The Borneo Post

South Africa rare earths mine hopes for boost from US-China feud

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STEENKAMPS­KRAAL, South Africa: It’s old, doesn’t look like much and is located well out the way in an arid part of western South Africa.

But the Steenkamps­kraal Mine may be about to become piping hot mining property thanks to some of the world’s highestgra­de deposits of rare earth metals.

“Steenkamps­kraal will become a very important source of rare earths for the global industry,” Trevor Blench, chairman of Steenkamps­kraal Holdings Limited, said during a recent tour.

The mine, located about 350 kilometres (km) north of Cape Town, used to produce thorium, a component of nuclear fuel, in the 1950s and 60s.

But now it’s been found to also have monazite ore which contains extremely high grade rare earth minerals including neodymium and praseodymi­um -- elements vital to cutting-edge industries.

Manufactur­ing uses range from tinted welding goggles to industrial magnets, strong alloys for aircraft engines, military hardware, hybrid cars, consumer electronic devices, medical equipment and even the flints in cigarette lighters.

China produces the largest share of so-called ‘tech minerals’, with a domestic output of 120,000 tonnes in 2018.

That’s vastly more than the US, which relies on China for about 80 per cent of its rareearth imports.

But now Beijing has threatened to cut off the supply as trade frictions mount, prompting US President Donald Trump on July 22 to give the Pentagon an executive order to find other sources of the crucial elements.

Rare earth elements are a group of 17 minerals unique for their magnetic, catalytic and electroche­mical properties.

For the first time since 1985, China last year became a net importer of some rare earths for its industrial needs, while the government cracked down on illegal exploratio­n and production.

Global sales of electric cars, which need the minerals, jumped by 68 per cent in 2018 to 5.12 million, with China selling over a million vehicles, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

“China may, as a result of its own requiremen­ts, just export less and less to the rest of the world,” Blench said.

Steenkamps­kraal Mine could just be the answer to growing demand, he suggested.

“About 14 per cent of this rock is rare earths. That is an extraordin­arily high grade and we don’t know anything like it on the planet,” Blench said, holding a small but heavy reddish brown rock.

Worldwide, many mines have around six per cent or less rare earths in their ore.

No mines for rare earth elements currently operate in South Africa, but the government confirms the presence of yet-tobe tapped tech minerals.

“South Africa is certainly on par with any other country that would lay a claim to being able to supply rare earths elements to meet this increasing demand,” said mineralogi­st Deshenthre­e Chetty at Mintek, a government mineral and metallurgy research department.

She added that it would be “a great deal for our country to be able to supply, and we are in a position to do so, as long as those markets are favourable.” — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Blench shows where the monazite reef (darker rock) containing the rare-earth minerals is, undergroun­d at the Steenkamps­kraal rare-earth mine, about 80km from the Western Cape town of Vanrhynsdo­rp. Steenkamps­kraal has been confirmed as one of the highest grade deposits of rare-earth minerals in the world.
— AFP photo Blench shows where the monazite reef (darker rock) containing the rare-earth minerals is, undergroun­d at the Steenkamps­kraal rare-earth mine, about 80km from the Western Cape town of Vanrhynsdo­rp. Steenkamps­kraal has been confirmed as one of the highest grade deposits of rare-earth minerals in the world.

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