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Perpetua requests up to $2 billion in loan from US EXIM to fund antimony project

Perpetua requests up to $2 billion in loan from US EXIM to fund antimony project

Perpetua Resources announced on Friday that it had filed a formal request with the U.S. Export-Import Bank to receive potential debt financing up to $2 billion for its Idaho antimony-and-gold Stibnite Project.

The project was approved for a loan of up to $1.8billion by the EXIM bank in 2024.

Perpetua stated that the increase in application amounts reflects an estimated rise in job-years as indicated by the financial updates and basic engineering works completed in the first three months.

In afternoon trading, the company's stock was up by nearly 4%.

The Pentagon-backed project would be the first antimony mine in the country. Its estimated reserves are 148 million pounds, and the metal is used to make bullets, tanks, alloys, and batteries for electric vehicles.

The administration of President Donald Trump has increased efforts to boost the production of essential minerals at home and to increase government funding as part of an overall effort to counter China's near total control of this sector.

Perpetua has received the federal permit for the Clean Water Act Section 404 from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. (Reporting and editing by Shilpi Mahumdar in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)