As a general
rule, the most successful man in life is the man who has the best information
The rare earths
are a group of 17 elements comprising Scandium, Yttrium, and the Lanthanides.
The Lanthanides are a group of 15 (Cerium, Dysprosium, Erbium, Europium,
Gadolinium, Holmium, Lanthanum, Lutetium, Neodymium, Praseodymium, Samarium,
Terbium, Thorium, Thulium, Ytterbium) chemically similar elements with atomic
numbers 57 through 71, inclusive.
Yttrium, atomic
number 39, isn’t a lanthanide but is included in the rare earths
because it often occurs with them in nature - it has similar chemical
properties. Scandium, atomic number 21 is also included in the group although
it usually occurs only in minor amounts.
The most
abundant rare earth elements (REE) are each found in the earth’s crust
in amounts equal to nickel, copper, zinc, molybdenum, or lead - Cerium is the
25th most abundant element of the 78 common elements in the Earth’s
crust. Even the two least abundant REEs (Thulium, Lutetium) are nearly 200
times more common than gold. Overall Rees have an abundance greater than
silver and similar amounts to copper and lead.
The
“rare” in rare earth elements came from frustrated 19th century
chemists who decided they were uncommon after trying to isolate these chemically
related elements. REES are also very hard to find in economic concentrations.
The Lanthanides
are divided into light rare elements, LREE, and heavy rare earth elements,
HREE. Light REE's are made up of the first seven elements of the lanthanide series
- Lanthanum (La, atomic number 57), Cerium (Ce, atomic number 58),
Praseodymium (Pr, atomic number 59), Neodymium (Nd, atomic number 60)
Promethium (Pm, atomic number 61) and Samarium (Sm, atomic number 62).
HREEs are made
up of the higher atomic numbered elements - Europium (EU, atomic number 63),
Gadolinium (Gd, atomic number 64), Terbium (TB, atomic number 65), Dysprosium
(Dy, atomic number 66), Holmium (Ho, atomic number 67), Erbium (Er, atomic
number 68), Thulium (Tm, atomic number 69), Ytterbium (Yb, atomic number 70)
and Lutetium (Lu, atomic number 71).
Source USGS
The principal
economic sources of LREE are the minerals bastnasite and monazite. In most
rare earth deposits, the first four REE - La, Ce, Pr, and Nd - constitute 80
to 99 percent of the total.
Deposits of
bastnäsite in China and the United States represent the largest
percentage of the world’s Rare Earth economic resources.
The second
largest percentage of the world’s LREE Rare Earth economic resources is
monazite. Monazite contains less La, more Nd and some HREE with usually
elevated levels of thorium compared to bastnasite.
Ion-adsorbed REE
in clays from South China provide the bulk of HREE to the market place.
Uses
Many REE applications are highly specific
and substitutes are inferior or unknown:
- Color cathode-ray tubes and
liquid-crystal displays used in computer monitors and televisions employ
europium as the red phosphor
- Terbium is used to make green
phosphors for flat-panel TVs and lasers
- Lanthanum is critical to the oil
refining industry, which uses it to make a fluid cracking catalyst that
translates into a 7% efficiency gain in converting crude oil into
refined gasoline
- Rechargeable batteries
- Automotive pollution control
catalysts
- Neodymium is key to the high
strength permanent magnets used to make high-efficiency electric motors.
Two other REE minerals - terbium and dysprosium – are added to
neodymium to allow it to remain magnetic at high temperatures
- Fiber-optic cables can transmit
signals over long distances because they incorporate periodically spaced
lengths of erbium doped fiber that function as laser amplifiers
- Cerium oxide is used as a
polishing agent for glass. Virtually all polished glass products, from
ordinary mirrors and eyeglasses to precision lenses, are finished with
CeO2
- Gadolinium is used in solid-state lasers,
computer memory chips, high-temperature refractories, cryogenic
refrigerants
- Used in improving high-temperature
characteristics of iron, chromium, and related alloys
- Y, La, Ce, Eu, Gd, and Tb are used
in the new energy-efficient fluorescent lamps. These energy-efficient
light bulbs are 70% cooler in terms of the heat they generate and are
70% more efficient in their use of electricity
- REEs are used in metallurgy as an
alloying agent to desulphurise steels, as a nodularising agent in
ductile iron, as lighter flints and as alloying agents to improve the
properties of superalloys and alloys of magnesium, aluminium and
titanium
- Rare-earth elements are used in
the nuclear industry in control rods, as dilutants, and in shielding,
detectors and counters
- Rare metals lower the friction on
power lines, thus cutting electricity leakage
China
China mines REEs
from bastnäsite ore in the provinces of Gansu and Sichuan. In Inner
Mongolia REEs are obtained as a by-product from iron making.
HREE extraction,
based on ion absorption clays, occurs in the states of Guangdong, Hunan,
Jiangxi and Jiangsu. These clays have very low cerium content and as a
consequence the other REES, in particular the HREEs, comprise a much larger
share of the ore than is typically found elsewhere.
Currently
Chinese ion absorption ore is the main source for HREE and resources are not
published. There may be the possibility of discovering new ion absorption
deposits in Southeast Asia, however high costs for labor, lack of infrastructure
and environmental restrictions may render these new deposits uneconomical
when competing in the market place with Chinese output.
China has 36 to
53 percent of the world’s REE deposits (industry figures differ) and
supplies 97 percent (this number is constant) of the global demand for rare
earth elements. The low cost and unregulated production from China’s
large deposits forced the closure of almost every rare earth mine outside of
China.
Tighter limits
on production and lowered export quotas are being put in place to ensure
China has the necessary supply for its own technological and economic needs -
in 2006 volume dropped to 48,000 tonnes. In 2007 volume dropped to 43,574
tonnes, in 2008 volume dropped to 40,987 tonnes and in 2009 to 33,300 tonnes.
In 2010 China dropped its annual REE export quota by 37% and then announced
an additional 35% drop in its H1 2011 export quota.
In a hunt to
secure jobs, and access to advanced technologies, the Chinese have forced
manufacturers needing access to REEs to make their products in China. These
manufacturers must either cut back production or build their
factories/products in China - recently major producers of the magnet
material Neodymium-Iron-Boron have transferred their operations to China.
Demand for Rare
Earths is forecasted to grow at 8-11% per year between 2011 and 2014. Many
experts are predicting that the Chinese, and those end users who moved to
China for security of supply, will be internally consuming most of the
countries rare earth production by about 2014.
Forecast demand, source: IMCOA presentation
Rare earth
demand is driven by several global macroeconomic trends:
- Miniaturization
- Environmental protection
- Increasing demand for energy, power
and fuel efficiency
The highest
demand growth is expected for magnets and metal alloys - hybrid and electric
vehicles along with wind turbines (also High Speed Rail) will compete for
the essential materials and there are no substitutions for the REEs used in
these applications. An increased use of energy efficient fluorescent lights
and growing demand for LCDs, PDPs will increase the use of phosphors.
The French
Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières rates high tech
metals as critical, or not, based on three criteria:
- Possibility (or not) of
substitution
- Irreplaceable functionality
- Potential supply risks
It’s very
obvious REEs are critical metals and that the west is going to need a secure,
long term supply of Rare Earth Elements completely independent of Chinese
control.
There are a lot
of junior companies in this space competing for investor attention.
Wilderness
of mirrors
“Wilderness of Mirrors” is a
phrase coined by the 1950s era counter-intelligence chief John Foster Dulles
to describe the intelligence game. In particular, the phrase refers to the
difficulty of separating disinformation from truth.
One of the
world’s foremost REE geologists and mineralogists Anthony
“Tony” Marianno says each REE deposit, assuming a favorable
political climate and good logistics, will need certain conditions present:
- Favorable mineralogy and
lanthanide distribution
- Necessary grade and tonnage
- Mining and mineral processing at
low costs
- Successful chemical cracking of
the individual lanthanides for their isolation and eventual recovery
- Low values of thorium, uranium and
other deleterious impurities
- Minimum environmental impact
Dudley
Kingsnorth of Industrial Minerals Company of Australia (IMCOA) outlines the
necessary steps to take a REE deposit all the way to production:
- Prove resource: grade,
distribution and understand mineralogy
- Define process and bench scale -
each ore-body is unique. Because of this uniqueness a new separation
process has to be developed for each individual deposit
- Conduct pre-feasibility study
- Demonstrate technical and
commercial viability of the process
- Obtain environmental approval
- *Publish Letters of Intent
– marketing is customer specific. The main value added from
Rare Earths is not in the mining and extraction, so it is necessary to
either develop your own supply chain or gain access to an existing
supply chain
- Complete a bankable feasibility
study
- Effect construction and start-up
There are
significant barriers to entry into the Rare Earths market:
- Developing a
rare earth mine and processing plant is capital intensive. Capacity
costs are high - plus US$30,000 per tonne of annual separated capacity
versus less than US$3500.00 for an open pit mine in the US. History
shows that the development time can be very long at 10-15 years
- Operational expertise is very
limited outside of China - limited technical expertise on mining,
cracking and separating
- Major mining companies, and
institutions, are put off by investments in such a tightly focused
market - this leaves juniors with potential development issues
REE
Minerals
There’s a
saying regarding the search for economic quantities of rare earths:
“You are not looking for a REE deposit,
you are looking for a Bastnaesite deposit.” anon
Practically all
light REE are extracted from bastnaesite and monazite, while the heavy REE comes
from xenotime and ionic clays. The process of extracting REE from these four
minerals has not changed over the last two decades. When you review these
four minerals chemical compositions you will see they are not complex. The
more complex, the harder it is to extract what you want and get the ultra
high purity oxides, metals, alloys and powders required.
Mineralogy is
mineral composition, metallurgy the process of extraction. Complicated
mineralogy can mean complex, expensive, power intensive, time consuming
metallurgy.
Bastnaesite: REE
CO3F, LREE dominant.
Monazite: REE
PO4, LREE dominant.
South China
Clays: Ion-adsorbed REE+Y in Clays
Xenotime: Y,HREE PO4, HREE dominant, one of the best sources for Y and
HREE. Usually found in small quantities associated with monazite.
Ancylite: (Ce)
SrREE(CO3)2(OH)·H2O, LREE dominant.
Eudialyte:
Na15Ca6(Fe2+,Mn2+)3Zr3(Si,Nb)(Si25,O73)(O,OH,H2O)3(CL,OH)2, HREE dominant,
name derived from the Greek phrase Εὖ
διάλυτος eu dialytos - "well
decomposable" alluding to its ready solubility in acid. Colloidal silica
makes it difficult to isolate the REEs but Eudialyte ores are among the most
promising sources of rare earth mineral raw material.
Britholite: (REE,Y,Ca)5(SiO4,PO4)3(OH,F), a phosphate so should be able to
crack it.
Allanite: (Ce)
(Ce,Ca,Y)2(Al,Fe2+,Fe3+)3(SiO4)3(OH), LREE dominant
but with low quantities of REE+Y compared to bastnasite. Refractory in
nature.
Zircon: ZrSiO4,
Zircon is often the major heavy mineral in beach sands and river
placers. It is also a byproduct of Sn, Ti and Au mining. Strong refractory
nature and resistance to chemical dissolution. Zircon is the main raw
material needed for value-added zirconium chemicals production.
Loparite (Ce)
(REE,Na,Ca) (Ti, Nb,Ta)O3 Alkaline igneous massif
Uraninite: REE
and Y - Released as dissolved elements in rafinates from uraninite
Fergusonite is a mineral comprising a complex oxide of various rare earth
elements. Fergusonite occurs in many geologic environments and has attractive
chemistry. Unfortunately it isn’t found in exploitable quantities.
Mines to
Magnet
Mining REEs is
fairly straightforward but separating and extracting a
single REE takes a great deal of time, effort and expertise.
Rare Earth Ore:
the ore is ground up using crushers and rotating grinding mills, magnetic
separation (bastnaesite and monazite – are highly magnetic, they can be
separated from non-magnetic impurities in the ore through repeated electromagnetic
separation) and floatation gives you the lowest value sellable product in the
Rare Earth supply chain - the concentrated ore. The milling equipment;
crushers, grinding mills, flotation devices, and magnetic, gravity, and
electrostatic separators all have to be configured in a way that suits the
type of ore being mined - no two ores respond the same way.
Concentrated
ore: chemically extract the mixed rare earths from the concentrated ore
(cons) by chemical processing. The cons have to undergo chemical treatment to
allow further separation and upgrading of the REEs. This process
– called cracking – includes techniques like roasting, salt or
caustic fusion, high temperature sulphidation, and acid leaching which allow
the REEs within a concentrate to be dissolved. This separates the mixed rare
earths from any other metals that may be present in the ore. The result will
be still mixed together rare earths.
Rare Earth Oxide
(REO): the major value in REE processing lies in the production of high
purity REOs and metals - but it isn’t easy. A REE refinery uses ion
exchange and/or multi-stage solvent extraction technology to separate and
purify the REEs. Solvent-extraction processes involve re-immersing processed
ore into different chemical solutions in order to separate individual
elements. The elements are so close to each other in terms of atomic weight
that each of these processes involve multiple stages to complete the
separation process. In some cases it requires several hundred tanks of different
solutions to separate one rare earth element - HREEs are the hardest, most
time consuming to separate.
The composition
of REOs can also vary greatly - they can and often are designed to meet the
specifications laid out by the end product users - a REO that suits one
manufacturers needs may not suit another’s.
In this authors
opinion a few junior REE miners will be able to produce oxides but the
product will not be more than 98% pure and command, as of April 11th 2011,
US$38kg. The cost to increase the purity to the 99.999% required by most end
users - and the technical knowhow and operational expertise - will be beyond
the capabilities of almost every junior miner. The
98% oxide will still have to be sent for further refining.
Very few REE
miners will ever get paid for producing a 98% oxide (Molycorp does, their
average price for a kilogram of oxide product in the first quarter of 2011
was US$38) let alone a 99.999% pure oxide (average LREE oxide price US$197kg
June 11th) – it seems very likely that most REE juniors will end up
selling a mixed rare earth solution - a concentrate comparable (place in the
supply chain) to what a junior copper miner would sell.
Others further
up the REE value added supply chain will turn the concentrate into high
purity rare earth oxides and continue the process of making the high purity
metals, alloys and powders.
Demand is
growing for rare earth metals.
A common
technique for producing metals from REOs is metallothermic reduction. The
oxides are dispersed in a molten, calcium chloride bath along with sodium
metal. The sodium reacts with the calcium chloride to produce calcium metal,
which reduces the oxides to rare earth metals.
Sorption is a
combination of the two processes – absorption, in which a substance
diffuses into a liquid or solid to form a solution, and adsorption, in which
a gas or liquid accumulates on the surface of another substance to form a
molecular or atomic film.
Other extraction
technologies include; vacuum distillation, mercury amalgamate
oxidation-reduction, high-performance centrifugal partition chromatoagraphy
and Sl-octyl phenyloxy acetic acid treatment.
The continuing
miniaturization of electronic devices - such as disk drives and micro motors
– is possible because of the ability of rare earth magnets to combine
high magnetic strength with a small size and weight.
Magnetic powders
are produced by processing specific combinations of elements that result in
distinct magnetic and physical characteristics. These powders are the primary
material used in the manufacture of rare earth permanent magnets. The main
elements consumed in the manufacture of Neo and samarium-cobalt permanent
magnets are; neodymium, samarium, some dysprosium and praseodymium.
Neodymium is
alloyed with iron and boron as well as other elements (like cobalt). In order
to produce neo powder for the manufacture of bonded (highly shapeable) Neo
magnets, the alloy is melted and then rapidly solidified to produce Neo
powders with the desired characteristics.
The flow of
electrical signals on every printed wiring board used in electronic devices
is regulated and controlled by the use of dielectric chips known as multi
layer ceramic capacitors ("MLCC's"). Many use rare earth formulas
containing lanthanum and neodymium of high purity and with precisely
engineered physical properties.
All the above
complex metallurgical technologies have taken decades to evolve, the methods
of manufacture and compositions of metals, alloys and powders used are all proprietary
methods developed over years of trial and error - they are not common
knowledge, exactly the opposite, they are tightly held secrets that very few
know. Lack of access to proprietary information about complex physical and
chemical processes will severely restrict companies from climbing the value
added chain.
This author
believes no junior REE miners will be able to produce a rare earth permanent
magnet - or the high purity metals, alloys and powders used in manufacturing
high tech devices.
What to
Watch For
When I evaluate
a REE junior’s project I want to see one mineral hosting as much of the
REE as possible, not three or more. I want that mineralization large grained
and non-interlocking and I want road, rail and access to the power grid
close.
Each deposit
will have its own unique mineralogy - this has to be determined. A company
has to concentrate its recovery efforts on the REE’s - whether LREE or
HREE - that are going to be easy to recover in an inexpensive uncomplicated
circuit, they have to work with what nature has given them in order to be
competitive in the market. Watch for how many different types of minerals the
REE are hosted in.
Work
index
When we talk
about a grinding or crushing circuit the terms Bond Equation and Work Index
come into play. The term Bond Equation measures work done or work that has to
be done while the Work Index is defined as the power consumption necessary to
accomplish the work.
If REE host
minerals have large distinct grains (the larger the grain the easier the
extraction of REE) and very little intergrowth (there’s always some)
the REE is easy to extract and there is very little crushing involved. The
amount of work needed to be done, the Bond Equation, and the amount of power
needed, the Work Index, is very low. Some deposits host mineralization whose
grain size is measured in millimeters, low Bond Equation = low Work Index =
lower power consumption. Therefore electrical power and other associated
costs (maintenance and replacement) are low – power consumption costs
for grinding and crushing are major costs for miners, especially deposits far
off the grid requiring diesel to generate electricity.
If
mineralization is smaller grained and interlocked it is very hard to extract
the REE. In this scenario the Bond Equation is very high because of all the
work necessary - some deposits ore has to be crushed down to the micron level
(dust) for REE extraction. The Work Index, the power required to grind and
crush to so fine a product is immense.
An extremely
high Work Index to prepare ore can make or break a deposits economics,
especially when poor infrastructure is considered – no rail or road for
transport, no access to the power grid and a high Work Index are all
potential deposit killers when it comes to competing in the market place.
Silica (Si) does
not dissolve in acid easily and being sand is very hard on grinding and
crushing equipment. Silica will actually wear on ball mills and that adds
contaminants.
Company
metallurgical reports can show up to 98% average recovery rates for all REES
listed in their assay tables - but this is lab testing, crushed to dust,
roasted and acid leached for hours times three - we could get that kind of
recovery from the asphalt out in front of my house if it had any REE in it.
In 2010 SRK Consulting studied 18 years of annual performance data and six
months of operational data between 2001 and 2002 (after implementation of
improvements) from Molycorps existing mill. The average recovery rate was
63%. SRK suggested that a mill recovery of 70% is
possible when the mill is operated on a sustained basis and with further
improvements.
We’re told
the value of the ore is based on - converting the individual REE percentages
to oxide, times the current selling price per kilogram, add them all
together. The problem is the company will never get paid 98% oxide prices for
all those different REEs – let alone get paid for a 99.999% pure oxide
which is the price many are using.
Does a company
have high levels of uranium or low levels of thorium in it’s deposit?
If you’ve got thorium where does it report to? If its recovered as
thorite you can extract and deal with it separately - it doesn’t have
to go into a tailings pond. Look very closely at the drill tables companies publish
on their websites. Ratios of thorium versus REEs usually remain constant - if
you see a spike in thorium levels you will almost
always see a spike in REE levels. If there’s a spike in thorium without
a spike in REEs then your thorium might be recovered as thorite.
How radioactive
is the concentrated ore and waste? Will the company be classified as mining
radioactive material if it gets that far? Over a certain rad count in British
Columbia – in many other places as well – and you start playing in
a whole different ballpark as far as mining and the environment are
concerned.
Three
Hour Tour
A few analyst
reports have been published that say the REE market will be saturated within
a few years because of a huge increase in production expected from new mines
coming on stream. As of yet none of these mines are on stream - some have
been going into production next year for the last several years – and
are today still raising money for “production”, still
haven’t done a preliminary economic study (PEA), a pre-feasibility or
feasibility studies, have no economic reserves, have no permits and have
published no realistic estimates of mining costs or even a metallurgical
report.
Source IMCOA
Many of the
deposits being counted on for near and mid-term supply simply don’t, in
this authors opinion, have the mineralogy and/or the necessary close by
infrastructure to compete in the market.
The
Future
The future for
some of our junior company’s REE deposits (the ones with the right
mineralogy and that are of sufficient tonnage) will be end users securing off
take agreements or buying a company’s REE deposit outright to have security of supply.
Spending 200 or
more million dollars for outright ownership of a deposit, or doing a
strategic financing to get the deposit into production for an off take
agreement is very little money upfront to take so much security of supply
risk off the table for a major high tech manufacturing company or a value
added rare earths producer.
Conclusion
The
opportunities in the junior REE sector are significant. But the junior
population is quite large - there are literally hundreds of stocks to choose
from that want your dollars.
There is a steep
learning curve and there are serious risks – great rewards come hand in
hand with great risk. You must be prepared to do your own due diligence and
uncover the opportunities.
You must be able
to evaluate these opportunities, pay regular attention to your portfolio,
manage the risk and take responsibility for your own decisions.
Fish, in their
album “Vigil in a Wilderness of Mirrors” sang:
I keep a
vigil in a wilderness
of mirrors
Where nothing here is ever
what it seems
Good advice.
Is the REE junior resource sector, with its immense opportunity, on your
radar screen?
If not, maybe it
should be.
Richard Mills
Aheadoftheherd.com
If you're
interested in learning more about the junior resource market please come and
visit Richard at www.aheadoftheherd.com. Membership is free, no credit card or personal
information is asked for.
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