022, the Company’s objectives were as follows:
| 1. | Complete a joint venture agreement on
the KSM Project with a suitable partner on terms advantageous to Seabridge. |
| 2. | Continue to strengthen the Company’s
social license by responding effectively to the needs and concerns of Treaty and First Nations
and local communities. |
| 3. | Complete an updated PFS incorporating
the East Mitchell (formerly Snowfield) deposit into the greater KSM project. |
| 4. | Advance “substantially started”
activities at KSM to ensure that the project’s Environmental Assessment Certificate
remains in good standing for the life of the project. |
| 5. | Continue exploration activities at Snowstorm. |
| 6. | Conduct additional drilling at Iskut focused
on the discovery of a new gold/copper porphyry deposit. |
| 7. | Continue the reclamation and closure of
the Johnny Mountain Mine in cooperation with the Tahltan Nation and British Columbia regulators. |
| 8. | Subject to receipt of permits, conduct
an initial drill program at 3 Aces to confirm the Company’s geologic model. |
| 9. | Increase gold ownership per common share
by way of accretive resource additions from acquisitions and/or continued exploration at
our projects. |
The Company is in the process of establishing
its objectives for 2023 and these will be set forth in its Annual Report for 2022 that is expected to be available in May, 2023. The
2023 objectives are expected to include objectives 1, 2, 4, 7 and 9 set forth above as well as updated exploration objectives at each
of the Iskut, 3 Aces and Snowstorm projects and certain additional objectives that are in the process of being determined. Objectives
1, 2 and 9 above do not have specific funding or have modest funding associated with them. The exploration objectives for 2023 at the
Iskut and 3 Aces projects are each expected to be in the $6-$8 million range and are intended to be funded by way of private placement
of flow-through shares, not from proceeds of a future Prospectus Supplement.
The 2023 objectives relating to exploration
at the Snowstorm project and reclamation and closure of the Johnny Mountain Mine are expected to be in the range of $4-$6 million each.
These expenditures are likely to be funded from the proceeds of a future Prospectus Supplement, and it is anticipated it would be a Prospectus
Supplement in respect of an At-the-Market offering which will take place in the United States.
The objective relating to advancing construction
activities towards achieving the designation of “substantially started” represents by far the biggest expenditures to be
incurred by the Company over the years leading up to the July 29, 2026 deadline for achieving that designation. The BC Environmental
Assessment Office (the “EAO”), the regulator that decides whether a project is designated as “substantially
started”, does not give guidance in respect of extent of work necessary to achieve that designation. The Company is able to review
previous decisions of the EAO in respect of whether other projects have achieved “substantially started”, but the Company
must subjectively apply the principles from those decisions to the KSM Project and make its own assessment of the amount of work that
must be completed. Accordingly, there is some uncertainty regarding the work that the Company needs to complete to be deemed to have
“substantially started” the KSM Project. The Company’s approach has been to commence early construction activities
at KSM on a schedule that will permit it to complete the amount of work it considers sufficient to achieve the “substantially started”
designation well before July 29, 2026. There is a range of possible work under consideration for completion and the specific work that
is to be completed is determined in the Company’s annual planning and budget process based on the extent of work completed in the
previous year, project needs, reducing project risks and advancing on matters more critical to full mine construction timelines. The
Company is optimistic that it will attract a joint venture partner as it advances these early construction activities and at some point
thereafter the joint venture partner will take over the construction work.
At the date of this Prospectus, the Company
is in the midst of planning its work programs and budgets for 2023, including the early construction work at the KSM Project. The more
significant elements of the construction activities it is presently considering for 2023 include the following:
| ● | Completing
the Glacier Creek fish habitat offsetting ponds; |
| ● | Extending
the Treaty Creek Access Road from the 17 km mark up the North Treaty Creek valley to the
location of the proposed processing plant and MTT portals; |
| ● | Earthworks
surrounding the camp built near the beginning of the Treaty Creek Access Road in 2022; |
| ● | Commencing
construction of the Taft Creek fish habitat offsetting ponds; |
| ● | Constructing
access roads to, and performing site clearing at, the sites for construction of foundations
for powerline poles for the power transmission line from the Treaty Creek switching station
to the processing plant area in the North Treaty Creek valley; |
| ● | Expanding
camp facilities at the Hodder Camp near the Treaty Creek Access Road; and |
| ● | Advancing
engineering of various infrastructure proposed for construction. |
The additional early construction work the
Company is considering for completion in 2024 and 2025 includes completing construction of the Taft Creek fish habitat offsetting ponds,
constructing the powerline from the Treaty Creek switching station to the area of the proposed processing plant and MTT portals in the
North Treaty Creek valley, constructing the power substation at the area of the processing plant, constructing the Coulter Creek Access
Road to the 8.6 km mark and clearing of many of the sites for location of proposed KSM Project infrastructure. The Company anticipates
submitting an application to the EAO for a decision that the KSM Project has been “substantially started” well before the
deadline and believes it is keeping itself on course for a positive decision.
The Company has only prepared preliminary
estimates for the cost of all of this work and certain of the work requires further engineering before reasonable cost estimates can
be established. The Company may elect not to complete some or many elements of this work and may elect to engage in construction of other
elements of the KSM Project infrastructure instead, including in respect of the work for 2023. However, it is anticipating that its budget
for 2023 early construction activities will be in the range of $100 - $180 million.
The Company entered into a Facilities Agreement
with British Columbia Power and Hydro Authority (“BC Hydro”) on February 28, 2022 under which BC Hydro will design
and construct a switching station that will permit the Company to draw hydro power for its KSM Project from the Northwest Transmission
Line Under the Facilities Agreement, the Company must pay BC Hydro for the work to be performed at an estimated cost of $83.1 million
(plus GST), of which $28.9 million (plus GST) was paid by April 1, 2022, a further $43.7 million (plus GST) is due on or before January
10, 2023 and the remaining $10.6 million (plus GST) is due by December 31, 2023. BC Hydro has advised that it now expect this work to
be completed in mid 2025.
The Company is exploring various alternatives
for raising the funding necessary to pay for these construction activities and other business objectives. Possible financing options
include the sale of a royalty or streaming interest in the KSM Project, funding from a joint venture partner as part of earning into
an interest in the KSM Project, the sale of all or some form of interest in one of the Company’s other projects or the sale of
shares or debt issued by the Company, including a possible financing under a Prospectus Supplement. The Company plans to promptly establish
an At-the-Market Offering in the United States after the filing of this Prospectus, which has been an effective source of meaningful
funding for the Company.
Mineral Interest Activities
In order to achieve its objectives and milestones,
the Company estimates annual costs for each of its mineral interests and tracks costs against those estimates for payroll, environmental
and social, technical engineering, exploration and other holding or property costs. The below describes those costs versus the 2022 estimates.
Advancing the KSM Project and in addition
to the substantial start discussion above, the Company’s 2022 plan and reported costs to September 30, 2022 were:
| |
| Actual
| | |
| Plan
| |
Payroll | |
$ | 2.0
million | | |
$ | 2.2
million | |
Technical and engineering | |
$ | 10.0
million | | |
$ | 12.1
million | |
Environmental and social | |
$ | 10.7
million | | |
$ | 12.7
million | |
Other holding or property | |
$ | 0.5
million | | |
$ | 0.1
million | |
Total | |
$ | 23.2
million | | |
$ | 27.1
million | |
Technical and engineering costs include those
costs to achieve objective #3 above related to the completion of the 2022 PFS and the continuing geotechnical data collection for key
mine infrastructure. Environmental and social endeavours relate to environmental monitoring baseline studies at KSM.
At Iskut, the Company’s 2022 plan and
reported costs to September 30, 2022 were:
| |
| Actual
| | |
| Plan
| |
Payroll | |
$ | 1.0
million | | |
$ | 0.7
million | |
Exploration | |
$ | 4.6
million | | |
$ | 5.5
million | |
Environmental
and social | |
$ | 0.8
million | | |
$ | 0.8
million | |
Total | |
$ | 6.4
million | | |
$ | 7.0
million | |
Exploration costs are those estimated and
incurred to support objective #6, exploration drilling focused on the discovery of a new gold/copper porphyry deposit. Environmental
and social costs include those activities that support the exploration program. Reported within provision for reclamation liabilities
and in support of objective #7, reclamation and closure of the Johnny Mountain Mine, the Company incurred $3 million of costs versus
a 12 month estimate of $3.2 million.
At Snowstorm, where the Company set objective
#5, continuing exploration activities at Snowstorm, the Company 2022 estimated costs and those incurred to September 30, 2022 were:
| |
| Actual
| | |
| Plan
| |
Payroll | |
$ | 0.4
million | | |
$ | 0.5
million | |
Exploration | |
$ | 2.0
million | | |
$ | 1.5
million | |
Other holding
or property | |
$ | 0.3
million | | |
$ | 0.4
million | |
Total | |
$ | 2.7
million | | |
$ | 2.4
million | |
At the Company’s 3 Aces project, 2022
estimated costs and those reported as incurred that support objective #8, conducting an initial drill program, to September 30, 2022
were:
| |
| Actual
| | |
| Plan
| |
Payroll | |
$ | 0.5
million | | |
$ | 0.8
million | |
Exploration | |
$ | 0.6
million | | |
$ | 3.4
million | |
Other holding
or property | |
$ | 0.1
million | | |
$ | 1.0
million | |
Total | |
$ | 1.2
million | | |
$ | 5.2
million | |
Obtaining required permits at 3 Aces was delayed
to September, 2022 and, as a result, the Company postponed the commencement of the exploration program and reduced its scope.
At Courageous Lake, the Company incurred $0.5
million of costs versus a 2022 estimate of $0.8 million.
PRIOR
SALES
Prior
sales of Common Shares and securities convertible or exchangeable into Common Shares will be provided as required in a Prospectus Supplement
with respect to the issuance of securities pursuant to such Prospectus Supplement.
TRADING
PRICE AND VOLUME
The
Common Shares are listed on the TSX under the symbol “SEA” and the NYSE under the symbol “SA”. The following table
sets forth, for the 12 month period prior to the date of this Prospectus, details of the trading prices and volume on a monthly basis
of the Common Shares on the TSX and NYSE, respectively:
| |
Toronto
Stock Exchange | | |
NYSE | |
Period | |
Volume | | |
High
(CDN$) | | |
Low
(CDN$) | | |
Volume | | |
High
(US$) | | |
Low
(US$) | |
2021 | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
December | |
| 1,653,289 | | |
| 24.95 | | |
| 19.77 | | |
| 7,023,710 | | |
| 19.63 | | |
| 15.29 | |
2022 | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |
January | |
| 1,126,362 | | |
| 21.85 | | |
| 18.85 | | |
| 6,175,186 | | |
| 17.40 | | |
| 14.86 | |
February | |
| 1,347,587 | | |
| 22.43 | | |
| 19.17 | | |
| 5,937,587 | | |
| 17.42 | | |
| 15.08 | |
March | |
| 2,449,262 | | |
| 25.00 | | |
| 21.76 | | |
| 10,685,723 | | |
| 19.87 | | |
| 17.04 | |
April | |
| 1,445,726 | | |
| 28.00 | | |
| 22.00 | | |
| 7,435,618 | | |
| 22.21 | | |
| 17.23 | |
May | |
| 1,833,107 | | |
| 23.62 | | |
| 17.49 | | |
| 7,621,139 | | |
| 18.39 | | |
| 13.58 | |
June | |
| 1,439,429 | | |
| 19.62 | | |
| 15.90 | | |
| 5,939,425 | | |
| 15.60 | | |
| 12.34 | |
July | |
| 1,628,226 | | |
| 17.79 | | |
| 14.28 | | |
| 7,637,461 | | |
| 13.88 | | |
| 10.99 | |
August | |
| 1,134,908 | | |
| 18.49 | | |
| 15.79 | | |
| 4,705,135 | | |
| 14.38 | | |
| 12.04 | |
September | |
| 1,504,505 | | |
| 17.32 | | |
| 14.25 | | |
| 7,358,644 | | |
| 13.37 | | |
| 10.35 | |
October | |
| 929,671 | | |
| 18.01 | | |
| 14.50 | | |
| 5,402,037 | | |
| 13.21 | | |
| 10.63 | |
November | |
| 1,359,547 | | |
| 17.27 | | |
| 13.83 | | |
| 5,973,522 | | |
| 12.78 | | |
| 10.02 | |
December
1 to December 22 | |
| 1,393,267 | | |
| 17.59 | | |
| 14.99 | | |
| 5,466,358 | | |
| 13.11 | | |
| 10.97 | |
On
December 22, 2022, the closing prices of the Common Shares on the TSX and NYSE were CDN$16.45
and US$12.05 per Common Share, respectively.
DIVIDEND
POLICY
The
Company has not paid any dividends since incorporation. Payment of dividends in the future is dependent upon the earnings and financial
condition of the Company and other factors which the directors may deem appropriate at the time.
CONSOLIDATED
CAPITALIZATION
As
of the date of this Prospectus, there have been no material changes in the share and loan capital of the Company, on a consolidated basis,
since September 30, 2022, the date of our most recently filed interim consolidated financial statements for the three and nine months
ended September 30, 2022.
DESCRIPTION
OF SHARE CAPITAL
Authorized
Capital
The
Company is authorized to issue an unlimited number of Common Shares without par value and
an unlimited number of preferred shares in the capital of the Company, issuable in series.
As of the date of this Prospectus, 81,330,012 Common Shares were issued and outstanding and
no preferred shares were issued and outstanding.
Common
Shares
The
holders of the Common Shares are entitled to receive notice of and to attend and vote at all meetings of the shareholders of the Company,
and each Common Share confers the right to one vote in person or by proxy at all meetings of the shareholders of the Company. The holders
of the Common Shares, subject to the prior rights, if any, of the holders of any other class of shares of the Company, are entitled to
receive such dividends in any financial year as the Board may by resolution determine. In the event of the liquidation, dissolution or
winding-up of the Company, whether voluntary or involuntary, the holders of the Common Shares are entitled to receive, subject to the
prior rights, if any, of the holders of any other class of shares of the Company, the remaining property and assets of the Company. The
Common Shares carry no pre-emptive or conversion rights.
Preferred
Shares
The
directors of the Company are authorized to create series of Preferred Shares in such number and having such rights and restrictions with
respect to dividends, rights of redemption, conversion or repurchase and voting rights as may be determined by the directors, and such
Preferred Shares shall have priority over the Common Shares with respect to the property and assets of the Company in the event of the
liquidation, dissolution or winding-up of the Company.
DESCRIPTION
OF SECURITIES OFFERED UNDER THIS PROSPECTUS
Common
Shares
The Company may offer Common Shares from time
to time under this Prospectus, together with any applicable Prospectus Supplement, at prices and on terms to be determined by market
conditions at the time of offering. This Prospectus provides you with a general description of the Common Shares the Company may offer.
Each time the Company offers Common Shares, the specific amounts, prices and other important terms of the securities will be described
in the applicable Prospectus Supplement.
For more information, see “Description
of Share Capital – Common Shares”.
Warrants
This
section describes the general terms that will apply to any Warrants issued pursuant to this Prospectus. The Company may issue Warrants
independently or together with other securities, and Warrants sold with other securities may be attached to or separate from such other
securities. Warrants may be issued under one or more warrant indentures or warrant agency agreements between the Company and one or more
banks or trust companies acting as warrant agent.
The
Company will not offer Warrants pursuant to this Prospectus unless a Prospectus Supplement containing the specific terms of the Warrants
so offered is filed with the securities commissions or similar regulatory authorities in each of the provinces of Canada where the Warrants
will be offered for sale.
The
specific terms of the Warrants, and the extent to which the general terms described in this section apply to those warrants, will be
set forth in the applicable Prospectus Supplement. If applicable, the Company will file with the SEC as exhibits to the registration
statement of which this Prospectus is a part, or will incorporate by reference from a Report of Foreign Private Company on Form 6-K that
the Company files with the SEC, any warrant indenture or form of warrant describing the terms and conditions of such Warrants that the
Company is offering before the issuance of such Warrants.
The
particular terms of each issue of Warrants will be described in the related Prospectus Supplement. This description will include, where
applicable:
| ● | the
aggregate number of Warrants being offered; |
| ● | the
price at which the Warrants will be offered; |
| ● | the
date or dates on which the Warrants may be exercised; |
| ● | the
number of Common Shares that may be purchased upon the exercise of each Warrant; |
| ● | whether
the Warrants will be subject to redemption and, if so, the terms of such redemption provisions; |
| ● | the
terms of any provisions allowing or providing for adjustments in (i) the number and/or class
of securities issuable upon exercise of the Warrants, (ii) the exercise price of the Warrants
and (iii) the term of the Warrants; |
| ● | whether
the Company will issue the Warrants as global securities and, if so, the identity of the
depositary of the global securities; |
| ● | whether
the Warrants will be listed on any exchange; |
| ● | material
Canadian federal income tax consequences of purchasing the Warrants; and |
| ● | any
other material terms or conditions of the Warrants. |
The
statements made in this Prospectus relating to any Warrants to be issued under this Prospectus, or the warrant indenture or warrant agreement,
if applicable, are summaries of certain anticipated provisions thereof and are subject to, and are qualified in their entirety by reference
to, all of the provisions of the applicable Warrants and any applicable warrant indenture or warrant agreement. Prospective investors
should refer to the terms of specific Warrants being offered, including any applicable warrant indenture or warrant agreement.
The
terms and conditions of any Warrants offered under a Prospectus Supplement may differ from the terms described above, and may be subject
to or contain any or all of the terms described above.
Units
In
addition to issuing Common Shares or Warrants pursuant to this Prospectus, the Company may also issue Units comprised of both Common
Shares and Warrants. Each Unit will be issued so that the purchaser of a Unit will have the rights and obligations of a holder of each
included security. The unit agreement, if any, pursuant to which Units are issued may provide that the Common Shares and Warrants included
in a Unit may not be held or transferred separately, at any time or at any time before a specified date.
The
Company will not offer Units pursuant to this Prospectus unless a Prospectus Supplement containing the specific terms of the Units so
offered is filed with the securities commissions or similar regulatory authorities in each of the provinces of Canada where the Units
will be offered for sale. A Prospectus Supplement in respect of any Units issued under this Prospectus will include the following, where
applicable:
| ● | the
aggregate number of Units being offered; |
| ● | the
price at which the Units will be offered; |
| ● | the
number of Common Shares and Warrants included in each Unit; |
| ● | the
terms of the Warrants included in the Units; |
| ● | any
provisions for the issuance, payment, settlement, transfer or exchange of the Units or of
the securities comprising the Units; |
| ● | whether
and under what circumstances the Common Shares and Warrants included in the Units may be
held or transferred separately; |
| ● | whether
the Units will be issued in fully registered or global form; |
| ● | material
United States and Canadian federal income tax consequences of purchasing the Units; and |
| ● | any
other material terms or conditions of the Units. |
If
applicable, the Company will file with the SEC as exhibits to the registration statement of which this Prospectus is a part, or will
incorporate by reference from a Report of Foreign Private Issuer on Form 6-K that the Company files with the SEC, any Unit agreement
describing the terms and conditions of such Units that the Company is offering before the issuance of such Units.
The
statements made in this Prospectus relating to any Units to be issued under this Prospectus, or the applicable unit agreement, are summaries
of certain anticipated provisions thereof and are subject to, and are qualified in their entirety by reference to, all of the provisions
of the applicable Units and the applicable unit agreement. Prospective investors should refer to the terms of specific Units being offered,
including the applicable unit agreement.
The
terms and conditions of any Units offered under a Prospectus Supplement may differ from the terms described above, and may be subject
to or contain any or all of the terms described above.
Subscription
Receipts
This
section describes the general terms that will apply to any Subscription Receipts issued pursuant to this Prospectus. Subscription Receipts
issued under this Prospectus will generally be exchangeable for Common Shares, Warrants or Units, without payment of any additional consideration,
upon the occurrence of certain events or the satisfaction of certain conditions. The Company may issue Subscription Receipts independently
or together with other securities, and Subscription Receipts sold with other securities may be attached to or separate from such other
securities. Subscription Receipts will generally be issued under a subscription receipt agreement between the Company and a trust company
acting as escrow agent.
The
Company will not offer Subscription Receipts pursuant to this Prospectus unless a Prospectus Supplement containing the specific terms
of the Subscription Receipts so offered is filed with the securities commissions or similar regulatory authorities in each of the provinces
of Canada where the Subscription Receipts will be offered for sale.
In
the United States, the Company will file as exhibits to the registration statement of which this Prospectus is a part, or will incorporate
by reference from Report of Foreign Private Issuer on Form 6-K that the Company files with the SEC, any Subscription Receipt Agreement
describing the terms and conditions of subscription receipts the Company is offering before the issuance of such Subscription Receipts.
A
Prospectus Supplement in respect of any Subscription Receipts issued under this Prospectus will include the following, where applicable:
| ● | the
aggregate number of Subscription Receipts being offered; |
| ● | the
price at which the Subscription Receipts will be offered; |
| ● | the
number and class of securities issuable in exchange for the Subscription Receipts; |
| ● | the
terms and number of securities issuable in exchange for the Subscription Receipts; |
| ● | the
conditions that must be satisfied before the Subscription Receipts are exchanged for Common
Shares or other securities of the Company; |
| ● | the
procedures and mechanics for the exchange of the Subscription Receipts into Common Shares
or other securities of the Company; |
| ● | material
United States and Canadian federal income tax consequences of purchasing the Subscription
Receipts; and |
| ● | any
other material terms or conditions of the Subscription Receipts. |
The
statements made in this Prospectus relating to any Subscription Receipts to be issued under this Prospectus, or the applicable subscription
receipt agreement, are summaries of certain anticipated provisions thereof and are subject to, and are qualified in their entirety by
reference to, all of the provisions of the applicable Subscription Receipts and the applicable subscription receipt agreement. Prospective
investors should refer to the terms of specific Subscription Receipts being offered, including the applicable subscription receipt agreement.
The
terms and conditions of any Subscription Receipts offered under a Prospectus Supplement may differ from the terms described above, and
may be subject to or contain any or all of the terms described above.
Debt
Securities
This
section describes the general terms that will apply to any Debt Securities issued pursuant to this Prospectus. We may issue Debt Securities
independently or together with other securities, and Debt Securities sold with other securities may be attached to or separate from such
other securities. Debt Securities will generally be issued under one or more trust indentures between the Company and one or more banks
or trust companies acting as trustee.
The
Company will not offer Debt Securities pursuant to this Prospectus unless a Prospectus Supplement containing the specific terms of the
Debt Securities so offered is filed with the securities commissions or similar regulatory authorities in each of the provinces of Canada
where the Debt Securities will be offered for sale. A Prospectus Supplement, in respect of any Debt Securities issued under this Prospectus,
will include the following, where applicable:
|
● |
the
aggregate principal amount of Debt Securities being offered and the offering price; |
|
● |
the
denomination and currency in which the Debt Securities will be offered; |
|
● |
the
date or dates on which the Debt Securities will mature and the portion of the outstanding principal payable upon maturity; |
|
● |
the
rate or rates at which the Debt Securities will bear interest, the date or dates on which such interest will begin to accrue and
be payable and the record dates for any such interest; |
|
● |
the
circumstances that will constitute an “event of default” under the Debt Securities and the consequences of an event of
default under the Debt Securities; |
|
● |
the
terms and conditions upon which the Company may be required to redeem, repay or repurchase the Debt Securities pursuant to any sinking
fund or analogous provisions or otherwise; |
|
● |
the
terms and conditions upon which the Company may be permitted to redeem the Debt Securities, in whole or in part, at its option; |
|
● |
the
terms, if any, upon which the Debt Securities may be converted into or exchanged for Common Shares or other securities of the Company;
|
|
● |
whether
the Debt Securities will be senior debt or subordinated to other indebtedness of the Company; |
|
● |
the
terms, if any, upon which the Company may be permitted or restricted from the issuance of additional securities, the incurring of
additional indebtedness or subject to other material negative covenants; |
|
● |
whether
the Company will issue the Debt Securities as global securities and, if so, the identity of the depositary of the global securities;
|
|
● |
whether
the Debt Securities will be listed on any exchange; |
|
● |
material
United States and Canadian federal income tax consequences of purchasing the Debt Securities; and |
|
● |
any
other material terms or conditions of the Debt Securities. |
The
statements made in this Prospectus relating to any Debt Securities to be issued under this Prospectus or the applicable trust indenture
are summaries of certain anticipated provisions thereof and are subject to, and are qualified in their entirety by reference to, all
of the provisions of the applicable Debt Securities and any applicable trust indenture. Prospective investors should refer to the terms
of specific Debt Securities being offered, including the applicable trust indenture.
“Novel” Securities
The Company will not offer any Securities
under this Prospectus which constitute “novel” securities as defined under NI 44-102.
A
Prospectus Supplement may also add, update or change information contained in this Prospectus or in documents the Company has incorporated
by reference. However, no Prospectus Supplement will offer a security that is not described in this Prospectus.
PLAN
OF DISTRIBUTION
The
Company may sell the Securities to or through underwriters or dealers, and also may sell Securities to one or more other purchasers directly
or through agents. Each Prospectus Supplement will set forth the terms of the offering, including the name or names of any underwriters
or agents, the purchase price or prices of the Securities and the proceeds to the Company from the sale of the Securities. Only those
underwriters, dealers or agents named in a Prospectus Supplement will be the underwriters, dealers or agents in connection with the Securities
offered thereby.
The
Securities may be sold, from time to time, in one or more transactions at a fixed price or prices which may be changed or at market prices
prevailing at the time of sale, at prices related to such prevailing market prices or at negotiated prices, including sales in transactions
deemed to be “at the market distributions” as defined in NI 44-102, including sales made directly on the TSX, the NYSE or other
existing markets for the Securities. Additionally, this Prospectus and any Prospectus Supplement may also cover the initial resale of
the Securities purchased pursuant thereto.
The
prices at which the Securities may be offered may vary as between purchasers and during the period of distribution. If, in connection
with the offering of Securities to which a Prospectus Supplement pertains, the underwriters have made a bona fide effort to sell all
of the Securities at the initial offering price fixed in the applicable Prospectus Supplement, the public offering price may be decreased
and thereafter further changed, from time to time, to an amount not greater than the initial public offering price fixed in such Prospectus
Supplement, in which case the compensation realized by the underwriters will be decreased by the amount that the aggregate price paid
by purchasers for the Securities is less than the gross proceeds paid by the underwriters to the Company.
No
underwriter or dealer involved in an “at-the-market distribution” under this Prospectus, no affiliate of such an underwriter
or dealer and no person or company acting jointly or in concert with such an underwriter or dealer will over-allot securities in connection
with such distribution or effect any other transactions that are intended to stabilize or maintain the market price of the securities.
In
connection with any offering of Securities, except for an “at-the-market distribution” under this Prospectus or as set out
in a Prospectus Supplement relating to a particular offering of Securities, the underwriters may over-allot or effect transactions which
stabilize or maintain the market price of the Securities at a level above that which might otherwise prevail in the open market. Such
transactions, if commenced, may be discontinued at any time. See “Plan of Distribution”.
In
connection with the sale of Securities, underwriters may receive compensation from the Company or from purchasers of the Securities from
whom they may act as agents in the form of discounts, concessions or commissions. Any such commissions will be paid out of the Company’s
general funds. Underwriters, dealers and agents that participate in the distribution of Securities may be deemed to be underwriters and
any discounts or commissions received by them from the Company and any profit on the resale of Securities by them may be deemed to be
underwriting discounts and commissions under applicable securities legislation.
Underwriters,
dealers and agents who participate in the distribution of the Securities may be entitled under agreements to be entered into with the
Company to indemnification by the Company against certain liabilities, including liabilities under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as
amended (the “U.S. Securities Act”), and Canadian securities legislation, or to contribution with respect to payments
which such underwriters, dealers or agents may be required to make in respect thereof. Those underwriters, dealers and agents may be
customers of, engage in transactions with, or perform services for, the Company in the ordinary course of business. In connection with
any underwritten offering of Securities, except as otherwise set out in a Prospectus Supplement relating to a particular offering of
Securities, the underwriters may over-allot or effect transactions which stabilize or maintain the market price of the Securities offered
at a level above that which might otherwise prevail in the open market. Such transactions, if commenced, may be discontinued at any time.
CERTAIN
INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS
The
applicable Prospectus Supplement will describe certain Canadian federal income tax consequences to investors of acquiring, holding and
disposing of Securities.
The
applicable Prospectus Supplement will also describe certain U.S. federal income tax consequences of the acquisition, ownership and disposition
of Securities by an initial investor who is a U.S. person (within the meaning of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code), if applicable.
AUDITORS,
TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
The
Company’s auditors are KPMG LLP, Chartered Professional Accountants, of Suite 4600, 333 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. KPMG LLP
has reported that it is independent within the meaning of the relevant rules and related interpretations prescribed by the relevant professional
bodies in Canada and any applicable legislation or regulation and are independent accountants under all relevant US professional and
regulatory standards.
The
registrar and transfer agent for the Common Shares is Computershare Investor Services Inc. at its principal office at 100 University
Ave., 9th Floor, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5J 2Y1 and co-transfer points at 510 Burrard Street, Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada V6C 3B9 and Computershare Trust Company, N.A., at 350 Indiana Street, Suite 800, Golden, Colorado, USA 80401.
LEGAL
MATTERS
Unless
otherwise specified in an applicable Prospectus Supplement, certain legal matters in connection with the Securities offered hereby will
be passed upon on behalf of the Company by DuMoulin Black LLP, with respect to Canadian legal matters, and by Carter Ledyard &
Millburn LLP with respect to United States legal matters.
BANKRUPTCIES,
PENALTIES OR SANCTIONS
Except
as disclosed below, none of the Company’s directors, executive officers or a shareholder holding a sufficient number of securities
to affect materially the control of the Company:
| (a) | is,
as at the date of this Prospectus, or has been within the 10 years before the date of this
Prospectus, a director or executive officer of any company (including the Company) that,
while that person was acting in that capacity, or within a year of that person ceasing to
act in that capacity, became bankrupt, made a proposal under any legislation relating to
bankruptcy or insolvency or was subject to or instituted any proceedings, arrangement or
compromise with creditors or had a receiver, receiver manager or trustee appointed to hold
its assets; |
| (b) | has,
within the 10 years before the date of this Prospectus, become bankrupt, made a proposal
under any legislation relating to bankruptcy or insolvency, or become subject to or instituted
any proceedings, arrangement or compromise with creditors, or had a receiver, receiver manager
or trustee appointed to hold the assets of the director, executive officer or shareholder; |
| (c) | has
been subject to any penalties or sanctions imposed by a court relating to securities legislation
or by a securities regulatory authority or has entered into a settlement agreement with a
securities regulatory authority; or |
| (d) | has
been subject to any other penalties or sanctions imposed by a court or regulatory body that
would likely be considered important to a reasonable investor in making an investment decision. |
Gedex
Systems Inc. (“Gedex”), a Canadian private company of which Rudi P. Fronk and Eliseo Gonzalez-Urien were non-executive
chairman and a director, respectively, was subject to an application made by FCMI Parent Co. to commence proceedings under the Companies’
Creditors Arrangement Act (Canada) (the “CCAA”) in respect of Gedex, among others, pursuant to an Initial Order
of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice (Commercial List) (the “Court”) dated August 12, 2019. The Court subsequently
granted a CCAA Termination Order on December 5, 2019 pursuant to which the Court approved the termination of the CCAA proceedings effective
at the date and time on which Zeifman Partners Inc, as monitor (the “Monitor”) filed a Discharge Certificate with
the Court. On December 23, 2019, the Monitor filed the Discharge Certificate with the Court.
Nautilus
Minerals Inc. (“Nautilus”), a Canadian reporting issuer of which Jay Layman was a non-executive director, filed for
and was granted creditor protection under the CCAA. Mr. Layman and the other independent directors of Nautilus resigned on March 29,
2019 prior to Nautilus being delisted from the TSX on April 3, 2019. By order made August 13, 2019, the Supreme Court of British Columbia
sanctioned and approved a plan of compromise, arrangement and reorganization dated July 23, 2019 pursuant to which Deep Sea Mining Finance
Ltd., as buyer, acquired certain assets from Nautilus.
INTEREST
OF EXPERTS
Names
of Experts
The
following are the names of each person or company who has prepared or certified a statement, report or opinion relating to the Company’s
mineral properties described or included in this Prospectus, including in a document incorporated by reference in this Prospectus, and
whose profession or business gives authority to the report, valuation, statement or opinion made by the person or company.
With
respect to the 2022 KSM PFS and PEA Report, the following experts are named and their responsibilities are as follows:
| ● | Tetra
Tech, under the direction of Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng. (surface infrastructure, capital estimate
and financial analysis), Jianhui (John) Huang, P.Eng. (metallurgical testing review, permanent
water treatment, mineral process design and operating cost estimation for process, G&A
and site services, and overall report preparation) |
| ● | Wood,
under the direction of Henry Kim, P.Geo. (Mineral Resources) |
| ● | Moose
Mountain Technical Services under the direction of Jim Gray, P.Eng. (open pit Mineral Reserves,
open pit mining operations, mine capital and mine operating costs, MTT and rail ore conveyance
design, tunnel capital costs) |
| ● | W.N.
Brazier Associates Inc. under the direction of Neil Brazier, P.Eng. (Electrical power supply,
energy recovery plants) |
| ● | ERM
Consultants Canada Ltd. under the direction of Rolf Schmitt, P. Geo. (environment and permitting) |
| ● | Klohn
Crippen Berger Ltd. under the direction of David Willms, P.Eng. (design of surface water
diversions, diversion tunnels, tailings management facility, water storage dam and RSF and
tunnel geotechnical) |
| ● | BGC
Engineering Inc. under the direction of Derek Kinakin, P.Geo., P.L.Eng., P.G. (rock mechanics,
geohazards and mining pit slopes) |
| ● | WSP
Golder under the direction of Ross Hammett, Ph.D., P.Eng. (Block Cave mining) |
With
respect to the Courageous Lake Report, the following experts are named and their responsibilities are identified:
| ● | Tetra
Tech, under the direction of Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph. D., P.Eng. (overall report preparation,
metallurgical testing review, mineral processing, infrastructures (excluding power supply
and airstrip), operating costs (excluding mining operating costs), capital cost estimate
and project development plan) and Sabry Abdel Hafez, Ph.D., P.Eng. (financial evaluation) |
| ● | Moose
Mountain Technical Services under the direction of James Gray, P.Eng. (mining, mine capital
and mine operating costs) |
| ● | W.N.
Brazier Associates Inc. under the direction of Neil Brazier, P.Eng. (power generation) |
| ● | ERM
Consultants Canada Ltd. under the direction of Pierre Pelletier, P.Eng. (environmental matters) |
| ● | WSP
Golder (formerly Golder Associates Ltd.) under the direction of Albert Victor Chance, P.Eng.,
and certified by Marc Rougier, P.Eng. (open pit slope stability) |
| ● | Tetra
Tech EBA Inc. under the direction of Nigel Goldup, P.Eng. (tailings, surface water management
and waste rock storage facilities, and surficial geology) and Kevin Jones P.Eng. (airstrip
upgrade) |
| ● | SRK
Consulting (Canada) Inc., under the direction of Stephen Day, M.Sc., P.Geo. (metal leaching
and acid rock drainage) |
|
● |
Resource
Modeling Inc. under the direction of Michael Lechner, P.Geo., RPG, CPG (mineral resources) |
William
Threlkeld, P.Geo., the Senior Vice President, Exploration of the Company and a Registered Professional Geologist, is named as having
prepared or supervised the preparation of technical information in respect of exploration programs of the Company at the Courageous Lake
Project. Resource Modeling Inc. under the direction of Michael Lechner, P.Geo., RPG, CPG is named as having prepared resource estimates
for the Walsh lake deposit at the Courageous Lake Project after the date of the Courageous Lake Report.
Each
of the persons referenced above is a qualified person as such term is defined in NI 43-101.
Interests
of Experts
To
Seabridge’s knowledge, none of the companies, firms or persons identified above received or will receive a direct or indirect interest
in the property of the Company or of any associate or affiliate of the Company. As at the date hereof, the aforementioned persons, and
the directors, officers, employees and partners, as applicable, of each of the aforementioned companies and firms beneficially own, directly
or indirectly, in the aggregate in relation to each such company or firm, less than one percent of the securities of the Company.
Other
than as set out below, none of the aforementioned persons, nor any director, officer, employee or partner, as applicable, of the aforementioned
companies or firms is currently expected to be elected, appointed or employed as a director, officer or employee of the Company or of
an associate or affiliate of the Company.
Mr. Threlkeld, the Senior Vice President,
Exploration of the Company, owns 388,897 Common Shares of the Company and options to purchase 55,000 Common Shares at various prices.
ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION
Seabridge
has filed with the SEC a registration statement on Form F-10 relating to the Securities. This Prospectus, which constitutes a part of
the registration statement, does not contain all of the information contained in the registration statement, certain items of which are
contained in the exhibits to the registration statement as permitted by the rules and regulations of the SEC. You should refer to the
registration statement and the exhibits to the registration statement for further information.
Seabridge
is subject to the information requirements of the U.S. Exchange Act and applicable Canadian securities legislation, and in accordance
therewith files reports and other information with the SEC and with the securities regulators in Canada. Under a multi-jurisdictional
disclosure system adopted by the United States and Canada, documents and other information that the Company files with the SEC may be
prepared in accordance with the disclosure requirements of Canada, which are different from those of the United States. As a foreign
private issuer, the Company is exempt from the rules under the U.S. Exchange Act prescribing the furnishing and content of proxy statements,
and the Company’s officers, directors and principal shareholders are exempt from the reporting and short-swing profit recovery provisions
contained in Section 16 of the U.S. Exchange Act. In addition, the Company is not required to publish financial statements as promptly
as U.S. companies.
You
may read and download some of the documents the Company has filed with the SEC’s EDGAR system at www.sec.gov. You may read and download
any public document that the Company has filed with the Canadian securities regulatory authorities at www.sedar.com.
DOCUMENTS
FILED AS PART OF THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT
The
following documents have been or will be filed with the SEC as part of the registration statement of which this Prospectus forms a part:
(i) the documents referred to under the heading “Documents Incorporated by Reference”; (ii) the consent of KPMG LLP; (iii)
the consents of the geologists, engineers and other experts named herein; (iv) the consent of DuMoulin Black LLP; and (v) the powers
of attorney from certain directors and officers of Seabridge.
ENFORCEABILITY
OF CIVIL LIABILITIES
Seabridge
is a company organized and existing under the Canada Business Corporations Act and its principal place of business is in Canada.
Many of the Company’s directors and officers, and some of the experts named in this Prospectus, are residents of Canada or otherwise
reside outside the United States, and all or a substantial portion of their assets, and a substantial portion of the Company’s assets,
are located outside the United States. Seabridge has appointed an agent for service of process in the United States, but it may be difficult
for holders of Common Shares who reside in the United States to effect service within the United States upon those directors, officers
and experts who are not residents of the United States. It may also be difficult for holders of Common Shares who reside in the United
States to realize in the United States upon judgments of courts of the United States predicated upon the Company’s civil liability and
the civil liability of the Company’s directors, officers and experts under the United States federal securities laws or the securities
or “blue sky” laws of any state within the United States. The Company’s Canadian counsel, DuMoulin Black LLP, advised the Company
that a judgment of a United States court predicated solely upon civil liability under United States federal securities laws would probably
be enforceable in Canada if the United States court in which the judgment was obtained has a basis for jurisdiction in the matter that
would be recognized by a Canadian court for the same purposes. However, DuMoulin Black LLP also advised the Company that there is substantial
doubt whether an action could be brought in Canada in the first instance on the basis of liability predicated solely upon United States
federal securities laws.
Seabridge
has filed with the SEC, concurrently with the filing of the registration statement of which this Prospectus forms a part, an appointment
of agent for service of process on Form F-X. Under the Form F-X, Seabridge has appointed Corporation Service Company, New York, New York
as its agent for service of process in the United States in connection with any investigation or administrative proceeding conducted
by the SEC or any civil suit or action brought against or involving the Company in a United States federal court or state court arising
out of or related to or concerning the offering of the securities under this Prospectus and any Prospectus Supplement.
ENFORCEMENT
OF JUDGMENTS AGAINST FOREIGN PERSONS OR COMPANIES
Certain
of the Company’s directors reside outside of Canada, being Rudi P. Fronk, Tracey Jane Arlaud, Richard Kraus, Eliseo Gonzalez-Urien, Jay
Layman and Melanie Miller. Each of such directors has appointed Seabridge, 400 - 106 Front Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M5A 1E1 as
their agent for service of process.
Each
of (a) William Threlkeld, (b) Michael Lechner and (c) Resource Modeling Inc. is resident outside Canada or, in the case of a company,
is incorporated, continued or otherwise organized under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction. Each of (a) William Threlkeld, (b) Michael
Lechner and (c) Resource Modeling Inc. have appointed Seabridge, 400 - 106 Front Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M5A 1E1 as their agent
for service of process.
Purchasers
are advised that it may not be possible for investors to enforce judgments obtained in Canada against any person or company that is incorporated,
continued or otherwise organized under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction, or resides outside of Canada, even if the party has appointed
an agent for service of process.
STATUTORY
RIGHTS OF WITHDRAWAL AND RESCISSION
Unless
provided otherwise in a Prospectus Supplement, the following is a description of a purchaser’s statutory rights. Securities legislation
in certain of the provinces and territories of Canada provides purchasers with the right to withdraw from an agreement to purchase securities.
This right may only be exercised within two business days after receipt or deemed receipt of a prospectus, the accompanying prospectus
supplement relating to securities purchased by a purchaser and any amendment thereto.
Original
purchasers of Units, Warrants (if offered separately), Debt Securities and Subscription Receipts, other than original purchasers who
acquire Units, Warrants, Subscription Receipts or Debt Securities in the United States, will have a contractual right of rescission against
the Company in respect of the conversion, exchange or exercise of such Unit, Warrant, Debt Security and Subscription Receipt, as the
case may be. The contractual right of rescission will entitle such original purchasers to receive, in addition to the amount paid on
original purchase of the Unit, Warrant, Subscription Receipt or Debt Security, as the case may be, the amount paid upon conversion, exchange
or exercise upon surrender of the underlying securities gained thereby, in the event that this Prospectus (as supplemented or amended)
contains a misrepresentation, provided that: (i) the conversion, exchange or exercise takes place within 180 days of the date of the
purchase of the convertible, exchangeable or exercisable security under this Prospectus; and (ii) the right of rescission is exercised
within 180 days of the date of purchase of the convertible, exchangeable or exercisable security under this Prospectus. This contractual
right of rescission will be consistent with the statutory right of rescission described under section 130 of the Securities Act
(Ontario), and is in addition to any other right or remedy available to original purchasers under section 130 of the Securities Act
(Ontario) or otherwise at law.
In
several of the provinces and territories, the securities legislation further provides a purchaser with remedies for rescission, revisions
of the price or damages if the prospectus, the accompanying prospectus supplement relating to securities purchased by a purchaser and
any amendment thereto contains a misrepresentation or is not delivered to the purchaser, provided that the remedies for rescission, revision
of the price or damages are exercised by the purchaser within the time limit prescribed by the securities legislation of the purchaser’s
province or territory. The purchaser should refer to any applicable provisions of the securities legislation of the purchaser’s province
or territory for the particulars of these rights or consult with a legal adviser.
In
an offering of Warrants, Subscription Receipts or Debt Securities (or Units comprised partly thereof), investors are cautioned that the
statutory right of action for damages for a misrepresentation contained in the Prospectus is limited, in certain provincial and territorial
securities legislation, to the price at which Warrants, Subscription Receipts or Debt Securities (or Units comprised partly thereof)
are offered to the public under the prospectus offering. This means that, under the securities legislation of certain provinces and territories,
if the purchaser pays additional amounts upon the conversion, exchange or exercise of the security, those amounts may not be recoverable
under the statutory right of action for damages that applies in those provinces and territories. The purchaser should refer to any applicable
provisions of the securities legislation of the purchaser’s province or territory for the particulars of this right of action for
damages or consult with a legal advisor.
PART
II
INFORMATION
NOT REQUIRED TO BE DELIVERED TO OFFEREES OR PURCHASERS
Indemnification
of Directors and Officers.
Section
124 of the Canada Business Corporations Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-44 (the “CBCA”) provides that a corporation may indemnify
a director or officer of the corporation, a former director or officer of the corporation or another individual who acts or acted at
the corporation’s request as a director or officer, or an individual acting in a similar capacity, of another entity, against all
costs, charges and expenses, including an amount paid to settle an action or satisfy a judgment, reasonably incurred by the individual
in respect of any civil, criminal, administrative, investigative or other proceeding in which the individual is involved because of that
association with the corporation or other entity. A corporation may not indemnify an individual unless the individual (a) acted honestly
and in good faith with a view to the best interests of the corporation, or, as the case may be, to the best interests of the other entity
for which the individual acted as a director or officer or in a similar capacity at the corporation’s request and (b) in the case
of a criminal or administrative action or proceeding that is enforced by a monetary penalty, the individual had reasonable grounds for
believing that the individual’s conduct was lawful. The indemnification may be made in connection with an action by or on behalf
of the corporation or other entity to procure a judgment in its favor, to which the individual is made a party because of the individual’s
association with the corporation or other entity as described above, only with court approval and provided the individual fulfills the
conditions set out in clauses (a) and (b) above. The aforementioned individuals are entitled to indemnification from the corporation
in respect of all costs, charges and expenses reasonably incurred by the individual in connection with the defense of any civil, criminal,
administrative, investigative or other proceeding to which the individual is subject because of the individual’s association with
the corporation or other entity as described above if the individual was not judged by the court or other competent authority to have
committed any fault or omitted to do anything that the individual described above ought to have done and provided the individual fulfills
the conditions set out in clauses (a) and (b) above. A corporation may advance moneys to a director, officer or other individual for
the costs, charges and expenses of a proceeding described above; however, the individual shall repay the moneys if the individual does
not fulfill the conditions set out in clauses (a) and (b) above.
Section
6.03 of the Amended By-law Number 1 (including all amendments as of December 5, 2007, the “By-laws”) of the Registrant, provides
that subject to Section 124 of the CBCA, the Registrant shall indemnify a director or officer of the Registrant, a former director or
officer of the Registrant or a person who acts or acted at the Registrant’s request as a director or officer of a body corporate
of which the Registrant is or was a shareholder or creditor, and his heirs and legal representatives, against all costs, charges and
expenses, including an amount paid to settle an action or satisfy a judgment, reasonably incurred by him in respect of any civil, criminal,
administrative, investigative or proceeding in which the individual is involved because of that association with the Registrant or other
entity, if (a) he acted honestly and in good faith with a view to the best interests of the Registrant or, as the case may be, to the
best interests of the other entity for which the individual acted as director or officer or in a similar capacity at the Registrant’s
request; and (b) in the case of a criminal or administrative action or proceeding that is enforced by a monetary penalty, the individual
had reasonable grounds for believing that the individual’s conduct was lawful. Section 6.03 of the By-laws further provides that
the Registrant shall also indemnify such persons in such other circumstances as the CBCA permits or requires and that nothing contained
in the By-laws shall limit the discretion of the Registrant to indemnify, or limit the right of any person entitled to indemnity to claim
indemnity, apart from the provisions of Section 6.03.
The
Registrant maintains a policy of directors’ and officers’ liability insurance which insures its directors and officers for
certain losses as a result of claims against them in their capacity as directors and officers and also reimburses the Registrant for
payments made pursuant to the indemnity provisions under the by-laws and the CBCA.
Underwriting
agreements in respect of offerings of securities under this registration statement may contain provisions by which the underwriters agree
to indemnify the Registrant, each of the directors and officers of the Registrant and each person who controls the Registrant within
the meaning of the Securities Act with respect to information furnished by the underwriters for use in the registration statement.
Insofar
as indemnification for liabilities arising from the Securities Act may be permitted to directors, officers or persons controlling the
Registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, the Registrant has been informed that in the opinion of the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is therefore unenforceable.
EXHIBITS
TO FORM F-10
The
exhibits to this Registration Statement on Form F-10 are listed in the Exhibit Index, which appears elsewhere herein.
EXHIBIT
INDEX
Exhibit
No. |
|
Description |
4.1* |
|
Annual
Information Form of the Registrant for the year ended December 31, 2021 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 from the Registrant’s
Report on Form 40-F, furnished to the Commission on March 25, 2022). |
|
|
|
4.2* |
|
Audited
financial statements of the Registrant for the year ended December 31, 2021 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.2 from the Registrant’s
Report on Form 40-F, furnished to the Commission on March 25, 2022). |
|
|
|
4.3* |
|
Management’s
Discussion and Analysis for the year ended December 31, 2021 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.3 from the Registrant’s
Report on Form 40-F, furnished to the Commission on March 25, 2022). |
|
|
|
4.4* |
|
Unaudited interim condensed consolidated financial statements of the Registrant as at and for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2022, together with the related notes thereto (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 from the Registrant’s Report on Form 6-K, furnished to the Commission on November 16, 2022). |
|
|
|
4.5* |
|
Management’s discussion and analysis of financial condition and results of operations of the Registrant for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2022 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.2 from the Registrant’s Report on Form 6-K, furnished to the Commission on November 16, 2022). |
|
|
|
4.6* |
|
Report to Shareholders Quarter Ended September 30, 2022 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.3 from the Registrant’s Report on Form 6-K, furnished to the Commission on November 16, 2022). |
|
|
|
4.7* |
|
The
Material Change Report update regarding the KSM (Kerr-Sulphurets-Mitchell) Prefeasibility
Study and Preliminary Economic Assessment, NI 43-101 Technical Report with an effective date
of August 8, 2022 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 to the Registrant’s
Report on Form 6-K containing such update, furnished to the Commission on August 11, 2022). |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.1 |
|
Consent of KPMG LLP, Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
|
|
|
5.2 |
|
Consent of William Threlkeld, P.Geo |
|
|
|
5.3 |
|
Consent of Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph.D., P.Eng. |
|
|
|
5.4 |
|
Consent of James H. Gray, P.Eng. |
|
|
|
5.5 |
|
Consent of Neil Brazier, P.Eng. |
|
|
|
5.6 |
|
Consent of Michael J. Lechner, P.Geo., RPG, CPG |
|
|
|
5.7 |
|
Consent of Rolf Schmitt, M.Sc., P.Geo. |
|
|
|
5.8 |
|
Consent of Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng. |
|
|
|
5.9 |
|
Consent of Ross D. Hammett, Ph.D., P.Eng. |
|
|
|
5.10 |
|
Consent of Stephen Day, M.Sc., P.Geo. |
|
|
|
5.11 |
|
Consent of Derrek Kinakin, M.Sc., P.Geo., P.G. |
|
|
|
5.12 |
|
Consent of David Willms, P.Eng., Klohn Crippen Berger Ltd. |
|
|
|
5.13 |
|
Consent of Henry Kim, P.Geo., Wood Canada Limited. |
|
|
|
5.14 |
|
Consent of Albert Victor Chance, P.Eng. (Marc Rougier, P.Eng) |
|
|
|
5.15 |
|
Consent of DuMoulin Black LLP |
|
|
|
6.1* |
|
Power of Attorney (included in Part III of this Registration Statement). |
|
|
|
107* |
|
Calculation of Registration Fee |
| * | Previously
Filed or Furnished to the SEC |
PART
III
UNDERTAKING
AND CONSENT TO SERVICE OF PROCESS
Item
1. Undertaking.
The
Registrant undertakes to make available, in person or by telephone, representatives to respond to inquiries made by the Commission staff,
and to furnish promptly, when requested to do so by the Commission staff, information relating to the securities registered pursuant
to this Form F-10 or to transactions in such securities.
Item
2. Consent to Service of Process.
A written
Appointment of Agent for Service of Process and Undertaking on Form F-X for the Registrant and its agent for service of process was filed
concurrently with the initial filing of this Registration Statement.
Any
change to the name or address of the Registrant’s agent for service shall be communicated promptly to the Commission by amendment
to Form F-X referencing the file number of this Registration Statement.
SIGNATURES
Pursuant
to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Registrant certifies that
it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all of the requirements for filing on
Form F-10 and has duly caused this Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement to
be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Toronto,
Province of Ontario, Country of Canada, on this 23rd day of December, 2022.
|
SEABRIDGE
GOLD INC. |
|
|
|
|
By: |
/s/
Rudi P. Fronk |
|
|
Name:
|
Rudi
P. Fronk |
|
|
Title: |
Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer |
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities
Act, this Registration Statement has been signed below by or on behalf of the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
Signature |
|
Title |
|
Date |
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Rudi P. Fronk |
|
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Rudi P. Fronk |
|
(Principal Executive Officer) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Christopher Reynolds |
|
Chief Financial Officer |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Christopher Reynolds |
|
(Principal Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Director |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Jay S. Layman |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Director |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Trace J. Arlaud |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Director |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Eliseo Gonzalez-Urien |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Director |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Richard C. Kraus |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Director |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Clement A. Pelletier |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Director |
|
December 23, 2022 |
John W. Sabine |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Director |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Gary A. Sugar |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Director |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Melanie R. Miller |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Director |
|
December 23, 2022 |
Carol T. Willson |
|
|
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| * | Pursuant to the Power
of Attorney on the signature page of the Company’s Form F-10 filed with the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission on December 23, 2023, Rudi P. Fronk, as attorney-in-fact does hereby
sign this Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement on behalf of each such director,
in each case in the capacity as director. |
By: |
/s/ Rudi P. Fronk |
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Name: Rudi P. Fronk |
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Attorney-in-fact |
|
AUTHORIZED
REPRESENTATIVE
Pursuant
to the requirements of Section 6(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Authorized
Representative has duly caused this his Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement to
be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, solely in its capacity as the duly authorized
representative of the Registrant in the United States, in the City of Denver, in the State
of Colorado, on this 23rd day of December, 2022.
|
Seabridge
Gold Corporation |
|
(Authorized
Representative) |
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By: |
/s/
Rudi P. Fronk |
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Name: |
Rudi
P. Fronk |
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Title: |
President
and Chief Executive Officer |
EXHIBIT
INDEX
Exhibit
No. |
|
Description |
4.1* |
|
Annual
Information Form of the Registrant for the year ended December 31, 2019 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 from the Registrant’s
Report on Form 40-F, furnished to the Commission on March 25, 2022). |
|
|
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4.2* |
|
Audited
financial statements of the Registrant for the year ended December 31, 2019 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.2 from the Registrant’s
Report on Form 40-F, furnished to the Commission on March 25, 2022). |
|
|
|
4.3* |
|
Management’s
Discussion and Analysis for the year ended December 31, 2019 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.3 from the Registrant’s
Report on Form 40-F, furnished to the Commission on March 25, 2022). |
|
|
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4.4* |
|
Unaudited
interim condensed consolidated financial statements of the Registrant as at and for the three- and nine-month periods ended September
30, 2022, together with the related notes thereto (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 from the Registrant’s Report on
Form 6-K, furnished to the Commission on November 16, 2022). |
|
|
|
4.5* |
|
Management’s
discussion and analysis of financial condition and results of operations of the Registrant for the three- and nine-month periods
ended September 30, 2022 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.2 from the Registrant’s Report on Form 6-K, furnished to
the Commission on November 16, 2022). |
|
|
|
4.6* |
|
Report
to Shareholders Quarter Ended September 30, 2022 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.3 from the Registrant’s Report on
Form 6-K, furnished to the Commission on November 16, 2022). |
|
|
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4.7* |
|
The
Material Change Report update regarding the KSM (Kerr-Sulphurets-Mitchell) Prefeasibility Study and
Preliminary Economic Assessment, NI 43-101 Technical Report with an effective date of August 8, 2022
(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 to the Registrant’s Report on Form 6-K containing
such update, furnished to the Commission on August 11, 2022). |
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|
|
|
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5.1 |
|
Consent of KPMG LLP, Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
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5.2 |
|
Consent of William Threlkeld, P.Geo |
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5.3 |
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Consent of Jianhui (John) Huang, Ph.D., P.Eng. |
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5.4 |
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Consent of James H. Gray, P.Eng. |
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5.5 |
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Consent of Neil Brazier, P.Eng. |
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5.6 |
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Consent of Michael J. Lechner, P.Geo., RPG, CPG |
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5.7 |
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Consent of Rolf Schmitt, M.Sc., P.Geo. |
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5.8 |
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Consent of Hassan Ghaffari, P.Eng. |
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5.9 |
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Consent of Ross D. Hammett, Ph.D., P.Eng. |
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5.10 |
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Consent of Stephen Day, M.Sc., P.Geo. |
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5.11 |
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Consent of Derrek Kinakin, M.Sc., P.Geo., P.G. |
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5.12 |
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Consent of David Willms, P.Eng., Klohn Crippen Berger Ltd. |
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5.13 |
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Consent of Henry Kim, P.Geo., Wood Canada Limited. |
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5.14 |
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Consent of Albert Victor Chance, P.Eng. (Marc Rougier, P.Eng) |
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|
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5.15 |
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Consent of DuMoulin Black LLP |
|
|
|
6.1* |
|
Power of Attorney (included in Part III of this Registration Statement). |
|
|
|
107* |
|
Calculation of Registration Fee |
| * | Previously
Filed or Furnished to the SEC |
III-4
Seabridge Gold (NYSE:SA)
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De Nov 2024 a Dic 2024
Seabridge Gold (NYSE:SA)
Gráfica de Acción Histórica
De Dic 2023 a Dic 2024