Ucore Rare Metals Inc. (TSX.V: UCU) (OTCQX: UURAF)
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- Strategic metals supply chain enterprise Ucore Rare Metals Inc. has developed its own proprietary solution for separating rare earth elements from their host ores in hopes of re-establishing a North American base for the REE supply chain
- During an era of international trade tensions over computer tech asset sourcing, Ucore aims to reduce Americans’ reliance on China for the REEs critical to modern technology ranging from cell phones and computers to electric vehicle batteries
- Ucore’s RapidSX(TM) REE processing solution is being demonstrated as advantageous over industry-standard CSX processes in side-by-side testing at Ucore’s facility in Ontario, Canada
- Ucore is preparing to begin construction on a commercial-scale facility in Louisiana that will use RapidSX(TM) to process REEs within the United States
- The company anticipates additional commercial facilities in Alaska and / or Canada in the future
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in global supply chain disruptions on an enormous scale, challenging businesses to cope with product unavailability, customer loss, skilled employee shortfalls, rising infrastructure costs, economic inflation and other significant pressures.
Even as the deadly pandemic slips away into memory, supply chain security remains a pivotal concern as trade and transit tensions deteriorate into geopolitical conflicts across national borders, exemplified in the public consciousness most recently by the wars between Russia and Ukraine, and between Israel and its Palestinian neighbors (https://nnw.fm/Y3Uwm ).
Ucore Rare Metals (TSX.V: UCU) (OTCQX: UURAF), a strategic metals supply chain-focused enterprise, is dedicated to securing the supply of rare earth elements (“REEs”) vital to modern computer technologies in North America. The production and refining of REEs are largely controlled by The People’s Republic of China on the global market, and international tensions have served as a reminder that China’s supply of REEs could become costly and difficult.
The Mountain Pass Mine, a fixture of Southern California’s Mojave Desert, produces the earthen materials containing REEs, but it is the only one of its type in the United States and the mining of REEs is now recognized as a matter of national security by the federal government (https://nnw.fm/VCcgJ ).
Ucore is working with U.S. municipal, state, and federal government entities as well as Canadian municipal, provincial, and federal government entities to advance the company’s facility in Ontario for testing Ucore’s proprietary RapidSX(TM) processing solution for REEs, and a related commercial facility in Louisiana that will soon begin construction, according to SEDAR filings (https://nnw.fm/3iDb8 ).
RapidSX(TM) uses a slender footprint in place of the physically large and electrically powered equipment used for the industry standard REE separation flowsheet, making RapidSX(TM) more efficient and cost-effective for producing REEs.
Ucore is using its Ontario facility to demonstrate the advantage of its RapidSX(TM) solution over the industry standard, and the company will use the Louisiana facility to commercially work with REE feedstock, introducing a more America-centric structure for the supply chain. Currently, the United States gets 78 percent of its REE supply from China, and even the Mountain Pass Mine must send its mined REE feedstock overseas to be processed. The European Union imports 98 percent of its REE supply from China, according to Forbes, further highlighting the need for new sources and the potential for Ucore’s market (https://nnw.fm/7Qwpe ).
Ucore’s commercial Strategic Metals Complex (“SMC”) facility in Louisiana will produce 2,000 metric tons per year of total rare earth oxides (“TREOs”) by early 2025, separating heavy and light rare earth elements, and will grow to 7,500 tons in 2027, according to the company. To create a truly independent supply chain, Ucore anticipates the construction of further SMCs in ensuing years, considering Alaska and / or sites in Ontario, Saskatchewan and / or Nova Scotia.
The company owns a rare earth mine prospect in Alaska, and Ucore may bring it online at some future point also to produce mined REE feedstock.
For more information, visit the company’s website at www.Ucore.com.
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