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Namibia will boost its sulphuric production as the critical mineral output increases

Namibia will increase its production of sulphuric acids in response to the critical rise in mineral output. Vedanta and Green Metals Refining announced plans to establish and revive plants on Thursday.

The extraction of metals such as uranium and copper is a common process.

Namibia, which is the third largest producer of uranium in the world, has eight critical minerals projects that are set to place it at the forefront for global green energy initiatives.

Green Metals Refining, based in London, plans to invest $59 million for the first phase of an acid plant that will be able to produce 175,000 tons of sulphuric acids a year.

In a Thursday statement, the company stated that it expects to increase annual production to 720,000 tonnes.

Derk Hartman, CEO of Green Metals Refining, said that Namibia is a net exporter of sulphuric acids and has a large pipeline containing acid-consuming projects. We have therefore established a compelling case for local metals projects by third parties.

The company plans to build a sulphuric-acid plant in Walvis Bay port, which will supply the country's copper and uranium mines. Both plants should be operational by the end 2027.

Vedanta announced this week that it will recommission its Skorpion Zinc operations sulphuric plant within the next 4 to 6 months, to produce approximately 1,000 tons of sulphuric acids per day

Since 2020, the facility has been on care and maintainance.

(source: Reuters)