18 September 2024
Rainbow Rare Earths
Limited
("Rainbow" or "the Company")
LSE: RBW
Update on the Phalaborwa
project in South Africa
·
Piloting campaign has
confirmed Rainbow's innovative process, paving the way for the
first commercial recovery of rare earths from
phosphogypsum.
· Primary front-end leach plant flowsheet
to produce a high grade rare earth feed stream has been subject to
extensive testwork and piloting, delivering an optimised and
simplified process flowsheet with a smaller footprint, with
expected Capex and Opex efficiencies.
·
Successful delivery of
neodymium and praseodymium (together "Nd/Pr") of ca. 96% purity so
far in the back-end separation pilot plant; this is confirmed by
market participants as a saleable product at a normal market
impurity discount. Rainbow team continues to optimise the process
to achieve the expected oxide purity of +99%.
·
The ongoing separation work
places the timing to deliver the Definitive Feasibility Study
("DFS") in H1 2025 at risk, recognising that the most important
objective is to deliver the optimal flowsheet for the project's
long-term success; guidance for DFS completion is updated to full
year 2025.
· Offtake discussions have commenced with
organisations looking to secure a strategic and ethical source of
the rare earths critical to the green energy
transition.
·
Longer-term, the honing of this
technology will allow Rainbow to access a much larger addressable
market in order to develop a long-term, scalable and sustainable
business.
· Further technical information on the
flowsheet testwork and optimisations is available at
https://www.rainbowrareearths.com/project/phalaborwa/
as well as in an updated
presentation which is available at
https://www.rainbowrareearths.com/investors/results-reports-presentations/.
NEWS
RELEASE
Rainbow Rare Earths is pleased to announce an
update on the Phalaborwa project in South Africa. Further to the
piloting campaigns carried out to date, Phalaborwa has
now produced its first magnet rare earth elements ("REE") in a
saleable form, paving the way for the first commercial recovery of
REE from phosphogypsum.
George
Bennett, CEO of Rainbow, commented: "I am very
proud of our team's extensive and hard work to establish and
optimise the primary front-end leach flowsheet at Phalaborwa, which
has delivered a simplified process to recover REE from
phosphogypsum versus that published in our Preliminary Economic
Assessment ("PEA"). While we have now achieved two saleable
products, being a mixed rare earth carbonate and separated Nd/Pr
oxide of +96% purity, we will continue to optimise our process to
achieve our target of +99% purity.
The supply
chain for REE is subject to excessive vulnerabilities due to the
dominance of China, who are increasingly demonstrating their
ability to restrict access to speciality metals. The geopolitical
risks have never been greater and we foresee that Phalaborwa can
play an important part in the development of an independent and
ethical supply chain of all four critical magnet
REE.
Longer term,
we expect that our innovative processing technology can be applied
to a much larger addressable market and we are currently evaluating
approaches for strategic partnership opportunities in Saudi Arabia,
Canada and India, along with our MoU signed with the Mosaic Company
("Mosaic") for the Uberaba project in Brazil and the partnership
with OCP S.A. ("OCP") and Mohammed VI Polytechnic University
("UM6P") in Morocco."
Primary
Flowsheet
The primary leach flowsheet represents +/−75%
of the Phalaborwa flowsheet and processes phosphogypsum to produce
a high grade rare earth feed stream for the separation
process.
The leach flowsheet as published in the project
PEA in October 2022 incorporated a number of important processes
including phosphogypsum washing, multiple stages of acid leaching,
fluoride removal via continuous ion exchange ("CIX"), rare earth
precipitation, a sulphuric acid agitated bake and water leach to
produce a high-grade REE stream for separation.
The leach flowsheet has been subject to an
extensive programme of bench scale and pilot plant leach test work
conducted at the Johannesburg facilities of the
Council for Mineral Technology ("Mintek"), aimed at supporting the
DFS for the project. This work has confirmed the efficacy of a much
simpler flowsheet, which maintains the overall recovery rate of
rare earths at ca. 66%, paving the way for the first commercial
recovery of magnet REE from phosphogypsum. The diagram below shows
the original flowsheet adopted for the PEA, with the coloured
blocks representing the processes and circuits that have now been
eliminated.
![A diagram of a plant Description automatically generated](https://dw6uz0omxro53.cloudfront.net/3173924/d6b9bdb3-be81-47c7-844b-f5b749b2b3fa.png)
The extended test work has allowed for the
identification and action of multiple optimisation
opportunities. The end result of these
efficiency measures is the delivery of a simplified leach flowsheet
with a smaller footprint, with expected capital and operating cost
benefits versus the PEA flowsheet, which already
showed strong economic returns across the rare earth price
cycle. This bodes well for the updated economics
of the revised flowsheet to be published in the Interim Report
before the end of 2024.
Rare Earth
Oxide Separation Flowsheet
The final separation flowsheet represents
+/−25% of the Phalaborwa flowsheet and refines the mixed rare earth
feed stream into separated rare earth oxides. This flowsheet has
been tested via a combination of bench scale ion exchange/ion
chromatography ("IX/IC") and pilot plant CIX /continuous ion
chromatography ("CIC") at the facilities of K-Technologies, Inc. in
Florida, USA.
As previously announced, the separation pilot
plant has to date achieved proof of concept with the CIC delivering
a separated NdPr oxide with ca. 96% purity. Market enquiries show
that this is a saleable product, with a normal impurity discount as
seen in other metals. Rainbow's team is continuing work to optimise
the process to achieve oxide purity of +99%, with the Dy and Tb
oxides to follow.
A review of the waste/recirculating streams
from the CIX/CIC test work has shown that the leach and separation
processes need to be integrated on the same site to allow for the
recycle of critical streams from the separation process to the
appropriate destinations in the leach plant and relevant disposal
of waste material. This has resulted in the decision to advance the
relocation timing of the CIX/CIC pilot plant to South Africa, with
the added benefit that the separation work can be the full focus of
Rainbow's technical team, which has already delivered excellent
results on the optimisation and finalisation of the primary
flowsheet.
Complementary bench scale IX/IC tests have
commenced in South Africa aimed at achieving +99% purity while the
pilot plant is shipped.
Next
Steps
The various workstreams required as part of
Phalaborwa's DFS are well advanced, but completion of the final DFS
is dependent on the finalisation of the separation testwork for the
project. This does place the timetable to complete the DFS in
H1 2025 at risk and the Company is therefore updating its guidance
to complete the DFS during full year 2025, recognising that the
most important objective is to deliver the optimal flowsheet to
ensure the long-term success and sustainability of the
project.
The Interim Report to be announced in Q4 2024
will update the economics of the Phalaborwa project reflecting the
optimisations delivered from the pilot test work campaigns to date,
footprinted against the PEA. The Interim Report will evaluate the
various product options currently available as revenue generators
for the project.
The Interim Report is expected to demonstrate
the resilience of the project economics in a variety of rare earth
pricing scenarios and allow for the commencement of the financing
process for the project in parallel with the completion of the
separation work. Despite the potential delay in finalisation
of the DFS, the Phalaborwa project development has been completed
in a short timeframe, and it is expected that the project will be
ready for development within five to six years of Rainbow securing
the project rights in December 2020. This is a much shorter
timeframe than would be expected for a traditional mining project,
which has an average development time of ca. 17 years according to
the IEA.
As part of the financing process,
offtake discussions have commenced with industry
participants, including original equipment manufacturers and global
trading companies, who share Rainbow's values and are looking to
secure responsible sources of all four critical magnet
REE.
Longer term, Rainbow expects that the honing of
its technology to recover critical REE from phosphogypsum will
allow the Company to access a much larger addressable market in
order to develop a long-term, scalable and sustainable business. To
this end, it is currently evaluating approaches for
strategic partnership opportunities in Saudi Arabia, Canada and
India, along with the MoU signed with Mosaic for the Uberaba
project in Brazil and the partnership with OCP S.A. ("OCP") and
Mohammed VI Polytechnic University ("UM6P").
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 that occurs as the by-product of
phosphoric acid production, with the original source rock for both
deposits being a hardrock carbonatite.
The Phalaborwa Preliminary Economic Assessment
has confirmed strong base line economics for the project, which has
a base case NPV10 of US$627 million, an average EBITDA operating
margin of 75% and a payback period of < two years.
More information is available at
www.rainbowrareearths.com