California rare earths miner races to refine amid U.S.-China trade row
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[August 24, 2019] By
Ernest Scheyder
(Reuters) - The owner of the only U.S. rare
earths mine is going on a hiring spree as it looks to significantly
boost production, part of a strategy to build out American refining
capability after China raised tariffs on the minerals amid an escalating
trade war.
By next year, MP Materials aims to be the first U.S. company to refine
rare earths since 2015 when Molycorp Inc, the former owner of
California's Mountain Pass mine, went bankrupt, executives said.
The mine has relied on China for rare earth processing, fueling national
security concerns. China is the world's largest processor and producer
of the 17 specialized minerals used to build weapons, consumer
electronics and a range of other goods. There are no known substitutes.
In June, China more than doubled tariffs on U.S. rare earths imports for
refining to 25 percent. On Friday, Beijing said it would add an
additional 10 percent on top of that tariff rate starting next month,
the latest tit-for-tat exchange in a protracted dispute between the
world's top two economies.
The Trump administration has labeled rare earths critical for national
defense and ordered the Pentagon to support domestic production.
"What China has recognized is that this is a strategic industry," said
James Litinsky, co-chairman of MP Materials.
The company plans to boost its headcount by next year to about 400, up
from about 200, and is already producing 68 percent more rare earth
concentrate than under Molycorp.
But that concentrate - more than 50,000 tonnes per year - is today
shipped to China for processing.
To resume refining in California, privately-held MP Materials is
spending $200 million to restart mothballed equipment at the mine and
build a large roasting oven.
"The tariffs are very painful, but we remain profitable," Litinsky said.
After processing, rare earths need to be turned into rare earth magnets,
found in precision-guided missiles, smart bombs and military jets. But
China controls the rare earths magnet industry, too.
Litinsky and peers are betting that by bringing rare earths refining
back to the United States, it will encourage other investors to build
magnets and other related parts in the country as well.
The mine originally opened in 1948 and has gone through a series of
owners, including Chevron Corp <CVX.N>, before Molycorp went bankrupt.
MP Materials also plans to re-open the Mountain Pass chlor-alkali
facility, which was built by Molycorp, Litinsky said.
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Heavy mining equipment hauls overburden material across Molycorp's
Mountain Pass Rare Earth facility in Mountain Pass, California June
29, 2015. REUTERS/David Becker/File Photo
The facility will recycle wastewater and produce hydrochloric acid and caustic
soda to use in the rare earths separation process, saving the facility the added
cost of buying the chemicals on the open market.
The company's new roaster will bake rare earth ore at high temperatures to
effectively leach out the high-value minerals.
'SMART PLAY, CHINA'
It's not clear if the group will be able to re-start the processing equipment by
next year or instead will face delays common in construction projects.
"Call me cynical, but history just shows if you look back on metals projects,
most don't start when they were slated to come online," said Mark Seddon, an
Argus metals analyst.
Once the refining equipment does switch online, the goal is to use that material
on site to make more than 5,000 tonnes per year of neodymium and praseodymium (NdPr),
two of the 17 types of rare earths that are used to make magnets.
Friday's tariff news means that MP Materials will need to find more customers
outside of China once it restarts its California processor, pitting it against
Australia's Lynas Corp <LYC.AX>, the largest rare earths miner and processor
outside of China.
Lynas CEO Amanda Lacaze has vowed not to cede her company's market share outside
of China.
"This will put MP Materials in direct competition with Lynas. Smart play,
China," said Ryan Castilloux, managing director with Adamas Intelligence.
MP Materials is majority controlled by Chicago hedge fund JHL Capital Group and
New York's QVT Financial LP, with China's Shenghe Resources Holding Co
<600392.SS> holding a 9.9 percent stake.
The group bought the mine out of bankruptcy in 2017 for $20.5 million, a far cry
from billions that Molycorp had invested in the facility over the years.
Litinsky says that despite the Shenghe stake, China has no control over Mountain
Pass or where its products will go.
"If the (U.S.) Department of Defense came to us and said, 'We need product,'
we'll sell there first," he said. "We'll sell wherever we want to sell."
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder; Editing by David Gregorio)
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