Orlando Sentinel

Proposed Nebraska mine has up to $366M of $1.1B it needs

- By Josh Funk

OMAHA, Neb. — A mining company that wants to extract an assortment of rare elements from southeast Nebraska has announced an agreement that will provide up to $285 million to help cover the roughly $1.1 billion cost of building the mine.

In addition to the acquisitio­n of a special purpose acquisitio­n company called GX Acquisitio­n Corp. II that NioCorp announced this week, the Centennial, Colorado, company also signed letters of intent to borrow up to $81 million more from Yorkville Advisors Global.

NioCorp could get as much as $366 million to finance the project, the company said.

NioCorp CEO Mark Smith said “these transactio­ns have the potential to put NioCorp on the fast track to obtain the required project financing.”

The main element NioCorp plans to produce at the mine about 80 miles south of Omaha near the town of Elk Creek is a heat resistant element called niobium along with scandium and titanium.

The company has said analysis of samples from the site shows there is also a significan­t amount of rare earth elements there like the ones President Joe Biden wants to produce more of domestical­ly.

But it’s not yet sure whether it will be economical­ly feasible to also produce some of those elements that are used to create the strong magnets used in a variety of high-tech products such as electric vehicles and cellphones.

Biden has said the United States needs to reduce its dependence on foreign suppliers of critical minerals.

China is the world’s biggest producer of rare earth elements.

Dean Kehler, co-chairman and CEO of GXII, said NioCorp should be able to help with Biden’s goal if it can raise the rest of the money it needs to begin producing niobium, scandium and possibly rare earth elements.

“We believe NioCorp is well-positioned to be a reliable, U.S.-based supplier that will produce these products on a sustainabl­e basis,” Kehler said.

It won’t be clear exactly how much money this transactio­n will give NioCorp until closer to when the deal is expected to close early next year because some investors could pull their money out of the GXII fund before closing.

GXII is one of the risky shell companies known as SPACs that became popular on Wall Street in recent years before many of them fell out of favor and had to be liquidated without ever completing a transactio­n.

A SPAC is essentiall­y a blank check company

created solely to merge with another business to invest in it.

While SPACs are often used to help companies go public, NioCorp is already a publicly traded company, but this deal is expected to give it a listing on the NASDAQ, which would help it attract more investors.

NioCorp has been actively exploring the Nebraska site for more than seven years, and since 2013, it has raised more than $80 million to pay for its efforts.

The proposed mine is expected to create over 400 jobs if it is ever built.

The U.S. imports all the niobium and scandium and most of the titanium and rare earths that NioCorp hopes to produce.

There is only one American mine that produces rare earths now at a site in California.

NioCorp says its deposit of rare earth elements is second only to that Mountain Pass mine that MP Materials runs in California.

 ?? JOSH FUNK/AP 2021 ?? NioCorp Developmen­ts CEO Mark Smith talks to investors about prospects for a proposed mine the company hopes to build near Elk Creek in Nebraska.
JOSH FUNK/AP 2021 NioCorp Developmen­ts CEO Mark Smith talks to investors about prospects for a proposed mine the company hopes to build near Elk Creek in Nebraska.

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