Good morning. My name is Rob, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Hecla Mining Company First Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, again, press the star one. Thank you. Anvita Patil, Vice President, Investor Relations, and Treasurer, you may begin your conference.
Good morning, Rob, thank you all for joining us for Hecla's first quarter 2023 financial and operations results conference call. I'm Anvita Patil, Hecla's Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer. Our financial results news release that was issued this morning, along with today's presentation, are available on Hecla's website. On today's call, we have Phil Baker, Hecla's President and CEO, Lauren Roberts, Hecla's Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, and Russell Lawlar, Hecla's Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Any forward-looking statements made today by the management team come under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act and involve risks as shown on slides two and three in our earnings release and in our 10-K and 10-Q filings with the SEC. These and other risks could cause results to differ from those projected in the forward-looking statements.
Reconciliations of non-GAAP measures cited in this call and related slides are found in the slides or the news release. With that, I will pass the call to Phil.
Thanks, Anvita. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining our call. I'm going to start on slide four. You know, April 16th marked the 15th anniversary of Hecla's purchase of Rio Tinto's interest in Greens Creek. Greens Creek's been our foundational asset. It's really what's allowing us to be the fastest-growing established silver producer. With that acquisition of Greens Creek that we made those years ago, we made a commitment to primarily focus our efforts in Tier 1 jurisdictions. Now we are the largest producer of silver in the U.S. and soon in Canada. Hecla is not just about jurisdictions, although I'm going to come back to jurisdictions at the end of our prepared remarks. Hecla is about creating real value on a per share basis by exploring, innovating, and executing on our large property positions.
It all starts with Greens Creek, which has provided the stability, cash flow in about 30% of our production growth over the last 15 years. Its employees have done a phenomenal job of continuously improving, making Greens Creek a longer-lived, lower cost, more productive mine. This is real value to shareholders. Greens Creek's success is allowing Hecla to invest in the Lucky Friday and Keno. The investment in Lucky Friday has allowed its production growth in the last 5 years to go from less than 1 million ounces to more than 4 million, with more growth on the horizon. Substantial growth over the next few years will be primarily from Keno. That should produce more than 2.5 million ounces this year and about 4 million ounces next year.
Since 2008, production has about doubled and is expected to be 17 million ounces this year. Then, and then we expect to increase to about 20 million ounces by 2025, which we project will be our sustained production profile for the foreseeable future. Not only have we seen our production grow and expect that growth to continue, we've also been growing our reserves. In fact, from 2008 to 2022, our silver reserves have increased by a factor of five. Most importantly, production reserve growth over the past 15 years has created value on a per share basis, and this is shown on the graph on the right. Our average silver equivalent production and equivalent reserve per share has increased almost 2 x since 2008.
This reserve growth is due to a core tenet of our strategy, that's to acquire large land packages in good jurisdictions. We continue to execute on this with the announcement of the ATAC Resources acquisition, which brings us a huge land package of more than 650 sq mi in the Yukon that's near Keno. We expect the transaction to close in the third quarter. April of this year also marks the 10th year of our acquisition of Casa Berardi, which when we acquired it, was solely an underground mine. It transitioned to a combination of underground and open pit operations in 2016, and now we're starting that transition to only being an open pit mine. This will require investment over the next few years.
The investment amount will depend on how long we continue mining underground and the margins it generates. What this will lead to is mining higher grade open pit materials in a few years. This higher grade ore is in the permitting pipeline, and the reserve grades are almost 70% higher than the current operating pit. The same rationale for why we bought Casa Berardi still holds. We have exposure to great geology, large land package, significant infrastructure, doré production, and exposure to gold whose volatility is less than silver. As we turn to slide five, I will narrow our focus from the strategy we've been implementing over time to some of the details of the first quarter.
The key takeaways are it was a strong operational quarter with free cash flow generation from the silver mines that were on track to achieve our production and cost guidance and strong safety performance across the company. Greens Creek achieved record quarterly throughput, breaking the record set just last quarter, and turned in very strong silver and gold production. Record gold production, in fact. At Lucky Friday, we achieved our safest quarter when at full production, which is an extraordinary feat considering the 80-plus years Lucky Friday has been operating. This safety record was achieved while silver production exceeded 1.2 million ounces. This is the third time the mine has achieved that in the last four quarters. The development at Keno Hill is on track for a mill startup in the third quarter, with production expected to exceed 2.5 million ounces.
Lauren's going to talk more about these properties in just a couple of minutes. This operational performance has translated into financial performance. For two consecutive quarters now, silver is now our leading source of revenue due to significantly more silver production. The cash flow generation of both Greens Creek and Lucky Friday was more than $31 million each, and combined for $69 million. Our capital allocation priority is investing in our mines to grow profitable production. This quarter, we invested $17 million each in Keno Hill and Casa Berardi, and $14 million in the Lucky Friday. Greens Creek will see relatively more capital in the coming quarters. However, what is most important is our commitment to keeping our employees safe, and we have our lowest all-injury frequency rate in our history, because in 2012, we implemented the National Mining Association's CORESafety Program.
We expect to release our 2022 sustainability report at our annual shareholder meeting on May 23rd, and given our high-grade underground operations, we are net zero in 2022 on scope one and two carbon emissions, which were offset with UN-certified credits. By the way, the annual meeting will be both in person and webcast. I hope you'll listen in. With that, I'll pass the call over to Russell to talk about our financials.
Thanks, Phil. I'll start on slide seven. One of the most impressive characteristics of our mines is their ability to generate free cash flow. Since 2020, our three mines have generated more than $620 million in free cash flow. This has been driven by our silver mines, which generate margins even at low silver prices. Looking at the chart on the left side of the slide, in the first quarter, we had a margin of $13.66, which is 60% of the realized silver price. Over the past three years, the margin has been between 44% and 64%. Not many companies have silver mines that are this consistent. This cash flow hasn't only been generated at our silver mines. Over the same period, Casa Berardi has generated more than $65 million of free cash flow.
This cash flow generation allows us to consistently invest capital into our mines and ensure we maintain healthy exploration budgets. This has always been a core strategy where we add value by reserve life extensions and conversion of mineral resources to reserve. Last year, we further invested this free cash flow into our operations with the result of the double-digit production growth that Phil discussed, with the acquisition of Keno Hill and the subsequent investments we've made there. This leads me to slide eight, where I'll discuss our first quarter revenue profile and balance sheet. During the quarter, our silver operations generated the second highest revenue and gross margin in our company's history. Total revenues for the first quarter were $200 million, with silver the highest contributor of all metals at 38%, followed by gold at 35% and 27% from base metals.
Revenues increased over the fourth quarter due to higher realized prices, although we had more silver production, we saw lower volumes of silver sold in the first quarter relative to the fourth quarter. This was due to our shipping schedule, where the fourth quarter had higher silver ounces sold as a silver concentrate shipment from Greens Creek was deferred from the third to the fourth quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for the last four quarters was $221 million, maintaining our leverage ratio at 1.9 x, which is below our target of a maximum of 2 x. As we go through this period of investment at Keno Hill and Casa Berardi, our net leverage target will remain at less than 2 x, we'll take the necessary steps to keep adequate cash on our balance sheet with a target of around $100 million.
We sold 2.1 million shares under our ATM program during the quarter, amounting to $11.9 million to maintain this targeted cash balance and ended the quarter with $96 million in cash on the balance sheet and $240 million of liquidity. Before I pass the call to Lauren, I'd like to briefly discuss what we are seeing on inflation. While we are seeing inflationary pressures on fuel, steel, ground support, and other key inputs stabilize quarter-over-quarter, labor costs and demand for skilled labor remains high across all our operations. The effects of inflation and labor costs are more pronounced at Casa Berardi. With that, Lauren will discuss that in more detail. With that, I'll turn the call to Lauren.
Thanks, Russell. I'll start on slide 10. Greens Creek, our flagship mine, reported another strong operational quarter with robust free cash flow generation. It was just in February this year that we reported the mine had record throughput in the fourth quarter. I'm pleased to report that the first quarter achieved yet another record of 2,591 tons per day. We expect the mine will produce 2,600 tons per day by the fourth quarter. Silver production was 2.8 million ounces. Gold production set a record of 14,885 ounces due to higher grades mined, increased throughput, and better recovery. We experienced significant positive model variance for silver in the first quarter. Looking forward, we expect silver grades to be more in line with the model. We reiterate our silver production guidance.
All-in Sustaining Costs for the quarter were $3.82 per silver ounce, a decline over the fourth quarter due to lower fuel prices and consumption because hydropower availability was higher during the quarter. Capital spending of $6.6 million was lower than planned, primarily due to the timing of equipment deliveries, which are expected in the second quarter.
The mine generated $37 million in free cash flow, adding another strong financial quarter to its long history of free cash flow generation, which is nearly $1.9 billion since the mine started operations in 1989. The mine is on track to achieve its production guidance of 9 million to 9.5 million ounces of silver and AISC of $6.00-$6.75 per ounce for the year. When we acquired the remaining 70% of the mine in 2008, throughput was just over 2,000 tons per day and silver recoveries were about 70%. Today, with our incremental improvements, throughput has increased by 30% and silver recoveries have improved 12 % . All of this was achieved with very modest capital investments supported by our culture of continuous improvement.
This prepared mine is the 11th largest silver producer in the world. I want to congratulate the team on delivering excellent results at this truly world-class asset. Turning to slide 11, Lucky Friday produced 1.3 million ounces of silver at an AISC of $10.69 per ounce in the 1st quarter. This quarter marked the 4th consecutive quarter of silver production exceeding 1 million ounces and a new safety record with an all-in frequency rate of 0.62 as of the end of April. Throughput increased by 5% to 1,059 tons per day compared to the fourth quarter. The mine is on track to achieve our target run rate of 425,000 ore tons per year in the fourth quarter.
Capital spending at the mine was $14.7 million as we focus on two key projects, the service hoist and the coarse ore bunker, which we anticipate completing by the fourth quarter. The service hoist is expected to debottleneck our production hoisting capacity, while the coarse ore bunker will decouple the mine and the mill by adding the capacity to stockpile ore for multiple days. Both projects are critical in achieving our production goals. Free cash flow generation for the quarter was $31 million, reflecting the receipt of $6.7 million in January from a December 2022 concentrate sale. We are reiterating the production and cost guidance for 2023 with 4.5 million to 5 million ounces of silver at an all-in sustaining cost of $8.50 to $9.50 per ounce.
The team continues to do a phenomenal job, and as we look forward, we are more convinced than ever that this will be the best decade in the mine's 80-year history. Moving to slide 12, Keno Hill, we remain on track for mill startup in the third quarter with about 75% of the pre-production development completed. Capital spend at the mine was $17 million for the quarter with significant progress made on mine development, underground infrastructure construction, and mobile equipment purchases. Work is gearing up for the surface construction season as well with the camp expansion and secondary crushing circuit modifications preparing to start. These two projects will position us to achieve and sustain the full permitted capacity of the mine. Initial ore feed for the mill recommissioning is being stockpiled from the Flame & Moth in Bermingham deposits.
Because of the high-grade ore we expect to mine in the fourth quarter, production is expected to exceed 2.5 million ounces of silver. We anticipate the mine could produce up to 4 million ounces of silver in 2024. Turning to slide 13, Casa Berardi produced approximately 25,000 ounces of gold for the quarter at an all-in sustaining cost of $2,392 per ounce. Production was lower, as expected, due to lower underground tonnage and grades while the cost per ounce was higher. Production costs declined compared to the fourth quarter due to lower tonnage, consumables, and reduction in contractor costs. However, the cash costs and all-in sustaining cost per ounce increased due to lower production. The mill continued to perform strongly, marking another record for quarterly throughput.
These mill improvements are a result of the investments we completed in 2021 and ongoing continuous improvement efforts by our processing team. Smaller underground stopes, more demanding stope preparation, and lower grades have resulted in significant cost pressures, which were compounded further by inflationary pressures in 2022. These changes are leading to a reevaluation of the underground cut-off grade and mine plans work we'll complete over the next several quarters. Since 2018, underground grades declined by 30%, which was anticipated as the higher grade zones were depleted. While our exploration has remained focused on underground targets, we have not yet seen significant exploration success. Underground exploration will continue with the aim of identifying higher grade zones. However, with the decline in underground grades and inventory, the mine is beginning a transition from an underground operation to a full open pit operation.
The mine became a combination of underground and surface operations beginning in 2016 with the addition of the EMCP pit, followed by the 160 pit in 2020. Higher grade open pit ore with reserve grades 70% higher than the current 160 pit is in the permitting pipeline and expected to be in production in three to four years. As Phil mentioned, during this period of transition to a fully surface operation, the mine will need capital investments in fleet and infrastructure, which we expect to be in the range of $100 million-$120 million, exclusive of stripping. The Casa Berardi mine has a substantial reserve and significant exploration potential on a large land package on the Casa Berardi Break.
As we go through this period of investment and discovery, Casa Berardi remains key in our key mine in our portfolio that gives us gold exposure and diversification from the concentrate market. I will now pass the call back to Phil.
Thanks, Lauren, we are reiterating our production and cost guidance for the year as shown on slide 14. Our silver production growth, which is sustainable beyond 2025, is based on Hecla having some of the best silver mines in the world with their low cost structure and long reserve lives located in tier one jurisdictions. This is the foundation that allows us to continue to grow, innovate, and create value for our shareholders. Our long-term growth is embedded with our Montana properties that are the third largest undeveloped copper deposit in the U.S., with more than 1.4 million tons of copper and 330 million ounces of silver. That brings me to slide 15. I suspect that many of you don't know what H.R.1 means. If you do, you might be too into American politics.
For three years, I was chairman of the United States National Mining Association, and that's the U.S. mining industry's lobbying group. I learned the significance of H.R.1 as the first bill of a new Congress. Whether it passes or not necessarily the important thing, but what it tells you is the priority of Congress. The last two Congresses had the House controlled by Democrats, and their H.R.1 was voting rights legislation, which was never passed. The 115th Congress, which the Republicans controlled, their H.R.1 was tax reform, which passed. You might recall that that was in 2017. That was sort of the primary success of the of that Congress. The current 118th Congress, H.R.1 is permitting reform.
Exactly one year ago on this call, I told you that attitudes were changing in the U.S. toward mining and permitting reform with the recognition of the need for metals for the energy transition and for national security. H.R.1 far exceeds where I thought we would be today. What are some of the important elements to mining investors of H.R.1? Well, first, it establishes the lead agency for NEPA review. It allows the project sponsor to prepare the EIS so we can move much faster. EIS documents are limited to 300 pages. There's a 120-day limit on appeals from the NEPA process. Remand of a NEPA decision requires imminent and substantial environmental harm. These are all very, very significant reforms to permitting.
To show you how far the attitude has changed, Republicans has enacting the bill as a pillar of the debt ceiling negotiations that were happening last night. Do I think that H.R.1 will pass the Senate, get signed by Biden? No, I don't. It is further evidence that the attitude among policymakers in the United States is positively changing and makes likely permitting reform in the next few years. More importantly, it's in stark contrast to other jurisdictions. In Mexico, the largest producer of silver in the world with their new law, creates barriers to mining and mining exploration. There are just too many to mention.
While Hecla is willing to invest in other jurisdictions, including Mexico, I am convinced that our strategy of primarily growing in the United States and Canada is the best long-term option for Hecla and our shareholders. Finally, I want to congratulate and thank all Hecla employees across all our sites. It's because of their dedication to safety, the environment, innovation, and execution that Hecla is the company that we are today. With that, Rob, I'd like to open the call to questions.
At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star, then the 1 on your telephone keypad. Your first question comes from a line of Heiko Ihle from H.C. Wainwright & Co. Your line is open.
Hey there. Thanks for taking my questions.
Sure thing, Heiko.
You got a decreased G&A cost of $2.3 million. You attribute this to higher incentive compensation in the fourth quarter of 2022. Can you maybe trendline the rest of the year for us quarter by quarter for G&A?
Off the top of my head, I will pass that on to Russell because I'm not sure.
I would expect G&A would be relatively consistent quarter by quarter. You know, what we saw as we came to the end of last year was that, based on performance of last year, we ended up having to accrue in the fourth quarter incentive compensation. That's why you saw the spike then. We also brought on some folks from the Alexco acquisition into our corporate department. We saw a bit more staffing in the G&A from that. You saw the fourth quarter go up a little bit, but those folks are still on staff. I would expect the G&A to roughly be what it is throughout the year.
Got it.
Heiko, it also depends on performance. If we have good performance, which I hope we do, then we'll have more incentive comp.
Correct.
You'll see it go up as a result of that.
Well, let's hope there's a half a billion in incentive comp. Greens Creek had very good throughput in the quarter. Were there any particular efficiencies that you undertook at site to make that happen, or is there anything undergoing right now? Just maybe help us plan the future there a little bit.
Well, I'll just comment by saying, you know, Greens Creek has done a excellent job of making incremental improvements. We had a very focused effort at looking at how we improve the operation. We had our really looking forward to producing more tons and believing that the mill can manage more tons. This is significantly more tons. We were at 2,000 tons a day when we acquired the mine. We're headed towards 2,600 tons a day. It is incremental improvements. It's a very focused effort. Lauren, maybe you have some more insight.
Yeah, absolutely. Thank you for the question, Heiko.
Gladly.
You know, we're on pace to achieve 2,600 tons a day by the end of the year, that's just sort of a linear progression quarter by quarter from where we are today to 2,600 tons a day. We're doing this with no significant capital investment in the mill. Really, as Phil said, we just took a step back, looked at the mill and our understanding of how the mill operated, we were willing to challenge conventional wisdom about what could be done. We developed some interesting concepts which we then tested through a series of industrial trials. What we find is that we are able to utilize more of the horsepower in the grinding circuit to increase throughput.
We're doing this at the same time that we are improving recovery, which is quite remarkable, really. Just a testament to the team's willingness to look at things with fresh eyes and try something new, and in this instance, it's been very beneficial.
Yep. Then just a quick one. You talked about selling some shares under your ATM or at a somewhat meaningful amount even. Is it fair to say that this is your preferred funding source for the firm in the intermediate and longer term as well? I mean, I like ATMs. They're, well, a cheap and easy way to raise some funds. Is it fair to say that this is your preferred way to do it in the future?
No, our preferred way is just generating free cash flow, Heiko.
Okay, fine. Besides that.
You know, and with, you know, frankly, with the, you know, the $25 silver price, that's pretty nice silver price in my estimation. Not that it can't go higher, I certainly hope it will. We generate a lot of free cash flow at these sort of prices. You get below $20 and it's, you know, frankly, you know, we have a choice. We either spend less, borrow more, or use the ATM. We're but having said that, we'll maintain the strength of the balance sheet.
You've been very successful with that in the past. On that note, I'll go back in queue. Thank you.
Thanks, Heiko.
Your next question comes from the line of Michael Siperco from RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Great, thanks, and thanks for taking my questions. First one, great quarters from Greens Creek and Lucky Friday. Of course, let me ask a bit about Casa Berardi. Understanding what you've said about the transition there and the guidance you've provided, can you maybe expand a bit, and I'm not sure how to ask this exactly, but can you expand on what the range of investment could be, high and low, over the next couple of years, and what that's contingent on? Maybe if possible, could you tell us what your vision of the mine is or what production and cost could look like once this transition period is over?
Sure. you know, the transition period will require a fleet of mining equipment that allows us to mine the West Mine Crown Pillar pits and the Principal pits. Sort of the unique thing that we're doing is mining the 160 pit to allow that to be the tailings disposal or storage facility. We're going to try to, we're still working through this, but we're going to try to accelerate the mining of that pit so that it is ready for to accept the tailings when we get to those other pits.
What we've indicated is we're thinking in order of magnitude $100 million-$120 million of capital over the next couple of years for equipment and things that we need to make this transition. Once we have made the transition, then you'll see the higher grade production from the West Mine Crown Pillar pit and the Principal. Where those costs will come out, I'm not absolutely sure, but I do know that they'll be substantially lower than where they are now, just because you will, at that point, no longer have the underground infrastructure that you'll be operating. Although we will continue to explore. We still have very high hopes for exploration success underground.
The focus will be on the surface and on the open pits. You know, you look at our technical report and what you'll see is substantial free cash flow generation toward the latter end of the mine as these pits are fully functioning. Lauren, anything to add to that?
I would just say that we've been, you know, the long-term operating concept with the open pits is to fully utilize, the investments that we've made in the, in the mill over the last several years. As you've seen, the mill throughputs and recoveries have steadily increased at the operation, and we intend to operate at the full permitted limit of the, of the mill and, then deliver the best ore we can to the mill.
We're still studying as to ways to improve the recovery. Maybe mention the studies that we're doing on the flotation.
Yeah. We've been doing some work on the potential to add a flotation circuit to the mill. I'll say that the preliminary view of it is for a relatively modest investment, we see a significant increase in recovery.
That is something we'll continue to evaluate over the coming quarters, as we work through our long-range plan for Casa Berardi.
Okay.
Let me just make one other comment, Michael. Things have not changed, you know, fundamentally from what we thought, with the exception of the inflationary pressure that we've experienced in the Abitibi.
Right. Right. No, understood. Maybe if I could just follow up and, am I understanding it right that you don't necessarily want to pull the plug on underground operations today, as you continue to explore? In other words, am I understanding this right in saying that you want to keep your options open on the underground as you transition in a more measured way rather than, something more drastic and immediate, in a shorter time period? Is that fair to say?
We're willing to, you know, look at all of the ways that we can take this forward. Whether we were to do something quickly or something where we're continuing to generate the margins out of the underground, we still have that optionality. We can go either direction. We're evaluating, you know, what's the best course of action for the mine over the long term. You know, we, just like what we've done at the Lucky Friday, we are certainly willing to say that we need to make investments in this and recognize that it's not able to cover the investment that we're making, i.e., it has negative cash flow. We had a number of years at the Lucky Friday like that.
We're now reaping the benefits of that today. We're prepared to see the same thing at Casa Berardi. We haven't prejudged at this point, we haven't prejudged in any way which direction we should go. We're still working through that.
Is there a point in time, as if it's end of year or into next year, where you think you'll have a more conviction either way?
Yeah, I'm sure there will be. I don't know when that is, or I would be able to tell you what we're going to do.
Okay. Okay. No, fair enough. Switching gears, if I could, to ATAC. Could you give a little bit more color on the transaction? Obviously, a well-known, land package, property over the years. What will you do differently? I know the deal hasn't closed yet, but can you maybe talk, in a preliminary way about what your plans might be there?
Look, the short-term plan is just to put it into the company, do a full assessment once we, you know, acquired it. Frankly, this happened faster than we had. While we always were interested in this has happened faster than what we had anticipated. You know, you had the suggestion by, you know, big gold.
Right
We reacted to that. We don't have any immediate, identifiable actions that we're going to take other than doing a complete evaluation and determining what to do, you know, over the coming years. The good news is we, you know, the amount of money that has been spent allows us to be deliberate in advancing it. We really don't start seeing a need to spend money until almost 2040. We're not going to wait that long, obviously, but we don't have pressure on us to advance it quickly.
Okay. You like the property, you're in the neighborhood, and you were motivated to act opportunistically. That's sort of a fair assessment of it?
Well, exactly. I mean, look, to be able to pick up a property of this size with the resources that have already been identified, and to, you know, have it in within 60 Km or so of Keno, we thought it was something that we couldn't pass up.
Got it. Very quickly, and then I'll pass it on. Just following up on the question about the ATM, and the use in the quarter. Can you say if the priority was really keeping the cash level at around $100 million on the balance sheet? Or more broadly. You sort of answered the question, but was that really the focus of using the ATM rather than dipping into the credit facility?
Yeah, that's right.
Okay. Okay, fair enough. Okay, thanks, very much for the answers. I'll pass it on.
Your next question comes from a line of Lucas Pipes from B. Riley Securities. Your line is open.
Thank you very much, operator. Good morning, everyone. I have another question on Casa Berardi, and I want to take a slightly different direction. Is the asset strategic? You have a reputation for being an excellent underground miner, so I wondered if with the transition to a surface mine, maybe the asset is less important in your portfolio. Thank you very much.
Thanks, Lucas. From my perspective, the asset is very strategic because of the things I mentioned that it does. It is a gold asset. Gold has less volatility than silver. It has served us very well. It has been at different times periods, if not the largest cash flow generator than the second largest. It is doré production. Realize that as a concentrate producer, we are subject to huge swings in the cost of the processing our concentrates. We think we need to have this. You know, you go down the line and you grow enough in the silver business. Do you necessarily have to have it long term? I guess, you know, maybe you don't.
In the foreseeable future, I think it's a very important asset for us, and I think the exploration potential is so high that it's not an asset that you would want to not have exposure to. You know, I can just view it as something that we will sort of work through its end of its life, which we expect to be much longer than what we have in reserves.
That's very helpful. Thank you for that color. Then, switching to Lucky Friday. You have the debottlenecking projects there later this year. I wonder what this could mean for the operation in terms of total throughput, total silver production in the years ahead. Thank you very much.
Sure. We're working to be at 425,000 ton a year run rate at the end of the year. That's 1,200 tons a day. Yes. I'm going to say something, Lauren's going to kick me. Theoretically, you can do more tons than that with the infrastructure that we have in place, at least the underground infrastructure, i.e., the hoisting capacity. As we continue to improve and optimize our new mining method, I'm hopeful that we'll be able to do more than 1,200 tons a day. You know, that's not the objective at the moment. The objective is to get to 1,200 tons, but, you know, maybe over time, we'll be able to do more than that. Lauren?
Well, no, I don't disagree with Phil. I'm incredibly optimistic about the Lucky Friday and what we're doing there. You know, the team has done really a remarkable job of advancing us toward this 425,000 ton a day.
A year.
Sorry, a year objective. It's in significant measure due to the innovation of the new mining method. There are a lot of other pieces that have to happen to support the mining rate that the mining method will allow us to do, and one of those is the hoisting system. At the moment, the team is closing in on our throughput target without all of the tools that we intend them to have. Like Phil, I'm optimistic that once the tools are in place, we can potentially do a bit better. Eventually, we'll hit a limitation on what the mill is capable of doing, and at that point, I would expect I'll probably have another conversation with Phil, and we'll see where we go from there.
Got it.
Yeah. I'm not-
Very helpful.
Lucas, I'm not so concerned about mill limitations. Those, on a relative basis, are easier to deal with.
Phil, can you remind us what the current capacity is of the mill and how you may address bottlenecks at the mill when the time comes?
I don't know. I think the capacity was a lot less, than we're actually producing.
Yeah. I mean, the nameplate capacity was. It's long in the rearview mirror. You know, what will limit throughput there will be our grinding capacity. We will push the throughput until we have reached the maximum grinding capacity of the plant. At that point, we'll have to think about what we do. As Phil said, those, you know, this is. They're relatively modest investments to do. You know, let's one step at a time. Let's hit the 425. We'll get there this year, and then we'll see where we go from there.
Excellent. Thank you. Speaking of grinding forward, H.R.1, Phil, what do you think it would mean in terms of total permitting time in the U.S.? I've seen figures around 15 years or so on average to get a mine permitted now. What do you think the net effect would be if H.R.1 were to pass?
Jeez, I haven't even sort of considered it actually passing as drafted. I guess I would suggest to you that you have a permitting system that is really locked into a judicial do loop. What this does is unlock that judicial do loop. I, you know, I think it will be significantly faster and more certain. That's the message I'm really trying to give to investors, is the U.S. is, you know, on a path that is, you know, there's only a few other countries that probably would be on the same path of improved environment for mining.
I will recommend, mining engineering, degree for my children who are toddlers right now. I appreciate that very much. Phil, to you and the team, continued best of luck.
Thanks, Lucas.
Your next question comes from the line of John Tumazos from Very Independent Research. Your line is open.
Thank you. Congratulations at all the progress. Could you give us some background on the good shape of the Keno Hill and underground now that you've had possession of it for a little while? It was idle for a long time. They must have kept the equipment dry and kept it from having a lot of freeze-thaw cycles, et cetera. How'd they keep it in such good shape?
John, you might recall that they actually started operating the mill a year ago for a relatively short period of time. I don't remember if it was a month or two months, but it was. You know, they did operate it, and it was functioning. In the meantime, since we have owned it, we have made, you know, a number of modifications. Nothing that is, I would characterize as, you know, a complete change. Just improved some design of different things and tried to improve its ability to be maintained as it operates at full capacity. Because it's never really done that. It's never really operated at that kind of.
Consistently.
Yeah, that on a consistent basis, at that 440 tons per day. No, they've done a good job. We have, you know, made these modest investments, and you'll see us testing it, you know, over the coming months, you know, to make sure that the modifications we made are functioning properly, and I feel pretty good about it. Lauren and I were just been there recently. Anything you want to add, Lauren?
Yeah. I would say, John, you know, the Alexco guys did a really, a good job of mothballing the mill and keeping it in good working order. Even during diligence, we're pleased with what we saw in terms of the condition of the plant. The things Phil's talking about are incremental improvements that, you know, like you would expect a 130-year-old operating company to bring to a mill, and that's exactly what we're doing. They're focused on improving reliability, throughput, and recovery, so. All relatively modest. The facility was in good order, and we're doing some fine-tuning.
If I can ask another one. In the cash flow statement, there's a $4.5 million reference, adjustment of inventory and net realizable value. Could you explain that one?
Yeah. Russell?
That was just at Casa Berardi, the mining costs were above the cost of gold in the first couple of months of the quarter. You just, we took a net realizable adjustment to that inventory during those quarters.
Is the other one?
No.
Greens Creek in that as well?
No.
Okay.
No. No-nothing at Greens Creek. There's also mining and stockpiling at Nevada, which potentially would have been a small adjustment in there, but it's mostly Casa Berardi, and it's mostly in January, February. The prices came back up in March. We did not have that issue in March.
If I could ask one more. I'm trying to understand the free cash flow definition. As I look at the cash flow statement, the company appeared to consume $17 million in the first quarter, where cash balances fell $9 million, you issued $12 million in stock, and maybe I'd want to add back the $4 million distributed to shareholders to get to $17 million consumed, which is different than your $68 million free cash flow by $85 million. I'm trying to figure out how you get to it. If I ignore all capital spending, that's $54 million. The provision for income taxes was only $3 million. Interest expense was $10 million or $11 million. I'm just trying to figure out the definition of free cash flow.
John, we've got. We're doing a calculation of free cash flow by mine, and then we're also doing a, you know, the cash flow statement shows this on a consolidated basis. When you look at Greens Creek and the Lucky Friday, those two mines by themselves generated free cash flow of $69 million. When you look at the company, there's, you know, all of the G&A, there's all of the other expenditures that go into operating cash flow on the statement of cash flows. When we say what our free cash flow is as a company, what we're doing is subtracting capital expenditures from that number. That's what we're doing at each property as well. We're taking...
That's as far as we go. We're not making any other adjustments. Russell, anything to add?
That's correct. What we're trying to delineate there is that Greens Creek, Lucky Friday generate this amount of cash flow that's available for the corporation to utilize for exploration expense or investment in capital at Keno Hill or investment at Casa Berardi or, you know.
G&A.
or G&A. Yeah, exactly. But those mines generate that amount of cash flow for the corporation to utilize and invest back into whichever way it would choose.
The definition at the mines is different than the financial statements.
No, it's the same. It's the.
Where the cash by operating activities was $40.6 million for the whole company.
I would say the only difference at the mines is we actually do add back the exploration expense because that's an expense that is meant to, you know, expand the life of the mine, et cetera, versus the consolidated exploration expenses included. Otherwise it's the same calculation. It's just the mine site only.
Thank you for that explanation.
Your next question comes from a line of Joseph Reagor from Roth MKM. Your line is open.
Hey, Phil and team. Thanks for taking the questions. I guess kind of following on some of what John just asked about, given that the, you know, the mines are generating free cash flow, but the corporate is bringing it, you know, down to zero or negative, you know, is there any consideration to finding a way to reduce the debt, and therefore, you know, maybe remove $40 million a year in interest expense?
I mean, the short answer is when we look at our capital allocation, number one, we're going to invest in the mines. Number two, we're going to explore. Number three, we are probably adding assets to the company. Number four would be debt reduction. You know, to the extent, Joe, you see, you know, $25 silver prices plus, then the debt reduction starts to enter into the picture. You know. One of the things I think we should mention is that one of the rating agencies just upgraded us by, from B+ to BB-. We will have the opportunity to refinance that debt and, you know, when we do, we would hope that we would have a lower coupon than what we currently have.
That's another way of reducing that interest expense. We do think that long term, as we plan to develop the Montana properties, and we think that's more likely given the improved permitting environment that we're seeing in the U.S., that we're going to access the debt markets. We don't want to have to do. We want to use the long-term bond market. We don't really want to do equity, nor do we want to do bank debt. We would prefer to do the long-term bond. It's important that we stay in that market. It is a priority is getting better ratings so that we get a lower coupon. Ultimately, we do want to be in the bond market. Anything, Russell or Anvita, that you guys wanna add to that?
Just the only thing I would add is that, you know, reduction of debt is in the, you know, conversation as it relates to capital allocation, but it has to be the most compelling use of that capital. Investment in Casa Berardi, investment in Keno Hill and other thing, in exploration, et cetera, are the things that we're investing in right now. As we see, you know, if we see significant amounts of cash, then, you know, we would, you know, look to do some of that. If we see something, some dislodgement in the debt market where we could, you know, do something better than, you know, we do now, then we would look at that. It's certainly on our minds, but right now the capital allocation strategy is investment in our business.
Okay. kind of two follow-ups to that, you guys kind of led me into what was going to be my next question, which is the debt's not, you know, the majority of it's not due to 2028. When would you look to refinance that? The second thing is, as you guys look at, you know, acquisitions, expansions, et cetera, you know, what do you guys consider to be the most important metrics for making those decisions? Is it ROI? Is it, you know, production growth? Is it, you know, NPV? You know, what, what's the metric that, you know, you guys are really focused on?
Well, let me start with that question. You know, as you can see with what we've done with ATAC , what we're really focused on is geology, and the ability of a property to have be of size that it has the opportunity to operate for a substantial period of time. Keno falls into that category. It's 88 square miles. It's got a long history. You know, we would prefer to buy assets that have infrastructure that's already built in. You know, in the case of S&P, there's something that we think, you know, over time that will be developed and the prospects are so compelling that it's the sort of thing that we want to focus on, and it's in the right jurisdiction.
You know, that's really what drives us when we're looking at things to things to acquire. Anything else that I sort of lost track of the first part of the question.
The first part of the question had to do with the debt, and when we would look to refinance.
Oh, right.
My answer to that would be, you know, we're continually have our eye on the debt market, and when it makes sense for us to do so, and when it, you know, there's a compelling reason to do it, we'll go ahead and do that. What we are doing now, and as Phil had mentioned earlier with the credit rating that we got, the increase of last week. You know, we're continuing to work to increase our credit ratings so that when we do go to the market, we can do it at a lower coupon than we're paying now.
Joe, we do stay in contact with the debt market. We've got meetings with debt investors just like we have equity investors.
Okay. Fair enough, guys. I'll turn it over. Thanks for the answers.
Thanks, Joe.
We have a follow-up question from the line of Michael Siperco from RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Thanks. Thanks again for indulging just one more question. Just on the guidance for this year and especially the cash cost AISC guidance, for Casa Berardi, obviously you were above that in Q1. Can you talk a little bit about what we should expect in the short term and how you're thinking about that guidance number for the year?
Yeah. I mean, it really becomes a function of the denominator. We would expect more production in the second half of the year than in the first half of the year. As a result, you'll see the number go down, you know, modestly. You know, it to be in that range that's in the, that's in the guidance.
You're still comfortable with that, I think it's the ±$2,000 AISC number for the, for Casa Berardi?
Yeah, we are.
If I'm not mistaken. Okay. Okay, great. Thanks for the follow-up.
There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back over to management for some final closing remarks. Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's conference call. We thank you for your participation, and you may now disconnect.