The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia rare-earth metals worth mining

Versatile minerals seen as strategic, but China still dominates market.

- By Matt Kempner mkempner@ajc.com

Operation in Charlton County is one of two spots in the U.S. producing and selling minerals.

A deposit of ancient beach sand in southeast Georgia is yielding minerals containing exotic-sounding elements that the U.S. government covets. Still to be fully worked out: Are they trash or treasure?

For Milton Sundbeck it’s leaning toward the latter.

In the last year, an operation Sundbeck owns in Charlton County near the Okefenokee Swamp quietly became one of apparently only two spots in the U.S. currently producing and selling minerals containing rareearth elements. His first shipment headed to China last summer.

For now, it’s only a sideline business, a bit of extra money beyond the mine’s main work.

But it is enough to give Georgia a teeny foothold in the turbulent global market for rare-earth elements, which U.S. authoritie­s have concluded are essential to the nation’s economic and security interests yet are vulnerable to supply chain disruption.

China dominates rare-earth elements. It has lucrative concentrat­ions in the ground and controls most of the world’s complex processing capabiliti­es for the materials. That kind of leverage worries U.S. officials who fear it could become a pressure point in trade wars with China.

The 17 rare-earth metals have helped feed a stunning array of crucial sectors. They’ve been used in night-vision gear, precision-guided missiles, anti-lock brakes, batteries, electric vehi-

cle motors, wind turbines, oil refining processes, smartphone­s, TVs, catalytic converters and more. They can be used to polish glass, serve as powerful, heat-resistant magnets and provide phosphores­cence.

Not a gold rush

The market for the material is volatile, the elements aren’t in rich concentrat­ions locally, and unlocking them from minerals is often difficult. The only other known U.S. commercial operation for rare-earth elements is Mountain Pass in California, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The site was shuttered for years, then re-opened, then filed for bankruptcy protection and recently launched anew.

Which helps explain why rare-earth elements have yet to spark serious expectatio­ns for a new version of a Georgia gold rush.

Recent Georgia State University research into rareearth concentrat­ions in leftovers at kaolin mines in Middle Georgia has been greeted with little more than shrugs from mine executives.

It’s interestin­g, but “not financiall­y or economical­ly feasible to explore at this moment,” said Prakash Malla, who directs research and developmen­t for Thiele Kaolin Co. in Sandersvil­le. Thiele participat­ed in the GSU study.

And in Charlton County, every batch of the slightly radioactiv­e minerals that Sundbeck’s Southern Ionics pulls out of its open pit mine near Folkston and partially processes up the road in Pierce County is another example of the nation’s challenges in establishi­ng a meaningful supply of rare-earth elements.

“That is not our target mineral,” said Sundbeck, who is based in Mississipp­i and has mining and chemical manufactur­ing operations in several states.

At his small Charlton operation, dozens of miles from the Georgia seashore, the focus is on titanium used in paint making and other processes, and zircon, which goes into material such as glazes for toilets and dinnerware.

A tiny amount of the local sand also includes minerals that encase various rare-earth elements with unusual names. Among them: yttrium, neodymium, cerium, lanthanum, praseodymi­um and gadolinium.

“We have just been throwing them away, but we just decided that long term it was in our interest,” Sundbeck said. “The prices have gone up. It is a nice little revenue stream for us.”

Their fourth 240-ton shipment of minerals containing rare-earth elements is about to be sent by train to the West Coast, then shipped to China for chemical processing that will unlock and separate the rare-earth elements.

It’s a modest start. “The amount we produce is insignific­ant in the world supply,” said Jim Renner, who directs environmen­tal stewardshi­p for the company’s Georgia operations.

The rare-earth connection has escaped attention from many of Charlton’s 12,500 residents, who rely on a rural economy tied mostly to timbering and the vast Okefenokee Swamp.

“We haven’t heard anybody talking about it,” said Matthew Cook, who with his wife owns the popular Okefenokee Restaurant.

James Everett, who chairs Charlton’s board of commission­ers, voiced surprise when contacted by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

“I have to check into that,” he said.

Southern Ionics only digs down about 25 feet. Tiny amounts of radioactiv­e elements, such as uranium, are naturally present in the sand.

Workers don’t have to wear protective suits when double bagging rare-earth-containing materials that look like greenish-brown sand, Renner said.

But the company has a radiation export license that had to be approved by the U.S. State Department. And if the materials were ever fully processed in the United States, the company would have to deal with radioactiv­e material that would be left over.

For now, Southern Ionics plans include mining in Charlton a few more years and eventually operating at another South Georgia site in Wayne County.

A misleading name and a volatile history

Rare-earth elements, it turns out, are not rare.

Thin concentrat­ions are fairly common around the world. The challenge is finding significan­t accumulati­ons that are economical­ly viable to mine, something clays in parts of south China offer.

Middle Georgia’s kaolin clays have only modest similariti­es.

Georgia State geoscience­s professor W. Crawford Elliott, who recently studied the rare-earth material around kaolin, still sounds hopeful that the elements will eventually become a financial addition to kaolin operations.

“Maybe five years or 10 years from now somebody figures this out,” he said.

Operators have another challenge with rare-earth elements.

Prices at the mining level tend to be much lower than what the fully processed elements go for.

The processed material varies based on the type of element, with recent per-kilogram prices ranging from about $1 to $300, according to Rod Eggert, a Colorado School of Mines economics professor.

In the last decade, prices soared amid concerns about China tightening supplies. Then prices plummeted as demand slowed and companies conserved supplies, recycled materials and sought alternativ­es to rareearth elements.

Demand for some rareearth elements could zoom again if the market for electric vehicles booms. And that might help the chances for Georgia operations, Eggert said.

“I think there is reason for cautious optimism in terms of rare-earth production from Georgia” and regional clay deposits, he said. “There is the potential over the longer term for that to have an impact on the rare-earth markets.”

Still, he pointed out that Georgia will be competing against new sources of the elements being sought around the world.

That includes U.S. Department of Energy interest in turning another kind of trash into treasure: scouring rareearth elements from the coalash leftover of power plants. Georgia Tech is among the universiti­es researchin­g the possibilit­ies.

 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF SOUTHERN IONICS ?? Minerals containing rare-earth elements are one of the products being mined by Southern Ionics in South Georgia. The minerals’ uses include night-vision gear, precision-guided missiles, batteries, electric motors, smartphone­s and TVs.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF SOUTHERN IONICS Minerals containing rare-earth elements are one of the products being mined by Southern Ionics in South Georgia. The minerals’ uses include night-vision gear, precision-guided missiles, batteries, electric motors, smartphone­s and TVs.
 ??  ?? The operation in Charlton County has become one of apparently only two spots in the U.S. currently producing and selling the minerals.
The operation in Charlton County has become one of apparently only two spots in the U.S. currently producing and selling the minerals.
 ?? SOUTHERN IONICS ?? In South Georgia, Southern Ionics has begun selling minerals containing rare-earth elements. The U.S. considers them important to security and economic interests but vulnerable to pressure from China, which dominates the market.
SOUTHERN IONICS In South Georgia, Southern Ionics has begun selling minerals containing rare-earth elements. The U.S. considers them important to security and economic interests but vulnerable to pressure from China, which dominates the market.

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