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U.S. Sitting on Mother Lode of Rare Tech-Crucial Minerals (LiveScience.com)
Tue, 09 Mar 2010 14:25:33 GMT
China supplies most of the rare earth minerals found in technologies
such as hybrid cars, wind turbines, computer hard drives and cell
phones, but the U.S. has its own largely untapped reserves that could
safeguard future tech innovation.
Those reserves include deposits of both "light" and "heavy" rare
earths - families of minerals that help make everything from TV
displays to magnets in hybrid electric
motors. A company called U.S. Rare Earths holds the only known U.S.
deposit of heavy rare earths with a concentration worth mining,
according to a recent report by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).
Light rare earths include the minerals ranging from lanthanum to
gadolinium on the periodic table of elements, while heavy rare earths
range from terbium to lutetium.
Averting disaster
If developed, such deposits could help the U.S. avoid a possibly crippling rare earth shortage
in the next decade. China has warned that its own industrial demands
could compel it to stop exporting rare earths within the next five or
10 years.
"There is already a shortage, because there are companies that
already can't get enough material," said Jim Hedrick, a former USGS
rare earth specialist who recently retired. "No one's trying to expand
their use of rare earths because they know there's not more available."
U.S. Rare Earths practically stumbled upon its first rare earth
deposit at Lehmi Pass, on the border between Idaho and Montana, about
15 years ago. The company founders coveted the area's reserves of
thorium - an alternative nuclear fuel - and took little interest in the
rare earths that were only used, at the time, in lighter flints and
tracer bullets for the military.
Their view changed over the years as rare earths became practically irreplaceable in high-tech products
used by millions of people today. The company only recently changed its
name to U.S. Rare Earths after staking out another deposit at Diamond
Creek, Idaho.
"The fact is, the Diamond Creek property is today, the most
accessible, undeveloped rare earth resource with significant [heavy
rare earths] that there is in North America," said Jack Lifton, an
independent consultant who works with U.S. Rare Earths.
Recent USGS figures estimate that the U.S. holds rare earth ore
reserves of up to 13 million metric tons. By contrast, the entire world
produced just 124,000 metric tons in 2009 - but it would take both time
and money for the U.S. to become self-sufficient in producing rare
earths.
Deposits near civilization
The Diamond Creek location has the added advantages of being in mining-friendly Idaho and having access to nearby highways and power lines - factors that would make opening a mine much easier.
"We have power, light and roads, so we're not in the middle of the wilderness," said Ed Cowle, CEO of U.S. Rare Earths.
Cowle hopes to attract enough funding over the next six months to
do some exploratory drilling at his company's deposits. He also pointed
to growing interest from national legislators in prodding the federal
government to take action.
"Many times opening a mine takes a certain period of time, but if
there's a strategic need for material from government, that time period
can be lessened," Cowle told TechNewsDaily. "We're hopeful of that
because of the nature of what's in the ground."
An expensive proposition
Another company, Molycorp Minerals, has already begun processing
"light" rare earths, such as lanthanum and neodymium, from a stockpile
it accumulated at its mine in Mountain Pass, California. But it still
has to ship its rare earths to China for final processing, because only
China currently has the equipment needed for the job.
"No one [in the U.S.] wants to be first to jump into the market
because of the cost of building a separation plant," Hedrick explained.
The former USGS specialist said that such a plant requires thousands of
stainless steel tanks holding different chemical solutions to separate
out all the individual rare earths.
The upfront costs seem daunting. Hedrick estimated that opening just
one mine and building a new separation plant might cost anywhere from
$500 million to $1 billion and would require a minimum of eight years.
Lifton has also suggested that many U.S. companies have not jumped
into the market because China's state-owned mines keep rare earth
prices artificially low. But if U.S. companies do not begin mining
American rare earth deposits soon, they may be left scrambling if China
does one day stop exporting rare earths.
But Cowle, the CEO of U.S. Rare Earths, seems hopeful that momentum
has already begun building for the U.S. government to encourage
development of its own rare earth deposits.
"From what I see, security of supply is going to be more important than the prices," Cowle said.
U.S. Sitting on Mother Lode of Rare Tech-Crucial Minerals
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