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Critical Metals signs an agreement to supply rare Earth to a US Government-funded facility

Critical Metals signs an agreement to supply rare Earth to a US Government-funded facility

Critical Metals announced on Tuesday that it had signed a 10-year contract to supply heavy rare-earth concentrate to Ucore Rare Metal’s U.S. Government-funded Louisiana processing plant.

The Tanbreez Project, a Greenland-based mining project in the development stage, is expected to produce up to 10,000 tons of concentrate per year. This represents 10% of initial production projections.

The U.S. is looking to increase domestic production of essential minerals in order to counter China's near total control over the sector.

Ucore Louisiana's facility received $18.4 Million from the U.S. Defense Department to begin construction on phase one of four.

The company expects to reach a capacity of 7,500 tonnes per year (tpa), in 2028.

Rare earths is a grouping of 17 metals which are used to produce magnets, which turn energy into motion. China halted its exports to the United States in March, as part of the trade dispute with Trump. The tensions began to ease in June.

Critical Metals received a letter in June of interest from the U.S. Export-Import Bank for a loan up to $120,000,000 to fund the Tanbreez Mine. This was the first investment by the Trump Administration in a mining venture overseas.

Once fully operational, the Tanbreez project will cost approximately $290 million and produce 85,000 tons of rare earths and two minor metals per year. (Reporting and editing by Leroy Leo in Bengaluru, Pooja Menon from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)