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Shenghe Resources Plans to Buy Stake in Peak Rare Earths

Shenghe plans to buy a 19.9% stake in Australia’s Peak Rare Earths, which runs a project in Tanzania, to secure more overseas resources amid surging prices.


A Canadian minister warned that the West cannot allow China and Russia to dominate production of critical minerals.
Global demand for rare earths is rising given their use in electric vehicles and many other modern commodities. Sina-AFP image of a mine in rare earths mine in China.

 

Chinese rare earth producer Shenghe Resources Holding Co Ltd said on Friday it planned to buy a 19.9% stake in Australian firm Peak Rare Earths to secure more overseas resources amid surging prices.

The stake, which will be sold by Appian Pinnacle Hold Co to Shenghe’s Singapore unit, will cost the latter around A$39.25 million ($28 million) or A$0.99 per share, Shenghe said in a filing to the Shanghai Stock Exchange.

Peak Rare Earths operates the Ngualla rare earth project in Tanzania with 18.5 million tonnes of reserves grading at 4.8%.

It also plans to build a rare earth refinery in Tees Valley, Britain with annual rare earth products output aimed at 9,900-11,600 tonnes, according to the filing.

Shenghe Resources said it is focused on rare earths resources markets both at home and abroad. “If the project can be implemented successfully, it will further consolidate the company’s foundation and optimize its global business,” it said.

Rare earths are a group of 17 minerals used in consumer electronics and military equipment. China is the world’s dominant producer of the metals.

Shenghe Resources currently has rare earths separation capacity of around 15,000 tonnes per year and processing capacity of 12,000 tonnes per year. It also has joint stake in rare earths mines in the United States and Greenland.

The Chinese price of praseodymium-neodymium alloy used to make super strong magnets used in EV motors doubled in 2021 and has already shot up more than 16% so far this year to 1.21 million yuan ($190,296.45) per tonne.

 

• Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Myanmar Strife Keeping Rare Earth Prices On The Boil

 

China’s Rare Earths Exports Rise To Seven-Month Peak

 

Rare earth metals at the heart of China’s rivalry with US, Europe

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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