Boliden AB (publ) (STO:BOL)
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Status Update

Jun 14, 2023

Operator

Welcome to Boliden's conference call. For the first part of the conference call, the participants will be in listen-only mode. During the questions and answer session, participants are able to ask questions by dialing star five on their telephone keypad. I will hand the conference over to Olof Grenmark, Head of IR. Please go ahead.

Olof Grenmark
Head of Investor Relations, Boliden

Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to welcome you to this telephone conference. My name is Olof Grenmark, Head of Investor Relations. Today, we will have an update regarding the press releases sent out last night, led by our President and CEO, Mikael Staffas, and he will be assisted by our Chief Financial Officer, Håkan Gabrielsson. Mikael Staffas will give us some initial comments, and then we will have a Q&A session. Please note, this telephone conference will be recorded, and it will be put up on our web. We will end this telephone conference 9:15 AM. Mikael, welcome.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Thank you, Olof. Good morning, everybody out there. I think it's quite easy to say that June 13, it was not a Friday the 13th, it was still a 13, will be remembered for a long time as being a day of lots of events happening at the same time. If we start with the fire, we are, of course, extremely pleased that nobody got hurt. I can also say, which was in the mentioned in the written communication on up, that it looks like we will not have any damages beyond the tank house, which is, of course, good that the rest of the operations seem to be unhurt.

We have shut everything down as of now. We're going through all the other units. We're looking into that they are safe to operate and so on. This will take some time. We have also lost some of the infrastructure on the site. There are some issues regarding, for example, oxygen, ammonia, and so on, that we need to work on getting the pipes restored. That should be relatively quick and easy. Regarding the tank house, nothing will be quick and easy. This is a more or less total fire. There will have to be a new tank house in some way constructed. For us, this will mean that we will also have to change the commercial model.

We will go short term from selling cathodes to selling anodes or tolling anodes, depends a little bit, and we are, of course, in full work right now in handling this whole commercial setup and everything else, but we feel good about it. Rönnskär is also a port that is frequently used for the Boliden area to get the zinc concentrate out to, maybe to Kokkola and to Odda, and the port is already operational. That will not be impacted, all the other things that are going on should be fine to continue. We have given you a number of what it costs to be shut down totally.

There will, of course, also be some kind of lost revenue of being operating without the tank house, i.e., you know, in selling anodes rather than cathodes. There is a commercial consideration in that. We will come back to that once we get our arms around it. There are, of course, many moving parts in that part of the equation. I can also say regarding insurance, yes, and that we are fully insured. The easy part to say here is that we have SEK 100 million as a self-hold on the property, and we have a 14-day self-hold on the interruption.

Now, exactly how this work out, and you've all dealt with insurance companies or know how the insurance companies work, there's gonna be some discussions about this. As long as we don't have a final settlement with the insurance company, those insurance money will not hit our P&L, i.e., in the beginning, as we're moving right now, we will continue to take the interruption costs, and the cost on the lost property onto our P&L, as to potentially be settled later. That's the introduction on the fire in Rönnskär.

If you move over to the other areas, I'll just briefly touch on them. The situation in Kevitsa has been unfolding for a while. We have had lower grades, and we should have, and it's been accelerating. We have had to, due to many different things, had to reschedule the mine sequence. We are mining now almost exclusively from what we call the pushback number four, and nothing from the pushback number three. The pushback number three has much better grade than the pushback number four. This doesn't mean that the pushback number three has been lost.

We will be able to mine it later, but the problem is security, that the, for different reasons, the pushback number three has now ended up to be below pushback number four, and due to the operations of pushback number four, it's not safe to operate below, and therefore, we cannot do that. That will have impact severely in Q2, as we have communicated. There will be some remaining issues regarding this or impact on this for the rest of the year that we have guided for.

It's important to point out, though, that there's no change in the R&R statement, i.e., there is no loss of positions that we have communicated this stage, so the ore body is there the way it was before, and we should be able to get that metal out over time. The third item, I'll just briefly pointed on it is the care and maintenance in Tara. Care and maintenance in Tara was decided by local management and local board last night, due to what has been for the last, you can say two to three months, sustained, very, very heavy losses, both book losses and cash losses, and this is a way to curtail the cash losses around this.

We are entering a four-week wind down phase, where we will secure the operations, and then, we will be standing still until we have better conditions. What we are looking for in better conditions is for zinc price. Zinc TC plays into this as well, but also power, and power cost is part of this equation. The general productivity and level that we can achieve, and labor cost is also part of the equation that we need to look into for a potential restart.

With this stoppage, it also means that we get more time to look into the Tara Deep issue, because of course, what we don't mine while we're down, we'll still be able to mine later, and the space that we don't take into the tailings facility, we will have left later. That means that the whole time pressure on Tara Deep will go away. We will also, of course, lose some time there. We cannot do exploration from underground for safety reasons. We cannot have drilling going on underground with during care and maintenance. We do not have the security staff there to handle that.

We could do, and we're still evaluating exactly how to do this. We are looking into whether we're gonna continue to do drilling from surface. There are some pros and cons around that. I think the main issue is that we are actually pretty good in schedule regarding exploration from surface. It's the underground one that's more on the critical path, given that we, during the whole flooding situation, could continue with drilling from surface, but not from underground. There's also been some questions, and I'll probably get some more questions, what is the impact on the smelters from this?

The answer is that yes, there will be some impact. Exactly how, very difficult to point out, but we're also pointing out that zinc concentrate is a liquid market, it's possible to procure, and we do not short term have any shortage of zinc concentrate. Of course, if this were to be prolonged for a longer time, we'd need to find additional volumes of zinc concentrate for Kokkola and for Odda. With that introduction, I think I'll leave it open for questions, and we'll probably get some more color on this with the questions.

Operator

If you wish to ask a question, please dial star five on your telephone keypad to enter the queue. The next question comes from Adrian Gilani from ABG Sundal Collier. Please go ahead.

Adrian Gilani
Equity Research Analyst, ABG Sundal Collier

Regarding the Kevitsa grades, when are you going to be fully back to normal in Kevitsa regarding the mining and pushback three? Is this effect isolated to the current year, or is it a spill over into next year as well?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

I'll take that quickly. It's a little bit too early to tell, but as it is tapering off, I would say that this should not be affecting next year too much, and rather, these lower grades, we will get back at higher grades at some time in the mining sequence as well.

Adrian Gilani
Equity Research Analyst, ABG Sundal Collier

Perfect. Also for the insurances for Rönnskär, you mentioned a bit on potentially being insured for lost revenues and earnings as well. Is this just for the complete stop in the coming few weeks, or could you potentially be insured for during the anode production phase as well, until the electrolyzers are back up?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

We are insured for the whole situation, for any lost for any losses due to the fact that we can't operate in this case, a tank house. The reason why I'm playing this down is a little bit because, of course, the insurance company might not be willing to accept the same model as we do regarding what is really loss, lost revenue and lost profit in this situation. Therefore, we'll be careful, but in principle, we are fully covered.

Adrian Gilani
Equity Research Analyst, ABG Sundal Collier

Okay, that's for all the free metals and the metal premium lost, just to be clear?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

This is why I don't want to say very clearly, because it is for the interruption cost. The cost of business interruption is the way to put it in insurance terms, and this is always a discussion with insurance companies, what is the interruption cost?

Adrian Gilani
Equity Research Analyst, ABG Sundal Collier

Okay, a final one from my end, more long term on Tara Deep. Should we just assume that the decision is going to be taken at earliest in 2026 now?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

I think that's a safe assumption.

Adrian Gilani
Equity Research Analyst, ABG Sundal Collier

Okay, thank you. That's all for me.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Edward Goldsmith from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Edward Goldsmith
Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Two questions from my side. Firstly, on care and maintenance at Tara, what is the closure cost, and what is the expected quarterly maintenance cost going forward? The second question is on Rönnskär. If Rönnskär restarts, will it be able to return to full capacity? As long as you're not producing cathodes, what will be the impact on margins? Thank you.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Well, if we start with the second one, as long as we're not producing cathodes and rather producing anodes and selling them, there will be an impact on margins, of course, but exactly what they will be, I cannot tell and will not tell, because we are of course, having all kind of commercial discussions at this time around with other refiners around what would a potential refining charge be and so on. That will take some time, so I cannot give you an exact number. Regarding the closure costs, you could say that it's about the one month full operating cost of closing down.

You know, not much production, but full cost for one month. After that, costs are severely reduced to the order of magnitude of about EUR 10 million per quarter. Of keeping it in care and maintenance. That's the cost for pumping and, you know, the kind of making sure that the equipment is taken care of and so on, while it's being shut down.

Edward Goldsmith
Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Thank you. That's everything for me.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Okay.

Operator

The next question comes from Daniel Major, from UBS. Please go ahead.

Daniel Major
Managing Director and Metals and Mining Analyst, UBS

Hi, guys. Thanks for the questions. Just on the Rönnskär, with respect to, I guess, the... You obviously indicated that the insurance will come through. Is it fair to assume in our modeling that, you know, you'll receive a lump sum payment, yeah, in due course? Can you give us any indication on the rebuild timeline, CapEx associated with that you might have to carry, excuse me, to rebuild the tank house? What sort of ongoing additional cost you would likely incur at Rönnskär before you receive any kind of any insurance payment?

Similar question at Tara, you mentioned EUR 10 million care and maintenance cost. I'm assuming that's a P&L item. What's your expected run rate of CapEx associated with ongoing exploration on Tara Deep, et cetera, whilst the asset is closed? First questions for me.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

We take the second part first, around Tara. We, you know, the exploration activities are, of course, part of the OpEx and not part of the CapEx. They will be curtailed, but that's also part of why we can reduce the OpEx and just have this EUR 10 million per quarter. That is, as you pointed out, a P&L item. There are other cash flow things that goes in and out when you deal with these things, you will, there are, of course, clearly payables going down, which will affect cash flow, but there are also some receivables going down affecting cash flows.

The cash flow is not really the same, but the P&L is to the order of million euros per quarter. You said Rönnskär and Rönnskär CapEx. The answer is, we do not know. I don't want to give a number. You know, it will for sure cost a lot, but we have, at this stage, no clue. We have not even a conceptual study of what we would do, what a new cell house would look like, how we would like to design it, and what timeline will be for that. That's way too early to say anything about.

We don't foresee, if you take your question, we don't really foresee any increased costs of operating Rönnskär compared to the kind of standard. Of course, the question is: What is the lost revenue of foregoing the refining charge that it comes with having a tank house and having to give that to somebody else? What's the effect, as you know, on three metals around this? Can we do tolling or would we sell the anodes and so on? All these are way too early. Commercial considerations are too early to tell.

Daniel Major
Managing Director and Metals and Mining Analyst, UBS

Okay, thanks. Maybe, just follow up if I could. Just to interpret the guidance you've given for the sensitivities around the earnings for the second quarter. In the mining business, you've SEK 1.2 billion of EBIT in Q1. You've guided for SEK 500 million of, I guess, exceptional items relative to your previous guidance. How should we read that on the sequential bridge in earnings from Q1 to Q2? I think prices have been lower, but I guess you see some improvement at Aitik after a poor Q1. I mean, how should we think about the sequential bridge in the key items, both mining and smelting Q1 into Q2?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

If you know, we don't guide too much for that, but I can help you a little bit. Of course, there were some kind of one-offs that we should not see again. There were pretty big negative items in Garpenberg that we have said now that there are some of that remaining into April before we got really going, but as we're talking now, it's much better.

We have also not said anything about Aitik, that means that Aitik is more or less operating according to the guidance we've given, which means more throughput than we had in Q1, but also potentially lower grade, as we have guided, that we're heading down to 0.17. You have these impacts that we talked about in Kevitsa, and then you will have the lower prices, and you will have to do your own modeling on this.

Daniel Major
Managing Director and Metals and Mining Analyst, UBS

All right. Thank you.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Okay, thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Christian Kopfer, from Handelsbanken. Please go ahead.

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Thanks, operator. Just a few follow-ups then from my side. Firstly, on Kevitsa, seems like you had a lot of uncertainty when it comes to call it guidance for grades. Still, you are quite explicit on the full, or you are very explicit on the full year. Which essentially means because we already have the guidance for Q2, then you can pencil in what you expect for the second half. Even though you signal that you are uncertain, you still say that you expect implicitly grades to come up quite materially in the second half. Is that correct, the interpretation?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Yes, we do expect them to come back in the second half, but we don't expect them to come back so much so that the full year guidance that we had given before holds. If they will come back.

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Yeah.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

The Q2 will be the exceptional low point, but it, we won't get everything back in Q3 and Q4 from what we losing in Q2.

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Yeah, that's fair. If I would, in order to reconcile everything, it seems like you need grades to come up to end the year at a quite significantly higher level than what you saw in Q1. Is that fair?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Yes. Q1 was relatively bad. Q2 is really bad. Q3s and...

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Okay.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Fours look better, but they won't compensate for the bad-

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Yeah

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

that happened in the early part of the year.

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Okay. All right. Going into 2024, as you see it right now, that should be a more normal year for Kevitsa.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

It should be some more a normal year for Kevitsa, as I see it now, we haven't done the detailed mine plan for next year, but as I see it now, it should be more normal year.

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Okay. For Odda, what would you say, everything else look, everything else unchanged, so to speak? How much higher zinc prices do you need to restart it again?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

It's difficult to give that because, you know, there are lots of moving parts in this. There's zinc price, there's zinc TC, there is power prices that we're negotiating hard on Odda. It is labor costs, but maybe not the cost of labor itself as opposed to the productivity, but the labor cost unit becomes per unit and so on. There are many moving parts in this decision to go into care and maintenance, and all those moving parts together with, is what we look at as we will then consider restarting again.

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Yeah, that's why I said, so everything else unchanged from current level. Is it fair to say that you at least you need to go meaningfully above 2,500?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

I would prefer, I mean, I would prefer not to say anything on that. Of course, if you only were to play with the zinc price and nothing else, yeah, the zinc price would have to be clearly higher than what they are today.

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Yeah. Okay. All right. When do you think you will come out with an assessment of investment costs and also when it comes to more details on the insurance claims on Rönnskär?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

It's a good question, and the answer is, I think it will be rather months before we come into this clearance regarding this. You know, there's something. Just to get a sense of it, we have to think about whether we're gonna build on the same place or the different place at the Rönnskär site. If we decide to put it in the same place, which could have some advantages, it will take quite some time to get to clear out what is there right now.

Building somewhere else could potentially be faster, but would have other disadvantages. We have not been able to even start thinking about this, and I don't think we've been able to contract anybody to do a feasibility study around this. It's unfortunately so that, you know, even though we have many contingencies, I don't think that we have a ready kind of drawings for a new Cell house. That's not, we haven't done continuously to that end.

Christian Kopfer
Equity Research Analyst, Handelsbanken

Okay. Thank you very much.

Operator

The next question comes from Ioannis Masvoulas from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Ioannis Masvoulas
Executive Director of Equity Research, Morgan Stanley

Follow-ups from my side. The first that I'd like to clarify, I mean, on Rönnskär and Tara, the disruptions and the underlying reasons are very clear. Kevitsa, what changed in your view on grades now as compared to the beginning of the year, that forced that change in the mine plan? Could you elaborate a bit on that, please?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Well, the, as I think I said before, the main reason is that we are now mining solely out of pushback number 4, we're not mining anything out of the pushback number 3. Comes the question, why is that? Well, the reason is that pushback number 3 is below pushback number 4. We cannot be at pushback number 3 right now for safety reasons. Comes the real question: why did we not have that already in the plans? Well, in the plans, we had. We foresaw both a, a time, a faster mining at, at pushback 3.

They could kind of keep up the pace and stay ahead whilst they circle around the pit, they could have stayed ahead and stayed outside. We've not managed to get the productivity at pushback number three that we wanted early in the year. Secondly, we thought that you can work on top of each other if you are not close to the rim so that you're not close of, you know, rock fallings down. Because of the way that things worked out, we're having to operate and loading much closer to the rim, which means that stones will fall over the rim, which means that it's dangerous to be below. This was not clear as we did the mine plan, and we've had to adjust the mine plan accordingly.

Ioannis Masvoulas
Executive Director of Equity Research, Morgan Stanley

That's very clear. Thank you. Second question, Rönnskär. I believe you had a commercial agreements around the low carbon copper out of this smelter. What happens to these agreements, and could Harjavalta step in so you can still maintain some of the, albeit small, green premiums?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

That is, of course, something that is, it's a very interesting question because the, the way that the kind of classification of Green Copper works is, of course, based on the standard that we had before the fire. It's not that you measure for every individual ton exactly, you measure that on an average basis for a year. Exactly how these calculations will have to be redone now, it's very unclear. That's something that I think people are working on as well.

Ioannis Masvoulas
Executive Director of Equity Research, Morgan Stanley

Okay.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

We don't know how much can do, be done with green. The main driver for getting the green pin, as you said, is the Aitik volumes, and the Aitik volumes will most likely still continue to be processed in Rönnskär. Rönnskär will then do an anode, but not the cathode. The cathode needs to be tolled somewhere, and then comes the question, okay, what is the CO2 footprint of that tolling at some kind of a refinery somewhere? That's, we don't know. Way too early to tell.

Ioannis Masvoulas
Executive Director of Equity Research, Morgan Stanley

Understood. The last question from me, you talked about the possible write-downs at Rönnskär around the tank house and relevant equipment. How does the insurance compensation play into it? When you think about the full year dividend, would you adjust for any impairments on your net profit?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Well, start in the end. If there are impairments, then they will go down to the P&L. We will not make adjustment for impairments in dividend discussions. There are, of course, lots of moving parts around this. We will have to take the write-down. We just don't know exactly what it is right now, but it's given that this is an old tank house, the write-down will be relatively small, but we don't know exactly what it is yet. The replacement value is much higher. The insurance is linked to the replacement value. In that sense, the insurance is there to cover, but as we said, we don't know exactly how this will work out, and the insurance claim is clearly gonna take months to sort out.

Ioannis Masvoulas
Executive Director of Equity Research, Morgan Stanley

Okay, great. Thanks so much.

Operator

The next question comes from Krishan Agarwal from Citigroup. Please go ahead.

Krishan Agarwal
Director and Equity Analyst, Citigroup

The question most of them have been asked. A quick follow-up on the commercial loss at Rönnskär. I mean, I understand that you're not quantifying it now, but conceptually, if I were to understand it, that the commercial loss from switching from cathode to anode is that you'll be losing a bit of a physical premium and then the free metal, while you'll be paying the refining charge in addition to the cost you already incurred. Would there be any loss of the by-product credit as well, in terms of gold, because you are producing the anode?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

That's also way too early to tell, because it all depends on what our commercial agreements would be. If we were to sell the anodes, how much paid will we get for the metal contained? If that is higher than what we have paid for the concentrates, which it should be, there will be some free metal still, but it will be less. If we toll it, then we're in theory, getting back all the spares for the precious metals plant, then we're not losing any free metal, but we will have a tolling cost that we need to pay. All these things, I think, are way too early to discuss.

You will, of course, understand that we will have to be having these commercial discussions in a very, you know, in a very thoughtful way, how to handle it, and how to make sure that we're not coming it up on the short end of the stick in commercial discussions as well, because we are the ones who are in a need.

Krishan Agarwal
Director and Equity Analyst, Citigroup

Understand. A quick financial implication type of a question. How should we read this entire incident as an impact on the group working capital? I understand that directionally it is going to result in a little bit of a build, any kind of, no quantification or guidance would be helpful. The second follow-up is that, If I were to look at the consensus expectation for the next year, CapEx, it is around, you know, SEK 11 billion, significantly down from your guidance for SEK 15 billion this year. Should we bake in into our models a little bit of a higher CapEx because of these incidents that we are discussing?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Well, I mean, in the end of the day, there will be more CapEx because, yes, the answer is yes. The question, how much of that will be covered by insurance? I don't know. That's something that needs to be looked upon going forward. I cannot get that mix not the timing either around it. Yes, yes, it will be CapEx to build a new tank house.

Krishan Agarwal
Director and Equity Analyst, Citigroup

Then the working capital?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

The working capital, we are having a higher working capital. Everything else equal, this thing should quicker, how fast we could get the working capital out, given that we will have, if you want to call it, so, excess capacity at the precious metal plants, and therefore should be able to kind of get more into intermediates. Once again, this is also a but because we don't really know how the balance will work out of all these things.

Krishan Agarwal
Director and Equity Analyst, Citigroup

Understood. Thanks a lot.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Just to be like, short term, of course, we will get a concentrate buildup. We cannot stop all the concentrate coming in, so there will be a concentrate buildup short term.

Krishan Agarwal
Director and Equity Analyst, Citigroup

Yeah, that's for more of the Q2.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

That's kind of for end of Q2 and the early Q3. You know, we have vessels on the way that cannot really be redirected, even though we're kind of stepping it there. Let's try to step down from existing contracts where possible.

Krishan Agarwal
Director and Equity Analyst, Citigroup

Understand. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Johannes Grunselius from DNB. Please go ahead.

Johannes Grunselius
Equity Analyst, DNB

Yes. Hello, everyone, it's Johannes Grunselius, DNB here. Two questions from me. I mean, we have discussed a lot of details, but what I'm after is on. I understand you don't want to give us a CapEx guidance for the tank house. Could you help me understanding how expensive is the tank house if you look at the smelter in general? I mean, is this very critical part of the sort of equipment and the capital employed in or the invested capital in the smelter?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

I mean, it's of course, going to be much more a part of it, the capital with a new one compared to an old one. I don't want to give any numbers, but I can refer to some of your colleagues, Johannes, who have kind of done some kind of benchmark, what it costs to build tank houses around the world, and already came up with a number of maybe this will cost between SEK 3 billion to build a new tank house. I would say I have not given that number because we have not done any assessment whatsoever.

Johannes Grunselius
Equity Analyst, DNB

Yeah. I don't know if you can help me with this one, but, it seems to me that we're talking more about a SEK 1+ billion investment, eventually, when the feasibility is done.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Yeah, I would assume that we're talking about, you know, plus SEK 1 billion investment, yes.

Johannes Grunselius
Equity Analyst, DNB

Okay. Okay. Also on the details when it comes to by-products for Rönnskär, when you move out from cathodes for a while, does that mean you're losing the premiums to it, when you're selling to direct clients, or could you still charge a copper premium on your products?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

There is a copper premium on, there is in Europe, a copper premium on anodes or on blister.

Johannes Grunselius
Equity Analyst, DNB

Okay.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

There is a, which is in some way kind of linked to the premium on cathodes, but of course, not one to one, but there is a kind of correlation.

Johannes Grunselius
Equity Analyst, DNB

Yeah.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Yes, we should still get some premium, but how big it will be, who knows?

Johannes Grunselius
Equity Analyst, DNB

Okay.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

We, of course, now jumping into the kind of spot market for if we want to sell with premiums. Now, if we toll it, then we get the cathodes back, and then we can sell ourselves with a premium. Yeah, there are lots of these issues around.

Johannes Grunselius
Equity Analyst, DNB

Okay, okay. When you think about the important by-products, or, you know, income streams from the Rönnskär smelters, where would you say we will see the most negative impact, from not producing, cathodes?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

I mean, we will lose on TCRCs because we will lose the RC portion.

Johannes Grunselius
Equity Analyst, DNB

Okay.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Right. We will also lose some free metals. Exactly the kind of balance of these, I don't know. We will also lose some premiums, but the balance, I don't know.

Johannes Grunselius
Equity Analyst, DNB

Okay, gotcha. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Camilla Stenlund, from Folkbladet. Please go ahead.

Camilla Stenlund
Journalist, Folkbladet

First of all, my regrets to you for yesterday's fire. I want to ask you about the employees. Is there any directions regarding the employees at Rönnskär? Short term, long term?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Regarding employees, is, of course, also way too early to tell. We have not done any kind of plans, we need to sit down together, also with the unions, and have discussions around it. Having said that, of course, things will change. We will not need any staff or any tank house in the short while. There might be other portions where we also don't need any staff. On the other hand, we're going to build things and clean up things where we might need some additional staff, and exactly how this is going to work out is way too early to tell.

Camilla Stenlund
Journalist, Folkbladet

Okay, thank you.

Operator

As a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please dial star five on your telephone keypad. The next question comes from Daniel Major from UBS. Please go ahead.

Daniel Major
Managing Director and Metals and Mining Analyst, UBS

Hi, Dan, here again, just two follow-ups. Just to clarify again on the insurance dynamic and the cash flow dynamic at Rönnskär. At this point, would it be your assessment that you would receive at least some funds from the insurance claim for the rebuild? Or would you have to carry most of the fund for the rebuild before receiving anything on the insurance claim?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

I think that both the size of the insurance claim and the timing of the payment of the insurance claim is still very much open to discussion, as is, of course, the timing that we would have to spend the money for a rebuild. I would say that we have not come at all that far in the discussions with the insurance company, but we are full value insurance. In theory, even though, you know, insurance companies find different reasons why an old cell house is not the same as a new one, therefore you would have to pay something in between. In theory, we have a replacement insurance in place that should be fully replacing lost property.

Daniel Major
Managing Director and Metals and Mining Analyst, UBS

Okay, thanks. Okay, thanks. Just one final sort of strategic question. You know, Tara is right at the top of the cost curve, and the CapEx associated with the expansion, et cetera, you know, it's material. How is the buy versus build case looking for zinc at the moment? Yeah, with respect to securing feed to your smelters, et cetera. You know, might it be a more attractive opportunity to look to acquire assets relative to continuing with the kind of revival of Tara?

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

We don't really look at it that way because we can always feed the smelters. We don't have to buy a mine to feed the smelters. We can have an offtake agreement from another mine. We can have a commercial agreement. We don't need for that. We are interested in operating Tara Mines, if we make money in Tara Mines. We need to have a product on Tara Deep that is good enough so that we will, you know, make money on it as on a standalone basis, as would any other potential acquisition of, you know, of additional mining capacity, would also have to stand on its own feet regarding what the finances would look like.

I would say that Tara Deep is a different mine that exists in Tara, the way that we envision it. We envision it being done with, quite some infrastructure investments, quite some CapEx, but at the same time, that would lower the CapEx, and Tara might not necessarily be this high-cost mine that it's been so far.

Daniel Major
Managing Director and Metals and Mining Analyst, UBS

All right, thanks.

Operator

There are no more questions at this time, so I hand the conference back to the speakers for any closing comments.

Mikael Staffas
President and CEO, Boliden

Just like to say thank you, everybody, for listening in. It's, as I said in the beginning, I think we'll always remember June 13, which was not a Friday the 13th, but a Tuesday the 13th. We can rest or you can rest assured that we will continue to work with full energy to, you know, correct the things that we have, and we are working diligently on this. Thank you very much for your attention, and I wish you all a good day.

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