US Rare Earth Processing Plant Opens in Colorado - The continuing saga of reducing our dependency on China

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A new pilot plant that will process rare earth elements necessary for many critical U.S. military weapons systems opened in June, as part of an effort to end China’s monopoly on the important resources.

The pilot plant is a joint venture between USA Rare Earth and Texas Mineral Resources Corp. The two companies previously funded a project on Round Top mountain in Hudspeth County, Texas, which features 16 of the 17 rare earth elements.

“Our objective is to set up a domestic U.S. supply chain without the materials ever leaving the United States,” said Pini Althaus, CEO of USA Rare Earth.

The elements are necessary for the creation of a number of weapons systems including the Lockheed Martin-made F-35 joint strike fighter, Tomahawk cruise missiles and other munitions.

USA Rare Earth previously held two grants with the government. One was with the Defense Logistics Agency where the company successfully demonstrated high-purity separation of three rare earth elements, Althaus said.

The second grant was with the Department of Energy. The company demonstrated its ability to process high-purity separation of a different set of three rare earth elements.

“We built upon that work that we were doing and decided that we were going to open up our own processing facility … which was a decision we made late last year,” Althaus said.

Once fully commissioned, the plant will be focused initially on group separation of rare earth elements into heavy, middle and light. The final phase of the pilot will be the further separation of high-purity individual rare earth element compounds.

The facility, which is based in Wheat Ridge, Colorado, will also be involved in the recovery of non-rare earth elements with a focus on lithium, uranium, beryllium, gallium, zirconium, hafnium and aluminum, all of which are on the U.S. government’s critical minerals list.

Currently, China controls the vast majority of the global rare earth production.

Althaus said the U.S. government should pump more money into the production of rare earth elements domestically.

“There are ways to start small, … infuse the capital markets with confidence, enable companies to develop their projects here,” he said. “Hopefully we’ll have a positive outcome where we don’t have to rely on China for these materials.”
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This is really good news, I hope this project goes well.

Being able to have some semblance of emergency autarky at least for the military is absolutely necessary.
 
Sam O'Nella taught me that Thorium rocks.
 
I give it six months before EPA lawsuits shut it down. Honestly I’m surprised the lawsuits didn’t prevent it from opening period.
 
holy shit hurry up and make some drug factories too HURRYYYY THEYRE DROWNING
There's a lot of pharmaceutical manufacturing in the Northeast United States, especially around Philadelphia. But most of it is smaller scale for the purposes of research and development. On the plus side, the US has immaculate R&D when it comes to pharmaceuticals. The downside is that they hand the formula over to the Chinese every time they need it manufactured. An effort should be made to improve pharmaceutical manufacturing in the Northeastern states and then spread it outwards.
 
Between this and our buddies in Japan developing technologies to extract rare earth elements from their undersea sludge, the future is looking better and better for efforts to decouple from Communist China.
This cannot be understated. Once Japan can tap into that deep sea moneymaker they're going to experience a hot new economic boom. And we're their best allies. China won't get shit from it.

China made quite the Sabre rattling some few years back about some nonsense that the area the HUGEFUCK rare earth deposite is China territory originally and it is theirs by right. Japan told them to fuck off and shut up. Only its off the southeastern coast of Japan, well beyond any of china's territorial claims.

This will be a point of heated contention relatively soon because China needs an edge in manufacturing and processing.
 
I give it six months before EPA lawsuits shut it down. Honestly I’m surprised the lawsuits didn’t prevent it from opening period.
The government is the one pushing this, basically giving them all the exemption in the world to make it happen. The EPA lawsuits may very well happen, but not under the current administration
 
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