Hi Michael,
That's right they do deal in the above and the recent foray into mining is new. They have appointed new management with experience in Coal and are looking (perhaps) at a new name change as per todays announcement...
Don't forget these guys also have some pretty exciting Uranium tenements from URANEX.
It's all at
www.comdek.com.au
here's some more info and back ground
Cheers
1 Summary of Coal Projects
Comdek has signed an agreement to acquire Isicebi, a company that has the right to
farm-in to three coal properties owned by Lukale Mining Ltd (Lukale) in the
Waterberg Coalfield area of South Africa. Until recently, the properties were owned
by BHP Billiton and BP Coal, however due to changes in the Minerals Petroleum
Resources Development Act (MPRD) Lukale, a Black Economic Empowerment (BEE)
group have now secured 100% ownership of these properties.
Lisbon LQ 19 (800 Hectares) is on the Limpopo river border with Botswana.
Zoetfontein LQ 22 (995 Hectares) is immediately adjacent to Lisbon LQ 19. Both
properties have been drilled by BHP Billiton and show the potential for significant
tonnages of open cast coal in the lower zones of the Waterberg sequence. The
Zoetfontein Fault also runs East-West through the middle of these farms and it is
expected that 50% of the coal is shallow at around 16m below the surface with the
remainder of the coal being greater than 250m deep.
Koert Louw Zyn Pan LQ 234 (1,365 Hectares) is on the Limpopo river border with
Botswana. This property has been drilled by BP Coal and shows the potential for
significant tonnages of open cast coal from all zones of the Waterberg sequence.
All the existing drill data for these three farms has been requested, with initial drill
data being received. Dawie Van Wyk of Geocoal Pty Ltd has been engaged to review
all this data and to complete a resource calculation to be compliant with the SAMREC
and JORC codes. An initial inferred resource of 415 million tonnes has been
calculated from existing drilling information compiled to date. Further data is
currently being sourced and validated and a further update on the inferred resource
will be announced in due course. A drilling campaign will be designed once all drill
hole data has been acquired and assessed.
2 Review of the Waterberg Coalfield
2.1. Introduction
Coal was discovered in this area in 1922 during water drilling 25km west of the town
of Ellisras. The coal seams of the Waterberg Coalfield occur in the Volksrust and
Vryheid Formations of the Karoo sequence. Numerous coal zones (seams) occur,
varying in thickness from millimetres to more than 8 meters over a zone of 120
meters. Not all these zones occur over the whole coalfield. The main coal seams can
be correlated across the coalfield into eleven main coal zones. The coal of the upper
seven zones (Volksrust Formation) consists of finely intercalated bands of coal and
mudstone. This has to be crushed to at least 12mm top size and washed to liberate
the coal form the mudstone. The coal in the bottom zones (Vryheid Formation)
occurs as thicker, more distinct seams. The coal from the top zones produces a soft
blend coking coal and a middlings product suitable for power generation. The coal
from the bottom zones is suitable for power generation, charring and local industry
consumption.