16 April 2024
Rainbow Rare Earths
Limited
("Rainbow" or "the Company")
LSE: RBW
Positive Initial Leaching and
Mineralogy Results at Uberaba in Brazil
·
Uberaba phosphogypsum
material demonstrates good monazite liberation results, giving
indications of an economic process route to
follow
·
Due to the scale of the
opportunity at Uberaba, an eventual rare earths processing
operation could be larger volume than that envisaged at
Phalaborwa
NEWS
RELEASE
Rainbow Rare Earths is pleased to announce the
results of the mineralogy and hydrometallurgical test work
recently carried out on phosphogypsum material from The
Mosaic Company's ("Mosaic") Uberaba site in Brazil that is the
subject of a memorandum of understanding ("MOU") between Rainbow
and Mosaic.
As announced on 7 September 2023, Rainbow had
assayed gypsum samples from
different areas of the Mosaic stack, which were
sent to SGS Laboratories in Lakefield, Canada for testing. The
assays found to have the highest grade were those taken from
the most recently deposited phosphogypsum material,
which is the by-product of ongoing phosphoric acid production by
Mosaic at the Uberaba site. This material demonstrated a grade of
between 4,520 to 7,912ppm total rare earth oxides ("TREO"), with
neodymium and praseodymium (together "NdPr") being 24.7% of the
rare earths basket. The TREO grade thus being ca. 80% higher (based
on current phosphogypsum material from the phosphoric acid plant at
Uberaba) and the NdPr grade being ca. 50% higher than those at
Phalaborwa.
The Uberaba phosphogypsum stack has similar
characteristics to Phalaborwa given that both stacks are based upon
a hard rock carbonatite phosphate deposit. As such, the Uberaba
material is amenable to direct acid leaching, which the testwork
demonstrated can recover between 31% to 65% of the TREO.
Mineralogical evaluation of the leach residue
carried out at SGS Laboratories in Lakefield, Canada, has revealed
that 50% to 71% of the rare earth oxides are contained in
monazite.
Due to mineralogy, a complementary route is
being studied via hydrometallurgical and monazite concentration
test work at Mosaic's lab in Brazil that will allow for increasing
overall TREO recovery.
The phosphoric acid plant at Uberaba receives
its phosphate rock feed from long life phosphate mines which offers
the opportunity to recover rare earths from the current arisings of
phosphogypsum from the phosphoric acid plant. The stack still
represents a significant rare earths resource that can be addressed
at a later date should the current arisings become the focus of the
initial study.
George
Bennett, CEO of Rainbow, commented: "These initial mineralogy results are very positive because
they demonstrate that the Uberaba material shows good liberation
results that bode well for a potentially economic operation to
recover the rare earth elements. As anticipated, the Uberaba
material has similar characteristics to Phalaborwa and we continue
to expect that a significant portion of the process flowsheet and
intellectual property developed for Phalaborwa can be applied to
rare earth extraction at Uberaba. However, given the scale of the
Uberaba project, we could expect a rare earths processing operation
there to be significantly larger than that at
Phalaborwa."
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.