使用警語:中文譯文來源為 Google 翻譯,僅供參考,實際內容請以英文原文為主
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
(inaudible) with this slide. TRX, what does this stand for? We're a team of experienced leaders. You that's us on the line and continue to deliver on various milestones and are rapidly growing the Buckreef Project in conjunction with our management team at Buckreef Gold mine site.
We've had a rapid production growth over the last year. We've had two planned expansions that come online on time, on budget and are operating very, very successfully. We'll get into that as we get through the presentation.
And the Buckreef property special mining license has significant exploration upside. There are lots of targets on this property. And we've displayed this over the last year or so, particularly with Anfield that used to operate even the extensions to our Buckreef Main Zone.
So just a brief overview of the Buckreef Gold property. It's a 2 million ounce plus gold deposit in the measured and indicated categories, another 600,000 ounces in the inferred categories located in Tanzania.
What we like about this deposit, it comes to surface, it's flat. It has great widths at 20 meters or approximately 20 meters broad. It has consistent gold mineralization throughout the deposits along a 1.5, 2-kilometer strike at the Buckreef Main Zone.
We're fully permitted, which means we can continue to grow this asset production profile without getting major overarching permits in place. There current special mining license go to up 2032. It's an extendable to -- for a 10-year periods to the end of life of mine of deposit.
Our processing plant has consistently beaten production guidance. It's also straightforward metallurgy in a grind, crush CIL.
We have minimal environmental footprint. We recycle all water. We've had a good tailings management program, and we're on the National Grid. And as I mentioned, we have significant exploration potential, which always brings a smile to my face, and Andrew will get into that in a few minutes.
So with regards to the Q2 2023 highlights. Again, our 1,000 tonne per day mill is operating great. We declare commercial production on that mill in November 2022. And the last quarter produced over 5,600 ounces of gold which is a 164% increase over the last similar quarter in 2022.
Records at Buckreef. We recorded positive operating cash flow again, which is funding our exploration and operational growth. We are going to advance a third mill expansion. That mill has been ordered; that will increase throughput capacity between 75% to 100% by fiscal 2024.
We continue to advance to much larger project. So we have geotech work ongoing, metallurgical work ongoing, tailings, planning ongoing, and other things. And Andrew will get into that in a few minutes, further on down in the presentation. But this is to get a much larger project at Buckreef, which we believe, the potential is there.
We've continued drilling in the last quarter, particularly around the Eastern Porphyry and the Anfield Zone. And Andrew will give a highlight of that in a few minutes. And most importantly, everybody is safe on-site, zero lost time injuries, no reportable environment or community related incidents in the quarter.
We did have a release that we add over a million hours with no lost time incidents. That continues to be the case, which we're very lucky for, and I'm going to knock on wood on that because I like that to continue.
So without further ado, I'd like to hand the presentation over to our Chief Financial Officer, Mike, and he will go through our Q2 2023 results.
Mike Leonard - CFO
Thank you, Stephen, and good morning everyone. Thank you for joining us. Stephen touched on our Q2, was another strong quarter for the company. And we continued to see the benefits through the financial results.
Again, it was the first full quarter of our new 1,000 tonne per day mill operating at capacity. And as a result, in the operational last time, we produced a record 5,636 ounces in the quarter. And we sold just over 5,500 of those ounces at a realized price of $1,845 per ounce, benefiting from the recent price in gold prices, which of course, touched a north of $2,000 an ounce very, very recently.
In the quarter, we recognized revenues of over $10 million, and operating cash flow of almost $5 million, which we substantially reinvested back into the business. And amongst other things, we've expanded our tailing storage facility, for example, which will accommodate our much, much larger production that Stephen touched on earlier. We've relocated a road which will allow us life of mine access through the Main Zone.
We continue to drill. We drill over 1,400 meters, that Andrew will touch on shortly, of exploration drilling as well as grade control drilling. And we've also purchased pieces of capital equipment, things like gensets, generators, which effectively will replace equipment that we had rented previously, and overtime bring down cost for us. So in summary, we continue to use that organically generated cash flow that the operation is generating to help grow the business.
On the cash cost side. We recorded cash cost per ounce of $888 an ounce, which was above what we recorded in Q1 but in line with our expectations and our mine plan. The mine sequence for Q2 had us undertaking a stripping campaign, which was meant to unlock high grade ore blocks, which we expect to see the benefit in Q3 and Q4 in the second half of the year, and certainly expect to see higher production as a result.
We did experience some lower head grade in part due to the wet season, had some inventory adjustments and slightly lower ounces produced in the quarter compared to Q1, which in part gave rise to that higher cash cost per ounce number. But on a full year basis, again, expect Q3 and Q4 to be our strongest quarters of the year and continue to expect our full year guidance to be between $750 and $850 an ounce in the cash cost side.
So as gross margin goes continue to be very, very strong at around 50% for both the three and the six-month periods to date and again demonstrate that the new plant is operating very, very efficiently and very, very profitably as Stephen touched on.
On a year-to-date basis, we produced and sold over 11,000 ounces, generating revenues of almost $20 million, operating cash flow of over $11 million. We did it at cash costs at around $808 an ounce in line with our full year guidance. And again, very, very strong gross profit margins of around 50%.
And again, we continue to use that cash flow that we generate to make value accretive investments right back into the business. And again, Stephen touched on it earlier, but another good example is a down payment on a much, much larger ball mill which is expected to double throughput later this year.
On the balance sheet side, it continues to be strong. We had a cash balance at the end quarter of around $9.5 million. We've working capital of about $5.5 million and EBITDA of around $4 million which again is a good proxy for cash flow. All of this really demonstrates strong liquidity to, again, fund that organic growth that we discussed a little bit earlier.
And again, importantly, we expect Q3 and Q4 to be our strongest quarters of the year. We're working to improve on all the operational and financial metrics as we grow this business. And now that the plan is up and running, we fully expect that to be the case.
So I maybe pause there and hand the presentation back to Stephen. Stephen?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah, Mike, thank you. And just to give the investors in the group a sense to all the activities ongoing at Buckreef. There's a new role we put in place around the SML. We also have works around tailings, facilities, new generator sets going in.
There's a lot of activity happening on the Buckreef site currently. And there will be -- that activity, I don't see it slowing down. I actually see it ramping up as we continually expand the asset at Buckreef.
On that front, Andrew is joining us today from Cardiff in the UK. He is actually right now at SRK's offices there. And I'll switch over to the next slide. And he will tell us about some of the things that are ongoing for the much larger, larger project that's currently being planned.
But in order to plan that out, we got to do the proper work, and we got to de-risk it properly. And that's what the team has been doing, and a lot of that has been through our Chief Operating Officer, Andrew Cheatle. Andrew, over to you.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Yeah, thank you very much, Stephen. And greetings to everybody from Cardiff, Wales in the UK. So we have been extremely busy with a lot of the preparatory work for -- work on building out the bigger mine. I'll take you through the list here.
We have completed our infill drilling program where we'd be focusing on Inferred Mineral Resources. We're looking to upgrade those to indicated, and we've been drilling both to the north and the south of the historical mineral resource. And we've also done some infill work on the Eastern Porphyry, which I'll get into in a minute.
I'm pleased to say that the metallurgical samples from 18 holes of 19 drills have gone out to South Africa. They have been received by SGS who are recognized global experts in this field. They undertook the first set of work we did some three years ago. So we benefit from continuity on that.
The geotechnical study has been ongoing. We've completed now the drilling and the fieldwork; this is, again, with SGS Terrane. Again, Terrane being a global expert in that field and has already been two sites in terms of looking at some of the underground and early-stage open pit work. So that has now back in Canada, with rock samples now going to laboratories for their testing of rock strengths.
In terms of the long-term planning as well, this continues too also be ongoing. We've completed conceptual work with Ausenco in terms of mine layout and the plant expansions for the 2,000 tonnes a day.
And also, very importantly, where do we place the life of mine TSF? And we have a number of locations, of which two have become very evident to us as the ones to go for. And we're now planning in terms of design, geotechnical work for those two locations.
Stephen, you mentioned the Mineral Resource update. We now have substantive information to do that update. And we're working very closely with SRK, again, global experts in Mineral Resource evaluation. And I'm here with that team as the company's QP working with the [SRKQP] to make sure this all goes smoothly.
And then in terms of the economic study for Buckreef. A part of my work here as well is working with the SRK management to define that work. So we have all of this going ahead.
And the objective for us is to obviously expand the scope of the 2018 PFS. The numbers are which on the right; this work was done at $1,300 an ounce gold price.
Mike, as you mentioned, we have been seeing $2,000 dollars an ounce. But hopeful and expect to see improvements in all of these metrics that you see here. And I think with some of the results we're seeing, we are hopeful to be able to show that this property also has underground potential. Carry on, Stephen.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah, thank you, Andrew. There's a lot of work going on, and this work needs to be done by the right people. It's being done by the right people and the right firms. Obviously, our goal here is to make significant improvements on that 2018 PFS. Capital numbers from what we're experiencing are way under given how we're building this out.
Certainly, our geotech work needs to be done to get proper strip ratios and things like that. We're hopeful that there'll be steeper pit slopes and a 52 degrees that were -- in this study. And so a lot of this work is ongoing, and we're cautiously optimistic of where it's going to go.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
That's right. I mean, certainly, as we've done this work, Stephen, and we've taken a fresh look at the mineral resource. We're seeing certainly some sections here with just fantastic continuity in grades. But -- and we've got to put the whole thing together, and we're hopeful to have some answers in the very near future in Q2.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yes. So on that front, Andrew, one of the things is that the work that's being done is what's known today.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
That's correct.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
And so the next slide is what's unknown and what we're doing on the exploration side. And these sort of models and updates keep on getting refined as more and more resources come into them and are found on the Buckreef property.
So let's get into that on the exploration side of what we're doing. And a lot of the investors have heard this before, but bring them up to speed on what we're actually doing now.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Yeah, thank you very much, Stephen. That's a great segway.
We have been drilling some more holes in Q2. These have been centered on the Eastern Porphyry and a few of them on the Anfield zone. As the results have been returned, and we're busy putting those results together and the plants and the maps together, and we're expected to publish those results in a few weeks.
Eastern Porphyry, I think, presents an opportunity for us to have a second mining front at Buckreef. And so it's receiving very close attention from the drill a bit and also our estimation process.
As you mentioned, we also continue to do a road deviation around the northern part of the pits. And Stephen, if you have the cursor there, if you could just maybe just highlight where the road comes through the pit.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
It's right about here.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Just about there. You got it, yeah.
So where the road comes through? The existing road comes through the pit. It actually comes through a very nice high width, high grade area. So once we open up the new road around the mine, around the SML, we'll have unfettered access now to the existing deposits, which is good news from the mining point of view.
The other thing is that the deposit does remain open on strike, particularly to the southwest and to the northeast on the Main Zone. But I think from an exploration point of view and further during the exploration, to reiterate the points that between the Eastern Porphyry and an operating Chinese mine just to the south of us, there's over 3 kilometers of defined mineralization by virtue of the artisanal pits. All of which have been abandoned; none of them are active that we have to go and drill.
And so far, we like what we've seeing. Some of the longer-term shareholders will remember that we've previously extracted, grab samples from some of the artisanal pits which are running at 28 grams a tonne. But there's an awful lot of work to be done there. In terms of an exploration play, we have no deposit to the northeast, an active mine to the southwest, and evidence of gold mineralization in between.
So we have to put the drill bit in.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Thank you, Andrew, for that. And now with regards to guidance, I'll hand it back to Mike, who will reiterate our guidance that we provided in our Q2 MD&A.
Mike Leonard - CFO
Yeah, thanks, Stephen. I touched on a little bit of this earlier. But as mentioned, the new mill, the 1,000 tonne per day mill is operating at full capacity. Q2 was the first full quarter of the mill operating at capacity. It's operating really well, really efficiently as Stephen touched on.
We've done over 11,000 ounces of production to date at the half year. So certainly, well on track to achieve our full year production guidance target of between 20,000 and 25,000 ounces of gold. So we are reiterating that to that figure. I touched on it earlier, but after a fairly comprehensive stripping campaign in Q2, we've unlocked some higher-grade ore blocks that again expect Q3 and Q4 production to be even higher than we've experienced to date.
On the cash cost side, again, at the half year, we're running at about $808 an ounce. We expect as the -- we enter the higher-grade zones in Q3 and Q4 that cost profile continues to improve, as well as the ounce figure, the denominator in the cash cost per ounce calculation. So again, I've restated our original guidance of between $750 and $850 an ounce on the cash cost side.
We touched on one of our growth platforms, which was looking at a third mill expansion. I'm pleased to say that we've made a down payment on that larger mill. That mill, I believe, is on the water and on the way to [Dar es Salaam]. We expect, once we integrate that mill and expand the plants, the throughput could increase by between 75% and 100% and in overtime certainly expand production.
Importantly, the guidance figures that we've summarized here today do not include the potential benefit that may come with this expansion. But certainly, we expect that construction to commence shortly. And hopefully, towards the calendar end of this year, we expect to benefit future action.
So I'll leave it at that around guidance and back to you Stephen, please.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yes, thank you, Mike. Greatly appreciate it. Now one thing I wanted to get into in this call is we've gotten a lot of comments back on ESG. And I wanted to make sure that investors understand our philosophy around ESG.
ESG, to us, is something that is kind of ingrained and you just do it in business operations. But it also has to be something that benefits the shareholders and the corporations in general. And part of that is social license, and part of that is actually managing costs.
So a lot of our ESG initiatives are focused on prioritizing local content. And when you prioritize local content, you create jobs in the region. You also help to reduce cost and manage supply chain issues that have occurred in the economies around the world over the last couple of years as a result of COVID.
So on the ESG front around corporate cost, obviously, we want to be on a hydro grid. It's a lot cheaper than being on diesel. We want to utilize local suppliers as much as possible.
As I said, we want to bring the supply chain closer. Also, labor rates in Tanzania are lower than elsewhere. And then we also do not get import taxes for instance.
We want to have training of local employees as well. Again, we want them to be as local as possible; if they live in the communities, they don't live on site.
And we do normal things like recycling water and things of that nature that are just good practices. This ultimately leads to a lot lower social risk, as Andrew mentioned, before there are artisanal in this area. So we work and engage with the local, artisanal, small-scale community. We've actually hired some resources at times from this local community to work on site and to help us advance the project.
Our employees are predominantly local, so they live in the area. And if they live in the area, we want their children to be going to decent schools, having decent medical facilities, those sorts of things. That if people remember the mining history of 40, 50 years ago even in Canada, there used to be communities built around mines. That's not dissimilar to here.
And we work with our joint venture partner with regards to drilling. They do a great job on it. The international rates are actually very competitive and are doing a great job.
So the whole goal of the ESG program is to integrate with the community. Be doing the right things, increase our productivity and the governance of our boards, and things of that nature has all been into place. But it's really integrated into operations and is not a charity by any means, but its good practices
Andrew, you're very close to a lot of these initiatives. You've got anything to add?
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Yeah. Stephen, actually, that was very, very well put. Thank you very much.
Let me just illustrate by an example perhaps. Many mining operations build massive concrete walls with razor wire on top to try and keep communities out. Because we have very, very good relationships with our local community, in many respects, they are in partnership with us as it were.
We don't need -- we don't have the security risk to build those kinds of barriers between ourselves and community, which includes artisanal miners. They know that they're not allowed to come onto our ground, and they don't. So there's, obviously, cost benefits from that. But there's also less friction in our environment as a result of that.
I think some of you might have also heard. We talk about the fact that our CIL tanks, the big blue tanks you see in the picture here, carbon-in-leach tanks, have all been built locally in a city called Mwanza, about 3.5 hours away from where we're working, by a shipbuilding community that build big ships that we would be used to sort of seeing whether it's in the Caribbean Sea or crossing the Baltic Sea, things like that.
400, 500 people size, ferries. They can build ships. They have all the equipment, laser, cutters, plasma welders. They can bend steel which they do.
And once we've sent them the engineering drawings, which we work with Ausenco in terms of all the engineering specifications, we did not have to draw one extra hole or bend one extra piece of steel. It all worked. That gives us a huge amount of credibility in terms of our community, in terms of our local and federal government. So that's been very, very successful.
But it's also, from a business point of view and from a shareholder's point of view, it's a lot less cost. And instead of bringing in from Turkey or from China or from South Africa, we're substantially derisked operation by working with people who are only 3.5 hours away.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah, so I'm just going to finalize this. As Andrew is -- look, what we do is work. I don't know if any mining company has done these types of expansions as quickly and for this cost. And then for it to actually be breaking the expectations that we have put in place on the production side of things has been great.
So our strategy is working and has benefited shareholders to date in the development of the Buckreef Project.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Stephen, I'd like to just add a bit of quantity to those numbers. Typically, at 1,000 tonnes per day, we have been receiving EPCM quotes in the order of about 40 million tonnes.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
We've built 1,000 tonnes a day. Should we say, for just I think about $6.4 million. So that's been a huge benefit to the shareholders. And the speed of which we've been able to do this has also been very good in terms of bringing revenue forward to allow us to continue to grow and drill the operation.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
So with regards to what's up coming. So obviously, we got a lot of work ongoing. The shareholders -- we'll continually see exploration and infill drill program results coming into the market. There will be continued news on our third mill expansion over the next six to nine months.
We have a lot of studies ongoing, and a lot of work being done there on the met study, geotech study, resource model updates, gaming facilities. A lot of work ongoing, so a lot of news flow from that. And then the planning and execution of a much larger scale gold operation is common.
And the work is being done, being put together. It's very methodical, so it does take some time to get it right, but it is certainly in the plans. And Andrew has been -- and myself had been meeting with suppliers around this as well as our general manager, even with regards to a much larger mill for the property over time. So a lot of milestones upcoming and continue, hopefully, good news to come in the future over the next year or so.
So with regards to where we are right now. Share price has been going up with regards to gold price going up, as well as we start to get into positive operating cash flow. Hopefully, that continues. And certainly, that is our expectation as we continue to successfully execute the growth at Buckreef Gold Project.
So on the last slide. I'm going to leave it on this slide as we get into Q&A. As I mentioned at our previous slide, a lot of work ongoing, a lot of things happening, and very rapid progress continues at Buckreef. And we're hopeful that it's going to continue to happen.
So without further ado, Christina, let's hand it over to the Q&A.
Christina Lalli - VP, IR
(multiple speakers) Stephen. Gaylene, up to you?
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Jake Sekelsky, Alliance Global Partners.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
So Gaylene, perhaps, I'll get into -- do you want me to get into the Q&As that are in the queue?
Operator
I could announce the analysts in the -- that are in the audio queue if you like.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah. Why don't you do that, and then we get into the written Q&A.
Operator
Sure. Okay.
Jake Sekelsky, Alliance Global Partners.
Jake Sekelsky - Analyst
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions and congrats on a strong quarter.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Thanks, Jake.
Jake Sekelsky - Analyst
Growth is obviously a big focus right now. And just looking at the additional ball mill that's on its way to site, can you remind us of the total cost of the mill and maybe some color on the installation costs there?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Mike, you want to give just an overview of the cost of the mill, and then I think there's a question in the Q&A queue as well that gets into how we're going to fund this.
Mike Leonard - CFO
Yeah. I can touch on it. I don't know if we'd explicitly guided a full capital cost, Jake. But I think you've got a sense for what the first 1,000 tonne a day mill cost us.
We expect to improve upon that cost. I think it's probably the best way to put it. It's effectively layering in a much larger mill with some supplementary tax. So I'd expect conservatively something slightly less than what the first 1,000 tonne a day mill cost.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah. And then, Mike, and also, we need to upgrade to transformer as well for the larger operation. And the generators that have been brought on the site will accommodate the larger expansion, and they're being installed as we speak.
So we haven't given full guidance. But for instance, there are seven tanks right now on site, there needs to be an additional two tanks.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Three.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Additional three tanks. So I don't expect this to be -- to be quite honest, it won't be as expensive as the first 1,000 tonne per day [plan].
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
And I think the only thing just to mention to add to the shopping list, Mike, is just some adjustments to the front end with our crushing circuit.
Mike Leonard - CFO
Yeah.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
That answer your question, Jake?
Jake Sekelsky - Analyst
Yeah, no, that's helpful. And so that'll be another low-cost mill expansion for you guys, and I'm assuming it's not the last. Do you able to just share even just at a high level any thoughts for future additional expansions, and what that might look like down the road even if it's over the next few years?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah. So what I would classify as answer is more aspirational, is Andrew is -- and team are updating resource models. We're doing all these met studies and things of that nature. We want to make this into a large-scale mining operation. And thus, we envision this being 3 to 4 million tonne per annum mine at some point in time.
And we're now starting to work to lay that out in the groundwork, to lay that out in a shareholder accretive fashion. And part of that is going and evaluating what mills are available worldwide. We've been doing that. We've been talking to various parties around that to have a sense of what that major capital cost may be.
And ultimately, we want to get this to be a 100,000, 150,000 an ounce type of property or even larger than that overtime. So that -- you're right, there will be future mill expansions. How they're going to look, and how quickly they're going to come online? That's target market, and that's part with the work that we're doing now of what the outcome of that work is.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
And I think, Stephen, particularly with that exploration side of it, right? It won't -- in a very positive scenario, we may well have two parallel pits.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Correct.
Jake Sekelsky - Analyst
Okay. Thanks for the color there. And then just lastly in that segues into my last question for Andrew. On the exploration, are you seeing or are you targeting any higher grade areas that you might be able to bring into the larger mine plan for 2024 going forward?
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Yeah. Jake, we have seen -- as we reviewed historical information, on the Eastern Porphyry, there are some higher-grade zones in that that grab our attention. And we're going to also continue to drill through from Eastern Porphyry and Anfield where we did have those higher grade grab samples.
Mike Leonard - CFO
And to give you a little bit of sense, Andrew, of what the type of work that's going on from a mine planning perspective. In a new resource model that's being updated, SRK and the team have gone through and put all the sections in place. So we have a much better understanding of where the high grade zones are in this deposit that we have before. And certainly, when you lay out a mine plan, given that's predominantly based on net present value, then you will target those zones earlier in the mine life if possible.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Yeah. And Stephen, I did mention earlier in the presentation that once the new road is open, which is a matter of weeks now, that enables us to go then through the position of the existing road. And there are some indeed high-grade blocks, very wide, very good grade, sitting immediately to the north which will now be accessible for mining.
And Jake, you specifically asked, I think, also 2024. I think it's fair to assume that we would continue to extend the pit now northwards into that ground.
Jake Sekelsky - Analyst
Perfect. Okay. Thanks for that.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
(multiple speakers) And that kind of answers the question, how we're going to pay for it all. (laughing)
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Yeah. I mean -- Stephen, I think you said the deposit. Obviously, it ranges in width. But at its widest points, this deposit is 40 meters wide.
Operator
Heiko Ihle, H.C. Wainwright.
Heiko Ihle - Analyst
Hey, can you hear me all right?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Okay, Heiko. How are you?
Heiko Ihle - Analyst
Perfect. You've made a pretty good lead over to my first question. It's impressive what you guys have done there in the last -- over two years.
Looking through, you mentioned some equipment earlier that you're buying versus renting like the gensets on this call. And in fact, those -- probably your last comment here a little bit ago. It means you're front loading some expenses. Can you give us some representative rates return that you anticipate from buying stuff versus renting it?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah. The example that I use is always a loader. So we're going to buy some loaders for the processing plant. They'll cost around $300,000, and we're currently renting two loaders for instance for $70 a month. So you could guess the return on that is significant.
With regards to the gensets, the return comes to two basis. We no longer rent them, so we'll avoid their rental cost. And then also, they're now variable gen set. So when the electricity goes down on the line right now, we would need to turn on the gensets 100% for the processing plant.
Heiko Ihle - Analyst
Yeah.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
When the voltage goes out online going forward, the gensets will come on to supplement the voltage. So it'll burn a lot -- less diesel going forward. So the return on that is going to be -- it's a matter of months as well. It's probably around six, seven months is around that.
So if you apply that to a model and IRR, you got significant returns on those type of investments. And we're doing that right across the whole operation now. And that is up and running of going in and finding those cost savings.
Heiko Ihle - Analyst
Fair enough. Q2 was the first full quarter with the newly expanded plant. I mean, this thing is now obviously humming, but is there anything else that might be a bottleneck. I'm also asking this in part with the expanded milling circuit to see maybe if there's any lessons that can be learned as that is getting built?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah. We're always open with the improvements we're making and the challenges. And challenges are always opportunities. So one thing that we need to do, and we're -- and as well under control is expanded tailings facility.
So we're working with authorities now. And then to get that new tailings facility up and running, that's well advanced. And also, the moral pit for that well advanced as well. So we don't anticipate any issues on that.
Longer term, we need to, as Andrew mentioned, have the long-term tailings management under control. And we're well advanced on that, of identifying sites, working with local authorities around land, both on and off the property for that. And we're working with Ausenco to design that.
And the goal for that is the -- when you're in operations, when you're doing stripping, you can move it over and build your tailings facility over time versus building it all upfront. So it'll be a tailings facility that's built for waste for the pit essentially over time. So that's one thing that we need to be doing.
Another challenge too is there's a step change here going from a 1,000 tonnes per day, doubling that capacity, 2,000 tonnes per day, and then thereafter. So we need to organize mining rates, mining equipment, employees. All of those sorts of things will take time and challenges to bring in appropriately.
So this expansion won't be ramped up as quickly as the other one because we had to get all of those sorts of logistical issues correct. And it takes some time for that to be planned out properly and to be assured that the proper equipment and human resource skill sets on site to manage it.
Heiko Ihle - Analyst
That's very helpful. Thank you all and keep up the good work.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Thank you, Heiko.
Mike Leonard - CFO
Thank you, Heiko.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Mike Niehuser, ROTH MKM.
Mike Niehuser - Analsyt
Hi, guys. You can hear me okay?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah, Mike. How are you doing?
Mike Niehuser - Analsyt
I'm good. Great. I hope you're well.
Question for Mike. Can I get you to repeat about the new ball mill? When that's going to be coming online? I think what I heard was maybe toward the end of fiscal 2023. So kind of the first full quarter or ramping up would be in the first fiscal quarter of 2024, is that right?
Mike Leonard - CFO
Yeah. I can touch on that. I think it's towards the back end of the calendar year, this year, Mike, So you're right, you'd likely expect to see some benefit in the early part of next fiscal year. Correct.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah. So we will deal with calendar 2023, Mike, as opposed to fiscal 2023.
Mike Niehuser - Analsyt
Okay. And also, you mentioned that the head grade was off in the quarter. I couldn't find that. Do you know what that was approximately?
Mike Leonard - CFO
Yeah. I think -- Andrew, I don't know if you have that number handy. I think it was somewhere around just over 2 grams, but a little bit less than what we rolled up in Q1, Mike. And Andrew, maybe you can touch on the impact the wet season has on things like grade.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Yeah, certainly, Mike. The grade has been quite consistent. The variation is a little bit minor. But obviously, when there's a wet season that we're dealing with the upper part of the deposits where we are in place. And so as we've had to go deeper to get the higher grade, we've had to also mine those sort of wet clays.
It slows down the equipment. Just the best way to describe it, guys, is -- but we know this. We have to plan, and we have to be strong at all seasons. So what we did is access parts of the stockpile which is deliberately there, for us to ensure that we have a consistent mill feed of a 1,000 tonnes a day.
The way I like to characterize it, for those that -- the fly is that the high grade is always fast tracked in our mine. And then the medium grade is sort of in the economy class queue. And so we just had to sort of put a bit more of that in for this quarter.
And Mike, that's why you're sort of seeing the higher grades coming in now towards the end of this quarter. And Mike, I think you also alluded that the last two quarters are stronger quarters in this fiscal year.
Mike Leonard - CFO
Yeah. And Mike, to specifically answer your question, the head grade that we rolled up in Q1 was 3.06 grams per tonne and in Q2 was 2.07. So quarter over quarter, that was part of the impact on ounces produced.
Mike Niehuser - Analsyt
Yeah. Thank you. The drill program for either calendar or the rest of this fiscal year, can you give us an idea of what your goal is for drilling either holes or meters?
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Yeah. So in terms of holes, Mike, what we're going to focus on is grade control drilling and a bit of sterilization. In terms of the diamond drilling on the deposit, we will be focusing at the Eastern Porphyry and the Anfield Zone, which is Anfield itself is a fairly early stage brownfield, Eastern Porphyry would now be an extension.
Mike Leonard - CFO
And I'm just going to add to that.
Mike Niehuser - Analsyt
That's pretty exciting. Do you have an idea of the size of the program?
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
We're still working our way through that, Mike.
Mike Niehuser - Analsyt
Okay.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
(multiple speakers) Yeah. To give you a sense of why we're focusing on there is the top part of the Main Zone is really densely drilled. So we know that those ounces can come into production really quick. And thus, we're focusing on the surface in Anfield and Eastern Porphyry for a reason because we believe that those ounces may be able to come fair quickly too.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Yeah. And provide additional production and flexibility.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah. The method (multiple speakers)
Mike Niehuser - Analsyt
Last questions. No problem here.
You're doing a lot of network and drilling and resource assessment. It almost seems like you're moving closer to realizing your aspirational concept. And I'm getting the feeling that that you're basically moving from the oxide and really understanding the area in between that and the sulphides.
And I'm thinking this calendar year is going to be a big year for really coming away with an understanding of the project's potential. Is that close?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah, you're 100% right. That's exactly why all this work is being done with regards to getting into what you say, transitional and harder material. Some of that material has already gone through mills, mixed in with the oxides. And as reported in the quarter, there has been no reduction in recovery rates which is possible.
Mike Niehuser - Analsyt
Yeah. That's huge. Also just lastly, just to comment, I think the comments you made about working with your buying locally from a timing, from an investor point of view, from quality building relationships is an unrecognized value here, and it doesn't happen overnight. So congratulations on all that and thanks for taking my questions.
Mike Leonard - CFO
Yeah. Thanks, Mike.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Thank you very much, Mike.
Operator
I'd now like to hand the meeting over to Christina Lalli, Vice President, Investor Relations, who will take us through the questions submitted in writing.
Christina Lalli - VP, IR
Thanks, again, Gaylene. So gentlemen, I think there are a few questions along the same line of topic here from a few of our shareholders who'd like some more information on our joint venture and the status there of -- with STAMICO, who obviously is a non-controlling interest in our financial statements. Can we speak a little bit to that relationship? And how basically that works out, and how we see that in our financial statements?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah, so a good question. The non-controlling interest does show up in the income statement of the financial statements. And with regards to the relationship with STAMICO and the government relationship, it's very strong. So we have a good working relationship in Tanzania.
We've built up a considerable amount of goodwill over the last two years through strong execution on the ground that's both from the shareholders, and they're on the call today as well as from all the local stakeholders that are in Tanzania.
With regards to how net income is split. Look, we don't split net income. It's split for accounting purposes. But from a cash perspective, the operating cash flow was reinvested back into the business to continually expand the business.
Also, as part of that agreement, we get capital repatriation back first. So any capital that we spent at Buckreef gets a return to TRX first prior to any dividend splits in the future. So right now, most of the income that's generated in cash flow is reinvested right back into the asset to grow it.
Christina Lalli - VP, IR
Great. Thank you. A question from a shareholder wondering about the third mill expansion, if we are truly serious about the fact that our current cash flow will indeed pay for that third expansion, if we expect there to be enough cash basically.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Yeah, that's in the forecast. So when we rolled up the budget, there are expenditures for the third mill expansion. As we mentioned, it should come online at the end calendar 2023. That is the expectation currently to be paid for cash flow for the business.
There's also other ways. And I think this goes into more shareholder dilution question on paying for the expansion is -- does other forms of financing that are available for that? We could do more on a goal pre-pay for instance. We can bring on some debt at the asset level, which we haven't done at this point in time, so there's other ways to pay for that expansion if necessary.
Mike Leonard - CFO
Yeah, and I'll just maybe add to that, Stephen. And the way we go about our budgeting is very, very conservative. And we do build in contingency for variances mining is a variable business as we all know. So we certainly build in contingency.
But in terms of conservatism, we ran our budget at [$16.50] an ounce for example, and we ran our half-year forecast at [$1,700]. So certainly, some upside on things like gold price, but we do have contingency for unforeseen expenditures as they come up.
Christina Lalli - VP, IR
Great. Thanks, gentlemen. Another question comes to us on the topic of possible M&A or purchasing of a new land or titles. Can we speak a bit to that subject?
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
Okay. On M&A, obviously, we have property right now in Tanzania. Buckreef property is a great property, and it requires a lot of our time.
Would we look at M&A opportunities that may be accretive and utilize the skill set that we have? We were able to go in, turn around an asset very quickly, build an asset out very cheaply. If there's any complementary types of M&A opportunities out there that could utilize that type of skill set, then obviously, we'll be doing shareholders as a service of not looking at those type of opportunities that can be turned around. It would be [very shareholder] or accretive very quickly.
Christina Lalli - VP, IR
Okay. Thank you, Stephen.
Stephen Mullowney - CEO, Director
So yeah, we would look at M&A opportunities that complement our skill set.
Christina Lalli - VP, IR
(Operator Instructions) For the moment, the last question comes from a long-time shareholder. If we have any thoughts or can foresee in the future paying a dividend?
Mike Leonard - CFO
Yeah, I get asked this question in every queue -- quarterly call. Right now, the asset is extremely capital intensive as we continue to grow it. There is more benefit in reinvesting the asset from a shareholder appreciation perspective. It's an increased metrics like EBITDA per share, net asset value per share, all of those type of metrics.
So in the foreseeable future, which is a short to medium term, I do not see the payment of a dividend at this point in time. I know that may be different than what was long-time shareholders may have been told, but that is the current business philosophy of growing value for the company.
Christina Lalli - VP, IR
Wonderful.
Mike Leonard - CFO
After that, once we get into a much larger project, all those options are on the table.
Christina Lalli - VP, IR
Great. So I don't see any questions remaining in the queue. On behalf of the TRX Gold team, I'd like to thank everybody for joining us today. We are always available to you, so please don't hesitate to reach out to us, and I'd like to wish everybody a great day.
Operator
This concludes the meeting. You may disconnect your lines. Thank you for participating, and have a pleasant day.
Mike Leonard - CFO
Thank you.
Andrew Cheatle - COO, Director
Thank you.