Commerce Resources: Faktenthread + TA + News
The issue of separation of rare earths is of particular importance to developing European supply. Separating concentrates into individual rare earths is technically challenging, costly and has a significant environmental footprint. The question whether rare earth mining projects embark on developing their own separation plants or cooperate with existing facilities is therefore a particularly salient one. Such advanced separation facilities currently exist in France and Estonia and overseas in China, Japan, Malaysia and the US. The existing facilities in Europe currently rely on the supply of concentrates from China and other minor producers (such as the US and Russia).
http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/policies/...facts-figures/index_en.htm
"the big deal is to perform the extraction of rare earth from weird minerals such as eudyalite or pyrochlores...rather than separating the heavies from a nice 99% HREE carbonate ? …."
http://www.techmetalsresearch.com/2012/03/...re-earth-projects-index/
Posted on April 10, 2014 by Jack Lifton
- See more at: http://investorintel.com/rare-earth-intel/...ed/#sthash.NT8tfDCi.dpuf
Al on September 24, 2014 at 1:29 AM said:
Good insight into the other side of the equation Jack. Having REEs in a previously processed mineral is more important economically and practically than most Juniors want to confess. They show % HREO not CREO and negate minerology. Even if you manage to produce a RE Concentrate of a mixed RE carbonate it still needs to process economically. Remember Rare Earths are not Rare, just extremely difficult to process. Looking for a RE company that near producing a PLS from a 44% concentrate (97% mass pull) read up on Commerce Resources CCE.V.
ROM 1.88% TREO – large homogenous resource. Low Th, Fl possible biproducts , simple flow sheet.
Mail von CG dazu:
Additionally, and back to the world of the REE’s, there have been two deals announced very recently and both of them need to be looked at in detail to see that they are a0 not the kind of deals that we are looking for, even if they are b) with well-respected companies who would be and are, viable JV partners still for us with the Ashram.
I am speaking about the “tolling” agreement between the Solvay Group and Avalon Rare Metals (TSX V – AVL), and then the MOU that was just announced last week between the world’s largest producer and processor the REE’s – China Non Ferrous Company – and Greenland Minerals (ASX – GGG).
These two deals are very similar in that a) there is no money coming from the major to the junior, and that b) if there is any money to be flowing, that it actually will go the other way around – that the junior will be paying the major to try to process their feed stock.
Again I will state very emphatically, that these are not deals that we are looking for, or would sign onto.
Finanzen.Net ist doch deutsch...oder?Ich befürchte die meisten sind des Ausländischen nicht mächtig.Also weiter bitte in unserer Muttersprache!
Mfg.ich
merlion on October 15, 2014 at 6:41 PM said:
Thanks Jon for the very good read.
My (not inconsiderable) experience in German Industry led me to understand that the German Engineer, the German Procurement Manager and the high-performance German Automobile require the right inputs. Make that ‘Dead Right’ inputs. They’re Sticklers! All of them.
Computers come to mind. If the input is garbage. So too, is the output.
And so it is with mineralogy. You may have done convincing reproducible lab work, but when the plant is built and the key is turned, you need output that will deliver convincing purity. All day, every day.
Prof. Dudley Kingsnorth went to Berlin in April 2012 and addressed the Deutsche Rohstoffagentur (= German Resources Agency) on the delicate balancing act of the rare earths industry.
Slide 27 of his presentation had this to say on the importance of mineralogy:
# Essentially 4 minerals have been processed over the last 50 years
# A new process could take 10-15 years to develop
# Finding US$1B for a new process will not be easy
I submit the German Rohstoffallianz might further specify: “Has the mineralogy been fully understood and applied for decades and does the mineral resource offer amenable processing that guarantees reproducible purity on scalable and economic bases.”
An amendment to point #6 to enunciate the need for time-worn proven metallurgy would be desirable. As you put it, “Almost non-existent remaining technical … risk” won’t satisfy the sticklers mentioned above in the first paragraph. And those sticklers will happily pay a premium for pure reliable product and guaranteed delivery on schedule.
http://investorintel.com/rare-earth-intel/...es/#sthash.TfbkIPrN.dpuf
George Soros holdings have to be made public but not until up to 6 months after the fact. As of June 30, 2014, funds managed by George Soros at Soros Fund Management were valued at $13.2 billion. During the quarter, Soros had 363 total positions.
TAS§Tasman Metals Ltd 0.87 others 57.815 1666666 1,600000$ O
http://stockmarketgenius.net/george-soros/george-soros-holdings/
Soros Fund ... 1.7M $1,609,324 2.5% owned of outstanding shares
http://apps.cnbc.com/...=US&uid=stocks/ownership&symbol=tsm.v
Tasman hat..... Eudialyt
freethinking on October 16, 2014 at 12:39 PM said:
and what is the Mineralogy of Jons 3 developer picks:-
Arafura Resources……. Apatite / Allenite / Cheralite
Rare Element Resources ……… Bastnesite / Synchysite / Monazite
Quest Rare Minerals ……. Pagmatite / Aplite
Bastnasite, Monazite and Xenotime (and Ionic Clays – China) are the only minerals that have been mined commercially to produce REEs
The chemical composition of these 3 minerals is far simpler than most others, allowing for a simpler process to be designed and mplemented.
This has a direct bearing on recoveries as does the liberation size which if too fine, is not amenable to yielding high concentration grades.
Jon it’s good to see that exotic mineralogy and high capital expenditures proposed by both Arafura and Quest, have not dampened your enthusiam.
Jon I have a question for you …. how do you think Arafura will raise the money required to complete their bankable feasibility study, and has it ever occured to you that if a company cannot raise the capital merely for the bankable feasibility study, then what are the likely chances of raising capital expendiure for project development?
- See more at: http://investorintel.com/rare-earth-intel/...-evolves/#comment-350595
Gruß, Smy
- See more at: [url]http://investorintel.com/rare-earth-intel/...hash.ZVwEdTRK.dpuf[/url]
Dazu Gavin Lockyer, Managing Direktor, Arafura:
2. The processing route (again outlined in all our public documentation) is to mine, beneficiate and process the ore to a mixed rare earth product in Australia which is then shipped to an offshore facility co-located with relevant raw material suppliers ie: HCl and NaOh for downstream processing into the products mentioned above. For the purposes of NPV and CAPEX/OPEX figures we have utilised the Gulf Coast USA as a basis. These costs (including the separation plant) are all considered in the numbers we have released to the market. These products will be available for our customers globally.
Kosten des Projekts 1,2 Milliarden$
Finders' fees: Secutor Capital Management Corp. received $352,690 and 383,801 non-transferable warrants. Marquest Capital Markets received 383,801 non-transferable warrants. EMD Financial Inc. received 121,875 non-transferable warrants. Caldwell Securities received 121,875 non-transferable warrants. Accilent Capital Management Inc. received 4,900 non-transferable warrants. Canaccord Genuity Corp. received $26,000 and 26,250 non-transferable warrants. Each warrant is exercisable at a price of 24 cents per share for an 18-month period.
Sind ja ne Menge Firmen beteiligt gewesen. Haben die alle auch selber Aktien von CCE gekauft? Kann da jemand was zu schreiben?
"Matamec's filing of the first feasibility study technical report for a heavy rare earth project outside of China is an important milestone for the Company and the rare earth industry," said Andre Gauthier, President and CEO of Matamec. "With the second pilot plant well underway, the team is working on building stronger economics for the Kipawa project which we look forward to communicating to shareholders once finalized. Having developed one of the most advanced heavy rare earth projects built around the unique Kipawa deposit with validated economics has allowed the Company to more aggressively approach financial investors."
Building Stronger Economics for the Kipawa Project by Executing the Following:
1) Second Pilot Plant - Started beneficiation testwork September 24, 2013
-- Some overcapacities were built into the conservative design, but it
could be reduced during the detailed engineering, pending the pilot
plant results. The second pilot plant will also help to confirm
improvements in regards of recovery rates.
2) Increased Production Capacity - Presently evaluating different production levels from 3,653 tpa used in the FS to 5,072 tpa of concentrates used in the PEA
-- Depending on the RE market conditions, it will be important to continue
the evaluation and confirm the final production scenario in order to
optimize the IRR before detailed engineering.
http://www.finanznachrichten.de/...v-heavy-rare-earth-project-256.htm
Stephan Bogner:
Warum ist es so wichtig, eine Lagerstätte mit REE- Mineralen zu besitzen, die historisch gesehen bereits erfolgreich verarbeitet werden konnten?
Weil ansonsten muss ein komplett neuer Metallurgie- Flowsheet entwickelt werden, der beweisen muss, auf kommerzieller Ebene einsetzbar zu sein – typischerweise ein zeitraubendes und einschläferndes Unterfangen, denn im REE-Bereich ist dies schlicht und ergreifend meist nicht möglich.
2011 schloss Matamec mit Toyota ein Joint-Venture...Bis heute investierten beide enorme Geldmittel, um einen Weg zu finden, ihre jeweiligen REE-haltigen Minerale und Gesteine (Matamec: Eudialyt) rentabel zu verarbeiten – bis heute ohne echten Erfolg, da ihre Mineralkonzentrate mit weniger als 10% TREO in der Falle zu stecken scheinen.
http://www.rockstone-research.de/research/...oneREEupdate6deutsch.pdf
Schaut man auf Finanznachrichten bei Matamec vorbei, sieht man ne Menge trading halts aber keine News, dass sich seit 24. September 2013 ihre Gewinnungsrate aus Eudialyt erhöht hat. Kurs fiel in langjährigem Abwertstrend auf 0,05cad
Ferner gibbet das hier:
In the decree of March 5th, the government of Quebec highlights the economic and technological importance of the Kipawa rare earths project. It mandates Investissement Quebec, through its subsidiary Ressources Quebec inc., to subscribe to $1 million CAD in Matamec equity and a minority stake of $3 million CAD in the HREE Kipawa deposit. This investment is part of an investment project of $6 million CAD in which Matamec will invest $2 million CAD.
3.10.2014 Matamec Announces a First Investment of $1,000,000 With Ressources Quebec
zum Preis von 0,06Cad die Aktie
Wat soll man da sagen?!
http://www.stockhouse.com/news/press-releases/...h-trecan-in-the-hree
Smy
Lynas Corp has announced it will raise prices for its neodymium-praseodymium Nd-Pr compound as well as overall prices starting in January 2015 in three different pricing tiers with the increases ranging from 8-20% in order to allow customers to “better manage their raw material inventories.” Lynas will also introduce new products including separated Nd, Pr and LCP (Lanthanum, Cerium, and Praseodymium). The new materials offer customers a better variety of than what even the Chinese producers have been putting on the market. Lynas said that magnet producers have preferred to base their formulations on the Nd-Pr combination rather than Nd alone in order to cut costs. Given the atomic proximity of Nd and Pr, these two rare metals share many characteristics and many Chinese companies no longer even offer the two elements separately. Some industries, such as glass and ceramics, do need separated neodymium and praseodymium oxides and the shortage of supply from China has led to price increases, prompting Lynas’s strategy. Could the confidence of Lynas’s financiers be a sign of more profitable change for the rare earths sector in general?
[url]http://investorintel.com/rare-earth-intel/...ting-license-lamp/[/url]
Lynas will nächstes Jahr die Preise erhöhen.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Weld
The Ashram Rare Earth Element (REE) Deposit is a carbonatite within the Eldor Property.
Ach un Tantal un Niob solls da auch geben.
http://www.commerceresources.com/s/...eralization-at-the-Ashram-Ra...