Nobody understands graphite exploring. You know this, I know this. We can fake it for a bit based on general mining knowledge, but graphite doesn’t get much investor love because people don’t really understand it. They don’t know what good graphite is, what a good property is, what end users are looking for..
So here’s what you need to know; Sri Lankan graphite isnt like other graphite.
A lot of graphite explorers are pulling up Amorphous Graphite which has a lower purity level compared to flake graphite, often found with a carbon content ranging from about 40% to 85% if you’re lucky. To get this ore to a point where its useful for anodes and rechargable batteries and such, you’ve got to spend a lot of time and money and energy taking the raw materials and sqeezing/shaking/burning/grinding the impurities out.
Processing graphite is harder than finding graphite, because it involves crushing, grinding, flotation in water and reagents to form a slurry, where the graphite attaches itself to air bubbles and impurities sink, then you’ve got to dewater it, dry it out, remove the silica, aluminum, and iron by chemical leaching, thermal treatment, or high-intensity magnetic separation.
Then you have to screen the ore into different shapes and sizes that are needed for different end uses, then start micronization (grinding to a fine powder) and spheronization (forming spherical particles) so the end result can be consistent enough to be useful as a batch.
This is a LOT of work, costs a LOT of money, and is a bit shit for the environment, if we’re honest.
So amorphous graphite can F off.
On the other hand, Flake Graphite carbon content (or purity) is typically anywhere from 85% up to 95% in the ground, which is nice. Higher-grade deposits are less common but highly sought after because they require less processing to achieve purity levels suitable for many applications, but the processing they DO require is, again, plentiful and painful.
The beauty of the bunch is Vein Graphite, which is the rarest and purest form of natural graphite, with purity levels often above 95% carbon content directly as mined. Some vein graphite can even exceed 99% purity without any beneficiation, and these deposits are primarily found in Sri Lanka.
If you want to get to 99.99% purity, starting off at 95% instead of, say, 80%, is everything.
Alright, enough pointy head talk. You’re an expert now. Let’s move on.
ENTER APPLIED GRAPHITE TECHNOLOGIES (AGT.V)
Early trading has seen the company share price drop from $0.25 initially to $0.15 over the opening few days, but is now beginning to pick up on low volume, indicating someone wanted to flush it early but is perhaps done with their weak hand, cheap paper, jiggery fuckery.
I have a suspicion graphite is going to have a moment, and Sri Lanka *should* be where that moment happens so watchlist it.
— Chris Parry
FULL DISCLOSURE: Not a client. Found it while going through some presentations and thought it novel enough to elevate. I *do* own some, courtesy of a shell a broker slipped me into a while back, which ensures I’ll be watching closely. Memo to brokers: If you want me paying attention to your deals but don’t want to pay marketing fees, having those pre-public discussions is how you do it. Don’t be a stranger.
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