Rare earths ore production continues to ramp up at Vital Metals’ Nechalacho Mine

In the rare earths’ business junior miners need to work with off-take partners to find and meet very strict product qualification requirements. These are specialty products, especially when it comes to the high value magnet rare earths used in electric motors for electric vehicles (EV). All of this takes time.

What this means for investors is that it is wise to first check a rare earths junior’s partnerships and off-take relationships before investing. This is because the off-take partners will be very selective as they need a high spec product (low impurity, etc) and those juniors that have succeeded in securing off-take agreements are well on their way to success. The juniors still have to successfully ramp up their production of the ‘at spec material’, but if successful can then fully qualify their product and hence stand the best chance at progressing to larger scale production. The process can take years not months.

One company doing the above is Vital Metals Limited (ASX: VML) (Vital). Vital has an off-take agreement with REEtec in Norway and another with Ucore in the USA. In both cases, Vital is working with them to develop a qualified end product at commercial scale that can then be sold to end-use customers.

Rare earths ore production continues to ramp up at Vital’s Nechalacho Mine

Vital is already mining (lifting, crushing and sorting ore are performing well) at its Nechalacho’ Mine in Canada’s Northwest Territories (NWT). The Nechalacho Mine is a high grade, light rare earth (bastnaesite) project with a world class resource of 94.7Mt at 1.46% REO (M& I, and Inferred). Nechalacho’s North T Zone hosts a high-grade resource of 101,000 tons at 9.01% LREO (2.2% NdPr) and is where mining from a starter pit began in 2021 (Stage 1). Stage 2 will involve the development of the much larger Tardiff deposit.

Further ore processing is to be done at Vital’s, under construction, Saskatoon cracking and leaching facility once completed, with first product expected by June 2022. Vital aims to produce a minimum of 5,000 tons of contained REO by 2025 from the Nechalacho Mine.

Construction is underway on Vital’s rare earth extraction facility in Saskatoon. Dense Media Separator (right) to be used in the extraction process

Source: Vital Metals September 2021 Quarterly Report

Vital states: “More than $120 million has been spent by previous owners on drilling, permitting and project development at Nechalacho, which includes a 40-person camp and airstrip. Vital aims to be the largest independent supplier of clean mixed rare earth feedstock outside China.”

Vital’s off-take agreements

  • Vital has a binding off-take agreement with Norwegian company REEtec for Stage 1 production with the supply of 1,000t REO (ex-Cerium)/yr for an initial five-year period. This was later increased to rare earth carbonate product containing a minimum of 750t NdPr, contained within 2,000t/year total rare earth oxides (TREO) with a maximum of 25% cerium. The amended agreement extends Vital’s product sales to REEtec to 2028 and provides the option to further expand operations during an additional 10 year long term supply agreement to provide up to 2,500t NdPr per annum contained within ~6,800 tonnes TREO (containing a maximum 25% cerium). It also means that the increase to 2,000t/year equates to 75% of Vital’s expanded Saskatoon plant capacity.
  • Non-binding MOU with Ucore Rare Metals Inc. (TSXV: UCU | OTCQX: UURAF) to sell to Ucore a minimum of 500t REO (ex-cerium)/year, commencing H1 2024. Vital to expand production to support a minimum of 50% of Ucore’s envisioned 5,000t TREO/yr processing capability (ie: 2,500t TREO/yr) by 2026. Customer acceptance protocols will include the supply of a sample (1-2kg) in Q4 2021 and with a 1t sample supplied in H2 2022.

The reason for the small initial volumes is that it allows both parties to scale together. As I discussed in the opening paragraphs, it takes time for miners to scale production of a high spec qualified rare earths product and for off-takers to go through their acceptance testing. The positive for Vital is that the process has begun with their two off-take partners, and a pathway towards full production and sale has been mapped out.

Vital Metal’s other projects

Vital is acquiring the Zeus heavy rare earth project and 68% of the Kipawa Project in Canada, from Quebec Precious Metals Corporation, for C$8 million, payable over 4 years. Vital also owns a second light rare earths project in Tanzania.

Vital states: “These projects have the potential to complement our light rare earths operations at Nechalacho and transform Vital into the only North American producer of both light and heavy rare earths.

Closing remarks

Vital Metals is the first commercial scale rare earths producer in Canada and only the second in North America, since rare earth mining was revived earlier in this century. Production began on a small scale in mid 2021 with ore crushing and sorting at the Nechalacho’ Mine in NWT, Canada. Further ore processing will begin to produce product from June 2022 from Vital’s Saskatoon cracking and leaching facility.

Off-take qualification of a scaled up rare earths’ product is ongoing with REEtec in Norway and with Ucore in the USA, but it can take up to 2 years. Vital will grow its production as its customers accept more qualified product. In other words, scale production with your customer, thereby being capital efficient in terms of Vital’s capital outlay.

The pieces of the puzzle are all in place for Vital Metals to build a significant rare earths operation. Investors with a little patience should potentially be well rewarded this decade as demand for rare earths takes off.

Vital Metals trades on a market cap of A$204 million.

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6 responses

  1. Tracy Avatar
    Tracy

    Thank you for the update Matt. Your timing was perfect, they put out the following news today – Vital Metals’ December 2021 Quarterly Report https://bit.ly/343cH8l

  2. Jack Lifton Avatar
    Jack Lifton

    Matt
    I think you have focused, correctly, on major supply chain issues often overlooked or misunderstood by juniors. One, is that it is the customer who specifies the product it will buy, and two, is that the product approval process can be very time-consuming. For example, magnet makers buy metals and alloys, and metal and alloy makers buy separated chemical forms, such as oxides, which, themselves must be transformed chemically into fluorides or chlorides for metal making. Each of these processes has its own specifications, and each metal or magnet maker also has its own proprietary “tweaks.” The 2012 junior nonsense, “We will make and sell a mixed con,” as a product strategy was and is ridiculous. I know that Vital and its off take “partners” are well aware of the challenges. I hope that the rest of the potential non-Chinese rare earth industry is also.

    1. Matthew Bohlsen Avatar
      Matthew Bohlsen

      Thanks Jack. Good to learn from you.

    2. Matthew Bohlsen Avatar
      Matthew Bohlsen

      Thanks Tracy.

  3. Rare Earths Investor Avatar
    Rare Earths Investor

    Thanks for the article. The MOU with Ucore is dependent on Ucore getting their own processes up and running, which as Jack Lifton points out is a complex and time-consuming enterprise, and involves Ucore themselves generating samples that their offtakes will accept to enable ongoing project financing.

    Clearly, the more immediate focus for Vital and her shareholders (I am – I think it’s important to indicate one’s interest in a company if held), IMHO, should be the European endeavor with REEtec. I am more comfortable with Vitals timeline here than relying on a potentially underestimated Ucore vision. Further, Vitals’ aims for HRE mining are futuristic and mining in TAN brings back Peak (and others) past and present memories.

    Hopefully, it is the more concrete REEtec developments over the next 2 years (maybe also some SRC processor news?) that will help Vital break out of its present locked trading range on the ASX.

    GLTA

    1. Matthew Bohlsen Avatar
      Matthew Bohlsen

      Great comment. Thank you.

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