Backed by Australia government, Iluka greenlights A$1b rare earths refinery

Published Mon, Apr 4, 2022 · 02:33 AM

DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.

[MELBOURNE] Iluka Resources on Monday committed to building Australia's first rare earths refinery after lining up A$1 billion (S$1 billion) in cheap debt from the government, which wants to diversify critical minerals supply away from China.

The mineral sands producer's Eneabba refinery in Western Australia is expected to cost between A$1 billion and A$1.2 billion, with production of light and heavy rare earths crucial for a range of tech applications - from electric vehicles to missiles - due to begin in 2025.

The new plant is key to a push by the United States and allies, including Australia and Japan, to develop new sources of a range of critical minerals, including rare earths, to counteract China's dominance over those supply chains.

"Our final investment decision would not have been taken without the support of the Australian government," Iluka said in a statement on Monday (Apr 4).

Iluka shares jumped as much as 9 per cent to a record of A$12.50 after the announcement.

Rare earths projects worldwide have faced numerous cost and funding setbacks over the past decade. To ensure this project went ahead, Iluka set up the refinery as a separate entity and negotiated a risk-sharing agreement with the government to cover cost blowouts.

DECODING ASIA

Navigate Asia in
a new global order

Get the insights delivered to your inbox.

Iluka is contributing A$200 million in equity towards the construction cost, a screening plant, a concentrating plant, and a stockpile it has at Eneabba of the minerals monazite and xenotime, which hold rare earths.

Future material to feed the refinery could come from other deposits owned by Iluka and other companies.

The plant will have capacity to produce 5,500 tonnes a year of rare earth oxides neodymium and praseodymium (NdPr) and 750,000 tonnes a year of dysprosium and terbium (Dy+Tb).

In another project to diversify supply, Australia's Lynas - the world's largest producer of rare earths outside China - is building a processing plant in Western Australia which will produce rare earth carbonate to feed a separation facility it is building in the United States. REUTERS

Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.

Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services