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Core Lithium has awarded a $274 million underground contract to Dev Mining Services, a subsidiary of Development Global, for its BP33 deposit at the Finniss Lithium Operation in the Northern Territory.

“The award of the BP33 underground mining contract is a major milestone in the development of Finniss and a strong endorsement of the quality of the project,” Core managing director Paul Brown said.

“BP33 is expected to deliver the majority of ore feed over the first 10 years of operation and is a key driver of Finniss’ significantly improved cost profile and economics.”

The agreement covers an initial three-year term, with an option to extend for a further two years, as Core advances underground development at BP33 ahead of works beginning in July.

“We have maintained a clear focus on project execution, risk management and delivery of the project economics,” Brown said.

“The award to [Dev Mining Services] reflects the strength of their technical capability, underground mining experience, understanding of the BP33 ground conditions and alignment with Core’s productivity and delivery targets.”

The scope of the works includes drill and blast, load and haul, decline development and ground support activities associated with underground mining at BP33. Core said the development will progress alongside production at the nearby Grants open pit to support a staged ramp-up and earlier cash generation at Finnis.

Located on the Cox Peninsula around 88km south-west of Darwin Port, Finniss is being redeveloped through a staged restart strategy centred on lower-cost lithium production and operational flexibility. Core believes BP33 will become a significant ore source during the first decade of operations, with the orebody suited to long hole open stopping mining methods.

“Considerable progress has been made since the final investment decision and funding package for Finniss were announced in mid-March, with activity advancing at Grants, sales completed from our concentrate and fines stockpiles, and the reactivation of our logistics chains,” Brown said.

“This progress demonstrates Core’s commitment to disciplined and efficient execution of the staged plan for Finniss, which is designed to reduce risk and capital requirements while delivering early cash flow.”

Core is targeting first spodumene concentrate production in the December quarter later this year, with the first ore from BP33 expected in mid-2027 before ramping up to nameplate production mid-2028.