
5 February 2024
Rainbow Rare Earths
Limited
("Rainbow" or "the Company")
LSE: RBW
Update on Rare Earth Oxide
Separation Progress
·
Group separation of the rare
earth elements has been achieved in the initial ion exchange
test-work ongoing in USA
·
The successful achievement
of the group separation paves the way for the delivery of
individual separated rare earth oxides. A high purity neodymium
and praseodymium (together "NdPr")
separated rare earth oxide is the initial focus of the
back-end piloting campaign, with the dysprosium ("Dy") and terbium
("Tb") oxides to follow thereafter
·
Group separation for the
samarium ("Sm"), europium ("Eu") and gadolinium ("Gd") elements
holds promise and could provide a complementary revenue stream as a
combined oxide
·
Rainbow is attending the 121
Mining Investment Conference in Cape Town, South Africa this week.
A copy of the 121 conference presentation is available on the
Company's website at:
https://www.rainbowrareearths.com/investors/results-reports-presentations/
News
Release
Rainbow Rare Earths is pleased to announce an
update on progress with regards to the ongoing rare earth oxide
separation work underway at the back-end pilot plant, which is
located at the facilities of Rainbow's technical partner
K-Technologies, Inc. ("K-Tech") in Florida.
The back-end plant process utilises continuous
ion exchange ("CIX") and continuous ion chromatography ("CIC") to
produce separated rare earth oxides. The innovative application of
this established technology has been pioneered by K-Tech in the
rare earth space and replaces traditional solvent extraction
which uses toxic and flammable solvents and diluents and
requires more than 100 separate stages.
As previously announced, the optimal feed for
the back-end process has been determined by Rainbow and K-Tech as
a cerium-depleted mixed rare earth carbonate, which
provides a higher-grade feedstock to the back-end separation
circuit.
The initial separation at the back-end pilot
plant has been achieved using the mixed rare earth carbonate
successfully produced from phosphogypsum from the Phalaborwa
project. This material, which includes cerium, was previously
shipped to K-Tech from the front-end pilot plant located at the
Johannesburg facilities of the Council for Mineral Technology
("Mintek"), a global leader in mineral processing, extractive
metallurgy, and related fields. Cerium depletion test work is
ongoing at both K-Tech and Mintek and the cerium-depleted
carbonate, once available, is expected to produce better results in
the CIX / CIC separation circuits.
The back-end plant process comprises three main
stages, as depicted in the simplified CIX / CIC block flow diagram
to follow, being:
1. Stage 1: Impurity Removal
via CIX;
2. Stage 2: Group separation
via CIC (in two steps); and
3. Stage 3: Individual
separation via CIC (in three steps).
Stage 1 removes remaining impurities from the
mixed rare earths feed. Stage 2 then uses CIC to separate the
targeted rare earth elements (NdPr, Dy, Tb) into groups from the
uneconomic rare earth elements. Stage 3 purifies the
separated target groups into the individual desired separated rare
earth oxides.

A summary of the progress made with the
back-end flowsheet is as follows:
·
successful impurity removal in the initial ion-exchange step
providing suitable feed solution for group separation;
·
successful separation of the uneconomic lanthanum and cerium
group;
·
successful group separation in the first step of the
chromatography stage, delivering a NdPr group, grading ca.
68%, as feed for purification in the subsequent individual
chromatography separation steps;
·
considerable upgrading of the concentration of the Dy and Tb
from a combined feed grade of 0.9% to 14.6%, which requires
separation from the SEG group; and
·
good separation of the samarium, europium and gadolinium
("SEG") group at a grade of ca. 63%, which as a group provides the
strong potential for an additional valuable product line as a
combined Sm-Eu-Gd oxide concentrate.
The current focus of the pilot plant test work
at K-Tech is to optimise the second stage of the chromatography
process to produce a 99.5% NdPr product. This will be followed by
CIC testing to separate and purify the separate Dy and Tb
oxides.
In addition, the production of a separated and
purified SEG oxide product will be evaluated and followed up.
Initial indications are that Phalaborwa could produce ca. 500
tonnes per annum of a saleable SEG product which, in addition to
the previously announced off-take for the residual gypsum, provides
the potential for an additional revenue stream for the project with
minimal capital and operating costs.
George
Bennett, CEO of Rainbow, commented:
"I am very
pleased with the continued progress to date validating our
front-end process flow sheet and the K-Tech CIX / CIC process flow
sheet for the back-end. The back-end process is on track to deliver
separated high purity rare earth oxides of NdPr, Dy and Tb, the
four most economically important rare earth elements due to their
crucial role in the green energy transition. It is also notable
that we have achieved positive separation in the chromatography
circuit of the SEG group of rare earth oxides, which could add
another very saleable product and revenue stream to Rainbow at
minimal cost.''
The four rare earths that will be produced at
Phalaborwa - NdPr, Dy and Tb - are all designated as critical
minerals further to their important role in the transition to the
green economy. As vital components of permanent magnets, these rare
earth elements are used within electric vehicles and wind turbines,
as well as many other advanced technologies including those
required for strategic defence purposes, such as guided missiles,
drones, electronic displays, sonar and jet fighter engines.
The SEG rare earths are samarium (used in magnets), europium
(used in optical displays) and gadolinium (used in medical and
nuclear applications).
For further
information, please contact:
Rainbow Rare
Earths Ltd
|
Company
|
George Bennett
Pete Gardner
|
+27 82 652 8526
|
|
IR
|
Cathy Malins
|
+44 7876 796 629
cathym@rainbowrareearths.com
|
Berenberg
|
Broker
|
Matthew Armitt
Jennifer Lee
|
+44 (0) 20 3207 7800
|
Stifel
|
Broker
|
Ashton Clanfield
Varun Talwar
|
+44 20 7710 7600
|
Tavistock
Communications
|
PR/IR
|
Charles Vivian
Tara Vivian-Neal
|
+44 (0) 20 7920 3150
rainbowrareearths@tavistock.co.uk
|
Notes to
Editors:
About
Rainbow:
Rainbow Rare Earths aims to be a forerunner in
the establishment of an independent and ethical supply chain of the
rare earth elements that are driving the green energy transition.
It is doing this successfully via the identification and
development of secondary rare earth deposits that can be brought
into production quicker and at a lower cost than traditional hard
rock mining projects, with a focus on the permanent magnet rare
earth elements neodymium and praseodymium, dysprosium and
terbium.
The Company is focused on the development of
the Phalaborwa Rare Earths Project in South Africa and
the earlier stage Uberaba Project in Brazil. Both projects entail
the recovery of rare earths from phosphogypsum stacks that occur as
the by-product of phosphoric acid production, with the original
source rock for both deposits being a hardrock carbonatite.
Rainbow intends to use a
proprietary separation technique developed by and in conjunction
with its partner K-Technologies, Inc., which
simplifies the process of producing separated rare earth oxides
(versus traditional solvent extraction), leading to cost and
environmental benefits.
The Phalaborwa Preliminary Economic Assessment
has confirmed strong base line economics for the project, which has
a base case NPV10 of US$627 million[1], an average EBITDA operating margin of 75% and a
payback period of < two years. Pilot plant operations commenced
in 2023, with the project expected to reach commercial production
in 2026, just five years after work began on the project by
Rainbow.
More information is available at
www.rainbowrareearths.com.