Australia’s Lynas inks US rare earth oxide supply deal

A small toy figure and mineral imitation are seen in front of the Lynas Rare Earths logo in this illustration taken November 19, 2021. REUTERS
March 16 (Reuters) – Australia’s Lynas Rare Earths said on Monday its unit Lynas USA ​LLC has signed a binding letter of intent ‌with the U.S. government to finalise a rare earth oxide supply agreement.
Under the deal, the Pentagon will allocate about $96 million to buy ​light and heavy rare earth oxide products from ​Lynas, with a floor price of $110 per kg for ⁠NdPr oxide, the company said.
Lynas said the letter of ​intent sets out a framework for a four‑year supply agreement ​supporting U.S. national security and supply‑chain resilience objectives.
The new offtake structure follows a mutual decision to revise the companies’ earlier agreement due to ​uncertainty over whether the planned heavy rare earth processing ​facility in Seadrift, Texas, would go ahead, it added.
“Through this agreement, the ‌U.S. ⁠Defense Industrial Base will continue to have access to Light and Heavy Rare Earth oxides that are essential for modern manufacturing,” Lynas CEO Amanda Lacaze said.
Rare earths, and the ​magnets made ​from them, are ⁠embedded in small but critical amounts across devices from iPhones and washing machines to ​F-35 jets, and power everything from EVs to ​military ⁠systems.
The deal comes at a time when the United States has been pushing to secure critical minerals and reduce reliance ⁠on ​China, which produces around 90% of ​the world’s rare earth magnets.
Lynas is the world’s largest rare earth producer outside ​China.

Reporting by Rajasik Mukherjee; editing by Diane Craft and Will Dunham

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