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Vulcan Elements, a rare earth magnet company, will build a $1 billion North Carolina facility

Vulcan Elements is a rare earth magnet manufacturer based in North Carolina. It announced on Tuesday that it would build a $1 Billion manufacturing facility to supply U.S. electronic and military customers.

The facility is to be located in Benson, about 30 miles (48km) south of Raleigh.

This would increase U.S. accessibility to magnets which convert power into motion in electric vehicles, mobile phones, fighter planes, and thousands of products. These magnets are the focus of a global trade dispute as China is using them to leverage negotiations with the Trump Administration.

John Maslin, CEO of the company, stated that North Carolina was chosen over other states because it has a workforce devoted to engineering and offers economic incentives. The plant is located in North Carolina's "Research Triangle" near universities, military bases and laboratories.

The workforce is the most important thing to us. Maslin stated that the most important thing was to find PhDs, engineers and technicians from complementary industries.

The United States was once the largest magnet manufacturer in the world, but it lost that expertise during the 20th century. Maslin stated that Vulcan's technology for magnets was developed by one of its co-founders and that the company doesn't anticipate any patent issues.

North Carolina estimates that the facility will boost North Carolina's economy by $2.6 Billion. Vulcan would be eligible to receive $17,6 million from the state if that were to happen.

Vulcan signed an agreement with ReElement Technologies in August to supply rare earth oxides. Vulcan would have to convert the oxide into a metal first before turning it into magnets.

Maslin stated that the metallization will take place in the Benson facility. He declined to state if Vulcan, or another party, would be responsible for this step.

Vulcan wants to produce 10,000 tons of magnets per year, and a "significant amount" of this production will be online by 2027. This is about the same amount of magnets that MP Materials plans to produce at its Texas magnet plant. (Reporting and editing by Lincoln Feast; Ernest Scheyder)

(source: Reuters)