9 October 2025
Ferro-Alloy Resources Limited
("Ferro-Alloy" or "the Company")
Notice of AGM
Ferro-Alloy Resources Limited (LSE:FAR), the vanadium producer and developer of the large Balasausqandiq vanadium deposit in Southern Kazakhstan , is pleased to announce that the 2025 Annual General Meeting ("AGM") of the Company will be held at 2.00 pm local time on 14 November 2025 at the Duke of Richmond Hotel, Cambridge Park, St Peter Port, Guernsey, GY1 1UY.
The Notice of AGM, which sets out the arrangements for the meeting and how shareholders may vote, has been sent in hard copy to the registered shareholders of the Company and is available on the Company's website: www.ferro-alloy.com.
ENDS
For further information, visit www.ferro-alloy.com or contact:
Ferro-Alloy Resources Limited |
Nick Bridgen (CEO) / William Callewaert (CFO) |
|
Shore Capital (Joint Corporate Broker)
Panmure Liberum Limited (Joint Corporate Broker)
BlytheRay (Financial PR) |
Toby Gibbs / Lucy Bowden
Scott Mathieson / John More
Tim Blythe / Megan Ray / Will Jones
|
+44 207 408 4090
+44 20 3100 2000
+44 20 7138 3204 |
Notes to Editors
About Ferro-Alloy Resources Limited:
The Company's operations are all located at the Balasausqandiq deposit in Kyzylordinskoye Oblast in the South of Kazakhstan.
Balasausqandiq is a very large deposit, with vanadium as the principal product together with the carbon black substitute ("CBS") and several by-products. Owing to the nature of the ore, the capital and operating costs are very much lower than for other vanadium projects.
The most recent mineral resource estimate for ore-body one (of seven) provided an Indicated Mineral Resource of 32.9 million tonnes at a mean grade of 0.62% vanadium pentoxide ("V2O5") equating to 203,364 contained tonnes of V2O5. In the system of reserve estimation used in Kazakhstan the reserves are estimated to be over 70 million tonnes in ore-bodies 1 to 5, but this does not include the full depth of ore-bodies 2 to 5, or the remaining ore-bodies which remain substantially unexplored.
The grade of carbon in the deposit is over 8%. The carbon flows through to the tailings from where it is concentrated, in a simple low-cost operation, into a 40% carbon product, the CBS, that can be used in place of carbon black as a reinforcing filler in the making of rubber.
The Project will be developed in two phases, Phase 1 and Phase 2, with Phase 1 treating 1.65 million tonnes per year.
There is an existing concentrate processing operation at the site of the Balasausqandiq deposit. The production facilities were originally created from a 15,000 tonnes per year pilot plant, which was then expanded and adapted to recover vanadium, molybdenum and nickel from purchased concentrates. Alongside this operation, there is a well-equipped laboratory and highly skilled technical team, who have already developed the technology that is being built into the feasibility study and is further developing and optimising processes needed for future vanadium and carbon operations. The plant will operate only when profitable concentrates are available and, when not operating as a production facility, will operate on an expanded basis as an R&D centre.