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Premium Potash and Bauxite Project Driven by a Proven Management Team
TSX : PRK
FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
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Certain statements in this presentation may constitute "forward-looking" statements which involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of Potash Ridge Corporation (the "Corporation"), or industry results, to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. When used in this presentation, such statements use such words as "may", "would", "could", "will", "intend", "expect", "believe", "plan", "anticipate", "estimate" and other similar terminology. These statements reflect the Corporation's current expectations regarding future events and operating performance and speak only as of the date of this presentation. Forward-looking statements involve significant risks and uncertainties, which include, but are not limited to the factors discussed under “A Cautionary Note Regarding Forward Looking Statements” and "Risk Factors" in the final prospectus of the Corporation dated November 27, 2012, and should not be read as guarantees of future performance or results, and will not necessarily be accurate indications of whether or not such results will be achieved. Although the forward-looking statements contained in this presentation are based upon what management of the Corporation believes are reasonable assumptions, the Corporation cannot assure investors that actual results will be consistent with these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this presentation and are expressly qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement. Subject to applicable securities laws, the Corporation assumes no obligation to update or revise them to reflect new events or circumstances.
A potash company focused on its Blawn Mountain property in Utah
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SOP: 680,000 tonnes per annum Bauxite material: 3.3 million tonnes per annum
EXPERIENCED AND PROVEN MANAGEMENT
OVER 80 YEARS COMBINED EXPERIENCE
Guy Bentinck President & CEO Chartered Accountant; 20 years mining/resource experience Sherritt: CFO and SVP Capital Projects
Ross Phillips Chief Operating Officer 10 years experience in large resource and energy sector projects Sherritt, Capital Power
Jeff Hillis Chief Financial Officer Chartered Accountant; 10 years mining sector finance, including CFO of several public mining companies Iberian Minerals, Excellon, Falconbridge
Paul Hampton VP, Project Management Geologist and Metallurgical Engineer; ~30 years experience in design, construction, start-up and management of mineral processing facilities SNC, Washington Group, Outotec
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Laura Nelson VP, Government and Regulatory Affairs Extensive experience in government relations, permitting and power planning, including the successful permitting of the Red Leaf oil shale project Red Leaf Resources, Utah Government
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES
Large mineral deposit containing premium-quality potash and bauxite material
Strategically located in a mining friendly jurisdiction with established infrastructure nearby
State-owned land allows for an efficient permitting process
Historical work expedites project development
Lower risk surface mining deposit; expected lowest cost producer
30 year mine life, with upside potential
PEA completed: $1.3 billion NPV at 10%; 21.3% after tax IRR; excludes bauxite material revenue
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POTASH OVERVIEW
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No known substitute
Increasing world population
Growing per capita income
Decreasing arable land
Increasing use of biofuels
~5% EXPECTED ANNUAL GROWTH IN DEMAND TO 2016
POTASH: ESSENTIAL TO THE WORLD’S FOOD SUPPLY
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AVERAGE 47% PRICE PREMIUM OVER MOP3
SULPHATE OF POTASH (SOP) IS A PREMIUM PRODUCT
Sulphate of Potash (SOP) Muriate of Potash (MOP)
Potassium Sulphate (K2SO4) Potassium Chloride (KCl)
6 million tonnes sold in 20111 55.8 million tonnes sold in 20112
Potassium and sulphur are essential nutrients2 Crop quality/yield diminish as chloride builds up2
Improves yield, quality, taste and enhances shelf life2
1Source: Fertecon 2Source: CRU 3Based on historical data 8
USES OF SOP
Fruits Vegetables Nuts Horticultural Plants
Tobacco Tea Dry soils Salty soil
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HISTORICAL PRICE PREMIUM FOR SOP HAS RANGED BETWEEN 30% AND 61%
SOP PREMIUM PRICE TRENDS
1SOP, standard grade cif NW Europe (Source: Fertilizer Week) 2MOP, all grades, fob Vancouver/Portland (Source: CRU)
U.S. $/tonne
SOP1 MOP2
10
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
SOP MARKET CHARACTERISTICS
1Source: Fertecon, CRU 11
Global SOP Consumption and Commodity Price1
$0
$100
$200
$300
$400
$500
$600
$700
$800
$900
$1,000
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2020
(US
$/tonne)
Tonn
es (
000s
)
Global SOP Consumption
Historical Standard FOB NW Europe (US$/tonne SOP)
Estimated Standard FOB NW Europe (US$/tonne SOP)
Europe 23.3%
N. America 8.6%
China 44.3%
Rest of the World
14.9% Africa 4.6%
Central and South America
4.3%
SIGNIFICANT GROWTH POTENTIAL
SOP MARKET DYNAMICS
Limited production and premium price has restricted demand
SOP share of potash market: Current: ~10% Potential: >28%1
Trend toward high nutrient fertilizers
Potential to use SOP in typical cereal crop fertilizer blends instead of ammonium sulphate
India SOP consumption: China (pop. 1.3 billion): 1.9 million tpy India: (pop. 1.2 billion) 50,000 tpy (<1% of country’s potash consumption)
Brazil SOP consumption = 32,000 tpy (0.4% of total potash consumption) Premium crops grown on 20% of planted land
12 1Based on crops that are best suited for SOP
BAUXITE MATERIAL OVERVIEW
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Bauxite material suitable for a Bayer Process • Non-‐tradiGonal high-‐grade alumina (51%) resource
• Low iron / Gtanium concentraGons compared to a tradiGonal bauxite
• Avoids the producGon of bauxite residue “red mud” waste
• No idenGfied heavy metals
• Favorable access to markets via exisGng rail and port infrastructure
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HIGH GRADE BAUXITE MATERIAL BY-PRODUCT
Potash Ridge bauxite material:
• THA = 50.9 % (Tri -‐hydrate Alumina)
• Quartz = 20.6 % (Form of Silica)
• Fe2O3 = 2.58 % (Ferrous Oxide <Iron>)
• TiO2 = 1.42 % (Titanium Oxide)
• P2O5 = 0.59 % (Phosphorous Pent-‐oxide)
Typical bauxite:
• THA = 41.66 % (Tri -‐hydrate Alumina)
• Total SiO2 = 7.32% (Total Silica)
• Quartz = 1.86 % (Form of Silica)
• Fe2O3 = 5.98 % (Ferrous Oxide <Iron>)
• TiO2 = 2.43 % (Titanium Oxide)
• P2O5 = 0.06 % (Phosphorous Pent-‐oxide)
• TOC = 0.19% (Total Organic Carbon)
GOOD TIMING FOR NEW BAUXITE
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Source: CRU Analysis, Bauxite and Alumina Market Outlook, 2011
Alumina demand forecasted to rise by 6.6% per year over the next five years
• Australian infrastructure constraints • Restrictions on Indonesian bauxite exports (2014) as the government looks to develop a
domestic processing industry • Few new politically secure regions of the world for new sources of bauxite
Chinese demand growth Indian demand growth
Growing Chinese alumina refining capacity has resulted in significant increase in bauxite demand
Alumina demand in India is forecast to more than double to 8.5 million tonnes by 2016 from 3.8 million tonnes in 2010
By 2016 China is expected to account for around 43% of global alumina refining capacity in 2010 China imported 76% of its 30 million tonnes of bauxite imports from Indonesia
Domestic bauxite production is expected to grow but projects have proved difficult to progress due to local obstacles, post 2014 several projects are expected to rely on imported bauxite
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TRANSPORTATION ADVANTAGE VS OTHER BAUXITE SOURCES TO CHINA
Blawn Mountain,
Utah
Boke, Guinea
Trombetas, Brazil
Kingston, Jamaica
Shipping distance to Shandong Province, China (nm) 5,744 11,128 10,815 9,051
Average alumina grade 51% 40 – 60% 50 – 60% 45%
Port Long Beach Conakry Aratu Jamaica
Bauxite grade comparisons: Gove / Weipa, Australia ~50% alumina and Indonesian bauxite ~40% alumina
Qingdao Los Angeles
Jamaica
Aratu
Conakry
BLAWN MOUNTAIN
THE BLAWN MOUNTAIN PROJECT
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ANTICIPATED PRODUCTION BY 2016
PROJECT OVERVIEW
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Large alunite deposit, which is expected to be processed into SOP, by-product bauxite material and sulphuric acid
Target 680,000 SOP tonnes and 3.3 million bauxite material tonnes per year; start up by 2H-2016
Historical work expedites project development
Mineral deposit to be surface mined
Proven process
ALMOST 100 YEARS OF POTASH PRODUCTION
UTAH: AN ATTRACTIVE MINING JURISDICTION
1Forbes Magazine, November, 2011 2Fraser Institute, February, 2012
Major resource producer
Existing potash production
Best state for business1
Top quartile mining jurisdiction2
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OUR LAND ADVANTAGE
State-owned land
Simpler permitting process
Leasehold and royalty agreements negotiated
No known adverse environmental, social or aboriginal issues
Sufficient water nearby – rights application made
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MUNICIPAL AND STATE SUPPORT OF PROJECT
ESTABLISHED INFRASTRUCTURE NEARBY
Roads, rail and natural gas
Construction materials and equipment suppliers nearby
Skilled labour force
Access to ports of Los Angeles (530 miles) and Houston (1,550 miles)
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SOP AND ALUMINA HOSTED IN ALUNITE
(K2SO4 ⋅ Al2(SO4)3 ⋅ 2Al2O3 ⋅ 6H2O) Volcanic rock mined for over 500 years
Contains alumina (Al2O3), potassium (K2O), and sulphur (SO3)
Historic source of SOP and alumina in U.S. and Australia
Long-term (30+ years) SOP and alumina production in Azerbaijan
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PREVIOUS WORK ACCELERATES PROJECT DEVELOPMENT
EXTENSIVE DEVELOPMENT ON BLAWN MOUNTAIN COMPLETED IN 1970’s
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Approx. $25 million spent (~ $100 million in today’s dollars)
Drilling
Resource estimate
Feasibility study
Mine plan
Engineering
Permitting
Pilot plant: 3-year operation processing 11 tonnes/day
• Project ultimately shelved due to poor economic conditions in early 1980s • Potash Ridge owns all historical data
SIMPLE PROVEN FLOWSHEET
Potash Ridge expects the processing plant to produce: • 680,000 tonnes of SOP per annum • 3.3 million tonnes per annum of 51% alumina content bauxite material • 1.6 million tonnes of concentrated sulphuric acid per annum
Alunite
Beneficiation
Calcination
Water Leach
51% alumina content bauxite
material
Potash Sulphate Solution
Crystalizer Compaction Drying Potash Sulphate
SO2 Acid Plant Sulphuric Acid
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Flowsheet mirrors historical production processes
RECENT TEST WORK CONFIRMS FLOWSHEET
• Pilot scale test work scheduled to start end- April; • Objective of pilot scale test work is process optimization • Except to be completed pilot plant testing by end of 2013
HISTORIC DRILLING
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320 holes drilled in 1970’s
NI 43-101 CONFIRMATION DRILLING
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Phase 1 Area 1 – 34 holes (19 core; 15 RC)
Phase 2 Area 1 – 38 holes (12 core; 26 RC) Area 2 – 50 holes (6 core; 44 RC)
Phase 3 Area 1 – 2 RC holes Area 2 – 16 RC holes
140 drill holes completed
Initial Mine Plan for 30 Years using NI 43-101 Compliant M&I Resources
SIGNIFICANT RESOURCE IDENTIFIED
1 Contained within alunite 2 Using 1.00% cut-off grade 3 The historic resources are not NI 43-101 compliant although reasonable methodologies were applied at the time. A qualified person has not done sufficient work to classify, and the Corporation is not treating the estimates as current mineral resources or mineral reserves.
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Area
Measured + Indicated Inferred
Resource tons (000's) Alunite grade SOP tons
(000's)
SOP Resource tons (000's) Alunite grade SOP tons
(000's)
SOP
grade1 grade1
NI-43-101 Compliant 2
1 156,285 37.6% 9,315 15.8% 392 46.5% 24 13.1%
2 464,442 35.6% 26,395 15.9% 250,769 34.7% 13,476 15.5%
Total: Areas 1 & 2 620,726 35.8% 35,710 15.9% 251,160 34.7% 13,500 15.5%
Historic Resources 3
3 11,600 44.0% 987 19.3% 281,400 44.0% 23,950 19.3%
4 51,700 36.5% 3,667 19.4% 49,200 38.0% 3,645 19.5%
Total: Areas 3 & 4 63,300 37.9% 4,654 19.4% 330,600 43.1% 27,595 19.3%
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EXPECTED TO BE LOWEST COST SOP PRODUCER
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Alunite Leach
Polyhalite Leach
Salt Lakes MOP/ Sulphate
Salts
Mannheim Process
Process Method
World Capacity Process Inputs Products
Avg Cost / Tonne
Mannheim 60% ! MOP ! Sulfuric Acid ! Energy
! SOP ! HCI
$550
MOP and Kieserite
25% ! MOP ! Kieserite ! Energy
! SOP ! Magnesium
Chloride
$386
Salt Lakes 15% ! Lake Brines ! Energy
! SOP ! Magnesium
Chloride ! NaCI
$300
Polyhalite Leach
– ! Polyhalite ! Water ! Energy
! SOP ! Kieserite
$162
Alunite Leach
– ! Alunite ! Energy
! SOP ! H2SO4 ! Bauxite substitute
$101
Cash Cost by Production Method Avg Cost/Tonne
Process Method and Cost Comparisons
POTASH RIDGE
Expected In Production Includes expected and in-production data
1 The cost is converted from $92 per short ton. Excludes bauxite credits.
$300
$386
$550
$162
$1011 $155
PRELIMINARY ECONOMIC ANALYSIS RESULTS
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PROJECT HIGHLIGHTS Annual Production Rates: SOP 680,000 tonnes Sulphuric Acid 1.6 million tonnes Initial Mine Plan1 30 years Capital Cost2 $1.075 billion
1 Future planned work may expand resource base and extend life of project beyond 30 years 2 Excludes third party costs: power generation ($160 million), sulphuric acid plant ($180 million) and water treatment plant ($40 million) 3 Excludes potential credits related to sale of 3.3 million tonnes per annum of bauxite material
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
NPV @ 10% (after tax)3 $1,331 million Unlevered IRR (after tax)3 21.3%
SOP CAPITAL COST BREAKDOWN1
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CAPITAL COST: $1.075 billion (25% conTngency)
24% SOP Leaching, CrystallizaGon and Drying
18% CalcinaGon
17% BeneficiaGon
41% ConGngency
and Indirects
1 Excludes third party costs: power generation ($160 million), sulphuric acid plant ($180 million) and water treatment plant ($40 million)
OPERATING COSTS: $101/TONNE1
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7%
79% Direct Plant and Mine ProducGon Costs
($188M)
7% Other ($14M)
14% RoyalGes ($33M)
1 The cost is converted from $92 per short ton. Excludes bauxite credits 2 750,000 tons (SOP) + 1.8M tons (sulphuric acid) = 2.55 million tons or 2.3 million tonnes 3 Includes 10% conGngency
Cost Breakdown Millions
Direct Plant and Mine Costs $188
RoyalGes $33
Other $14
TOTAL: $235
Divided by 2.55 tons2
Cost per ton $92
Cost per tonne $1013
CAPITAL STRUCTURE
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Millions ($)
Common Shares 81.3
Non-voting Common Shares 5.0
Total Shares Outstanding 86.3
Warrants – $ 0.50 10.7
Warrants – $1.00 5.0
Broker options/warrants 3.4
Stock options 6.8
Total Fully Diluted Shares 112.3
PROJECT TIMELINE
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Stage Activity 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Confirmation Drilling Areas 1 & 2
Process Development
Metallurgical Testing and Pilot Plant (process optimization)
Permitting Project Permitting
Financing Capital Raise
Engineering Studies
Prefeasibility
Feasibility/Mine Design
Implementation
Basic Engineering
Procurement
Detailed Engineering
Construction
Production Commissioning
MANAGEMENT AND BOARD CURRENTLY OWN 4%
STRONG BOARD WITH DIVERSE SKILLS AND LOCAL EXPERIENCE Rahoul Sharan, Chairman Chartered Accountant with over 30 years diversified mining experience Former Chairman and CEO of Uranium Power Corporation
Navin Dave Chairman and CEO of Stat-Ops International Former Managing Partner, KPMG LLP
Robert C. Gross Former Chief of Staff to Utah Governor Former Senior Advisor, Coalition Authority of Iraq Former Chairman and President of First Interstate Bank Former President and CEO of Blue Healthcare Bank
Rocco Rossi Experienced business strategist and public company director Former President and COO of MGI Software Corp.
Phil Williams Director, Investment Banking of Dundee Capital Markets Inc. Former VP, Business Development Pinetree Capital and Mega Uranium Ltd.
Stephen Harapiak President and COO Victory Nickel Inc. Former CEO, Potash Corp.
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Guy Bentinck President & CEO
SKILLED SERVICE PROVIDERS
Hazen Research: • Pilot plant • Metallurgical testing
Norwest:
• Resource estimates • Permitting • Prefeasibility study • Feasibility study • Water rights
Stoel Rives: • Permitting • Water rights
ICPE • Engineering
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COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES
Large mineral deposit containing premium-quality potash and bauxite material
Strategically located in a mining friendly jurisdiction with established infrastructure nearby
State-owned land allows for an efficient permitting process
Historical work expedites project development
Lower risk surface mining deposit; expected lowest cost producer
30 year mine life, with upside potential
PEA completed: $1.3 billion NPV at 10%; 21.3% after tax IRR; excludes bauxite material revenue
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CONTACT US
E-mail: [email protected]
Phone: 416.362.8640 ext 101
Website: www.potashridge.com Head office: 3 Church Street, Suite 600 Toronto, Ontario M5E 1M2
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