Rare metals bring rare opportunities to mining

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A burst in demand for rare earth elements in everything from hybrid cars to wind turbines has brought investors to Avalon’s doorstep
Brenda Bouw Mining Reporter
Vancouver — From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
Published on Tuesday, Mar. 23, 2010 7:01PM EDT

Don Bubar was considered a bit of an oddball in the mid-1990s when he started a mining company that explored rare earth elements with strange names such as dysprosium, neodymium and terbium.

Today, his obscure industry is attracting a lot of attention thanks to an explosion in demand for rare earth elements for use in everything from hybrid cars and wind turbines to missile technology.

“It's been a long road, but we saw the opportunity with rare metals and stuck with it,” said Mr. Bubar, chief executive officer of Avalon Rare Metals Inc., (AVL-T2.540.072.83%) whose flagship Nechalacho project in the Northwest Territories is considered one of the largest rare earth deposits in North America.

http://fresh.bnn.ca/stock.aspx?pi_symbol=AVL-T

Not only has his company raised millions of dollars in recent years to help develop the $400-million Nechalacho project, but it is also positioning itself to take advantage of the new rare earth rush.

Like many junior miners before it, tiny Avalon – it has only six full-time employees – is leveraging its exploration expertise to develop a project it hopes will attract investors who will help finance it through to production, which is expected in 2014.

Investment bankers are knocking on his door, and end users in the auto and other industries also will be interested in hearing more after Avalon releases its much-anticipated pre-feasibility study with updated costs in a few weeks.

Today, investor interest in rare earth elements is growing as the United States introduced legislation last week to develop its own domestic supply.

Meanwhile, China, which produces more than 90 per cent of rare earths on the market today, is steadily reducing its exports each year to first meet its own growing needs first.

The increased demand for rare earths – which are also used in electronics, specialty glass and nuclear applications – has spurred the creation of dozens of new exploration companies hoping to cash in on the growing trend.

That is expected to create an oversupply of certain types of the materials, known as light rare earth elements, which are easier to find in the Earth's crust than heavy rare earths.

It is those producers who have a combination of light and heavy earth elements who have the potential to reap big profits in the years to come, according to Jon Hykawy, an analyst at Byron Capital Markets in Toronto.

“Most investors realize that the heavy rare earth element command the higher price because they are rarer,” he said.

Avalon is one of those players, and has a higher concentration of heavy metals than most of its peers.

“Avalon has one of the highest levels of heavies located outside China,” said Mr. Hykawy.

Still, the company has a lot of work to do before reaching production and faces risks such as contamination of its elements when mined, as well as production delays.

It also needs to raise more money to get the mine built and into production.

Avalon raised $16.5-million in 2007 and another $17.5-million last summer, when a lot of mining companies, especially juniors, were still having trouble raising money.

It plans to go back to market in the coming months to raise between $20-million and $30-million, which it will use to keep up its development plans over the next two to three years.

Avalon also owns a lithium development project in Ontario and a tin-indium-gallium-germanium project in Nova Scotia.

Other Canadian-based companies with rare earth projects include Saskatchewan-based Great Western Minerals Group Ltd., which trades on the TSX Venture Exchange and has a development in Africa, and privately held Molycorp Minerals, which is behind the Mountain Pass project in California.

Of the three projects, Avalon's Nechalacho proposed project is the only new heavy rare earth mine.

Original URL here:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repo...-rare-opportunities-to-mining/article1509694/


Avalon Rare Metals here:
http://avalonraremetals.com/
View attachment AVL-T.bmp

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"U.S. Sitting on Mother Lode of Rare Tech-Crucial Minerals"

http://www.livescience.com/technology/rare-earths-precious-metal-shortage-100308.html
 
Nice! ...pretty sure there'll be more where that came from... just something prospectors haven't turned their attention to in the past...

BTW, clicked on this link/site:
http://rareearthinvestingnews.com/feature-articles/360/us-gets-moving-on-rare-earths

...and got this popup offer for a free RE newsletter:


No idea if it's any good and I expect there're loads of other newsletters/sites around...but anyway
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