U.S. Energy Corp./Crested Corp. and Enterra Close Rocky Mountain Gas Sale to Enterra
June 02 2005 - 2:46PM
PR Newswire (US)
U.S. Energy Corp./Crested Corp. and Enterra Close Rocky Mountain
Gas Sale to Enterra USECC Receives $18.8 Million in Stock and Cash
and $3.3 Million Debt of Rocky Mountain Gas is Refinanced by
Enterra RIVERTON, Wyo., June 2 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- U.S.
Energy Corp. (NASDAQ:USEG) and its majority-owned subsidiary,
Crested Corp., (OTC:CBAG) (BULLETIN BOARD: CBAG) d/b/a USECC
announced today that they have closed the agreement to sell their
natural gas subsidiary, Rocky Mountain Gas, Inc., (RMG) (and RMG's
subsidiary RMG I, LLC) to Enterra Energy Trust (Nasdaq: EENC; TSX:
ENT.UN) (Enterra) for $18.8 million in cash and stock. The
agreement closed on June 1, 2005. The $3.3 million in debt with
Petrobridge Investment Management of Houston, TX, which remained at
RMG, has been refinanced and is no longer a USECC obligation.
Enterra paid for the acquisition with $500,000 cash, $5,234,000 in
freely tradable trust units and $14 million in exchangeable shares
which are restricted for sale and will be exchanged for freely
tradable trust units on June 1, 2006. USECC received $18.8 million
for its percentage of RMG. USECC formed Rocky Mountain Gas, Inc.
(RMG) in 1999 to take advantage of the growing coal bed methane
(CBM) play in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming and Montana.
Enterra has acquired all of the stock of RMG and will retain
certain employees and RMG's office in Gillette, Wyoming. RMG's
properties produced 728,051 mcf of CBM in 2004. RMG established
significant leaseholds in the Oyster Ridge area of southwestern
Wyoming and in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming and southeastern
Montana. By mutual consent, the sale agreement excludes RMG's
equity interest in Pinnacle Gas Resources, Inc., which has been
assigned to USEG and CBAG. USEG owns 70% of CBAG. Mark J. Larsen,
former president of RMG, said, "We are pleased to have concluded
this transaction with Enterra, a highly respected oil and gas
entity. I firmly believe that the consideration we have received
through our equity ownership in Enterra will be of great value to
the USEG and CBAG shareholders. This transaction came at an
opportune time. It has allowed us to improve our liquidity, and at
our discretion, to add value to our other significant natural
resource assets. It also allows us to remain in the gas, oil and
CBM arenas through an equity position in both Enterra and
Pinnacle." U.S. Energy President Keith G. Larsen added, "USEG
management has stated that we, as a company, are moving 'back to
our future,' back to the mining and milling of molybdenum, uranium
and gold commodities upon which this company was founded. Prices
for uranium, vanadium and molybdenum are at their highest levels in
decades. Gold has also been trading at over $400 per ounce. USECC
has significant holdings in uranium and gold and expects to receive
a 'world class' molybdenum asset from Phelps Dodge in the near
future," he added. The consummation of the RMG transaction is
expected to provide USEG with the opportunity to complete and/or
initiate the following: 1) Complete the retirement of $3.0 million
of USEG debt ($500,000 paid on June 1, 2005 and the $2,500,000
balance over 10 months). 2) Initiate exploration and development of
uranium properties in Wyoming and Utah. Primary among them are
mines at Sheep Mountain, in south central Wyoming, and more than
12,000 acres of uranium lode mining claims in central and
southeastern Utah. Many of the Utah claims show evidence of
extensive vanadium mineralization, as well as uranium. 3) Continue
changing the status of the Shootaring Canyon Uranium Mill from
reclamation to operational. 4) Initiate the evaluation of the Mt.
Emmons (Colorado) molybdenum property that USECC anticipates
receiving from Phelps Dodge Corporation before year's end. Uranium
Spot prices for uranium have increased more than three-fold since
May 2002 and now stand at $29 per pound of uranium concentrate on
the spot market. USECC will begin drilling this month to further
delineate uranium resources at Sheep Mountain. Additional drilling
programs will also be conducted on other Wyoming and Utah
properties this year. In late 2004, USECC entered into a joint
mining agreement with Uranium Power Corp. (UPC) (TSX-V "UPC-V") for
the development of Sheep Mountain and other uranium properties in
exchange for $4,050,000 cash and 4,000,000 shares of UPC-V stock.
An installment payment of $500,000 to USECC is due on June 27,
2005. UPC-V will also provide up to $10 million in financing -- up
to $500,000 each for up to 20 uranium ventures, including Sheep
Mountain. The joint mining and development agreement allows UPC-V
to earn a 50% interest in each property. In addition to its
extensive resources in uranium, USECC owns the Shootaring Canyon
Uranium Mill in southeastern Utah, the last and most modern uranium
mill built in the U.S. The mill was mothballed in the 1980s, when
the U.S. uranium market collapsed. USECC has announced that it
plans to spend up to $25 million, subject to financing, to
refurbish the mill and install a vanadium circuit over the next two
years to bring it into production. The companies project outputs of
up to 1.5 million pounds of uranium and 4.2 million pounds of
vanadium per year from Shootaring once the mill is refurbished and
placed into production. Attaining this level of production will be
dependent on sustained high prices for uranium concentrates and
vanadium, and overall the grades of material fed to the mill being
economic (containing sufficient uranium and vanadium) at such
sustained high prices, as well as other factors. Molybdenum
Although USECC does not presently own molybdenum properties, it
likely will receive the Mt. Emmons (Colorado) property from Phelps
Dodge by year's end. USECC once owned mining claims, including the
Keystone Mine, on and around Mt. Emmons which it sold to AMAX Inc.
in 1977. After significant exploration efforts, AMAX estimated that
Mt. Emmons contains approximately 146 million tons of high grade
(0.43%) molybdenum (approximately 900 million pounds.) Like
uranium, moly oxide prices have surged in recent years, reaching a
20-year high of $39.00 per pound as of June 1, 2005. Over a period
of more than 20 years, various owners of the Mt. Emmons property
have reportedly spent more than $200 million on acquisition,
exploration and planning for mining operations. Such components as
environmental studies and some mine operational plans must be
upgraded and revised, but much of the original work remains valid.
Once the property is transferred, USECC will evaluate all options
available to the companies and endeavor to maximize the value of
this "world class" mineral asset. Mark Larsen is slated to become
the president of US Moly Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary of USECC,
in the near future. Gold Gold prices, too, have shown strong
increases, rising by one third since early 2002 and standing at
$415 per Troy ounce at June 1, 2005. In 2004, USECC's
majority-owned subsidiary, Sutter Gold Mining Company, merged with
Globemin Resources Inc. to form Sutter Gold Mining, Inc. (SGMI.)
The newly formed company is now developing mining claims located 47
miles southeast of Sacramento, in California's historic
121-mile-long Mother Lode gold belt. SGMI is in the final phases of
environmental permitting and mine planning for an operation
designed to process up to 1,000 tons of gold-bearing material per
day. "The sale of RMG strengthens USECC's financial position
significantly," said Keith G. Larsen. "We firmly believe that the
value of our other significant natural resource holdings will be
enhanced as a result of this transaction," Larsen concluded. ABOUT
U.S. ENERGY CORP. AND CRESTED CORP. U.S. Energy Corp. and its
majority owned subsidiary, Crested Corp. are engaged in a joint
venture to conduct various business operations as USECC. Through
their subsidiaries, Sutter Gold Mining Inc., Plateau Resources
Limited., U.S. Moly Corp and USECC, they own interests or
properties prospective for gold, uranium, vanadium and molybdenum.
This news release includes statements which may constitute
"forward-looking" statements, usually containing the words
"believe," "estimate," "project," "expect," or similar expressions.
These statements are made pursuant to the safe harbor provision of
the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Forward-looking statements inherently involve risks and
uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially
from the forward-looking statements. Factors that would cause or
contribute to such differences include, but are not limited to,
future trends in mineral prices, the availability of capital,
competitive factors, and other risks. The profitable mining and
processing of uranium and vanadium will depend on many factors:
Obtaining properties in proximity to the Shootaring mill to keep
transportation costs economic; delineation through extensive
drilling and sampling of sufficient volumes of mineralized
material, with sufficient grades, to make mining and processing
economic over time; continued sustained high prices for uranium
oxide and vanadium; obtaining the capital required to upgrade the
Shootaring mill and add a vanadium circuit; and obtaining and
continued compliance with operating permits. The profitable mining
and processing of gold will depend on many factors, including
receipt of final permits and keeping in compliance with permit
conditions; delineation through extensive drilling and sampling of
sufficient volumes of mineralized material, with sufficient grades,
to make mining and processing economic over time; continued
sustained high prices for gold; and obtaining the capital required
to initiate and sustain mining operations and build and operate a
gold processing mill. We have not yet obtained feasibility studies
on any of our mineral properties. These studies would establish the
economic viability, or not, of the different properties based on
extensive drilling and sampling, the design and costs to build and
operate gold and uranium/vanadium mills, the cost of capital, and
other factors. Feasibility studies can take many months to
complete. We have not established any reserves (economic deposits
of mineralized materials) on any of our uranium/vanadium or gold
properties, and future studies may indicate that some or all of the
properties will not be economic to put into production. The
molybdenum property has had extensive work conducted by prior
owners, but this data will have to be updated to determine the
viability of starting mining operations. Obtaining mining and other
permits to begin mining the molybdenum property may be very
difficult, and, like any mining operation, capital requirements for
a molybdenum mining operation will be substantial. By making these
forward-looking statements, the Companies undertake no obligation
to update these statements for revision or changes after the date
of this release. DATASOURCE: U.S. Energy Corp. CONTACT: Keith G.
Larsen, President, or Don Warfield, Director of Corporate
Relations, of U.S. Energy, +1-307-856-9271
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