IDC invests R325m in Northern Cape rare-earths project | News24

IDC invests R325m in Northern Cape rare-earths project | News24


Manganese ore falls from a conveyor to a stockpile at the port in Port Hedland, Australia.

Ian Waldie/Bloomberg via Getty Images


South Africa’s development finance institution has invested $20 million (about R325 million) in a domestic rare-earths project which aims to help the European Union (EU) reduce its dependence on China for critical minerals.

The state-owned Industrial Development Corporation (IDC) is backing Frontier Rare Earths’s Zandkopsdrift project in the Northern Cape, the Luxembourg-registered company said in a statement on Thursday. The EU, which is working to strengthen its critical minerals supply chains, designated the asset as a strategic project last year.

The IDC’s equity investment is funding a definitive feasibility study for Zandkopsdrift, which aims to produce rare-earth products and battery-grade manganese from 2030, Frontier said. The statement didn’t disclose the size of IDC’s shareholding.

China currently dominates the processing and refining of rare earth elements, which are found in permanent magnets used in everything from smartphones, drones, electric vehicle motors, and wind turbines. The US, EU and others are trying to develop alternative sources of supply.

Frontier said that “multiple potential EU funding pathways” are “under evaluation” for Zandkopsdrift. The company also said it has signed an agreement with Carester, which will deploy proprietary extraction technology at the mine and process some of the future offtake at a separation plant being built in France.

Revenue generated by the manganese byproduct means Zandkopsdrift is “expected to be the lowest-cost producer of rare earths outside China,” Frontier Chairman Philip Kenny said in the statement.

The investment in Frontier’s local subsidiary “reflects our mandate to support projects that advance Southern Africa’s industrialisation and critical minerals strategy,” Rian Coetzee, IDC’s executive for industrial planning and project development, said in the statement.

The IDC has other investments in the mining and metals sector in companies including Kumba Iron Ore, ArcelorMittal South Africa, and Merafe Resources.

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