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Rare Earths Norway reports that the estimate of the deposit is now 81% larger than previously estimated.

The estimate of mineral resources at the?mine that Rare Earths Norway is developing, Europe's biggest rare earth project has increased by?81% from the last evalution two years ago, the privately owned firm announced on Tuesday.

The Fen project, which is being developed by the company, would help Europe to reduce its dependence on China as the dominant producer of rare earths.

According to a WSP statement, the project has?a total rare earth oxide of 15.9 million metric tonnes in indicated and inferred resource,'

It added that the 'new estimate' reflects additional exploration drilling which took place in 2018 and compares with 8.8?million tonnes calculated for 2024.

SEEMED AS A STRATEGIC?ASSET

By nearly doubling the size of its known deposits, Rare Earths Norway is now a strategic asset that can be used in many different ways, said Bernd Schnefer, CEO at EIT RawMaterials. This agency, funded by the EU, focuses on critical minerals.

The deposit size is larger than Per Geijer, which was described by LKAB as the largest in Europe in 2023 with a?1.3million tons of rare earth oxides. It?updated its?estimate last year to 2.2 millions tons.

According to the company, the latest estimate of the Rare Earths Norway Project reveals that 19% are neodymium oxides and praseodymium oxides (NdPr), which are key minerals for permanent magnets needed in electric vehicles, windmills, electronic devices, and defence applications.

It stated that it would produce 2,000 tonnes of NdPr in 2031. In its statement on Tuesday, it did not mention a production volume or a timeline. Reporting by Eric Onstad, Editing by Jan Harvey

(source: Reuters)