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They were thought to be in short supply: a recent US Geological Survey estimate put world reserves at 100 million tonnes. But now Yasuhiro Kato of the University of Tokyo, Japan, and his team have found the minerals in such high density that a single square kilometre of ocean floor could provide one-fifth of the current annual world consumption. Two regions near Hawaii and Tahiti might contain as much as 100 billion tonnes.
WTO rules China curbs on raw material exports illegal
Tue Jul 5, 2011
(Reuters) - China broke international law when it curbed exports of coveted raw materials, the World Trade Organization ruled Tuesday, in a landmark case threatening Beijing's defense for similar export brakes on rare earths. - Full Text
Too Costly?
It doesn't look very green. Rare earth processing in China is a messy, dangerous, polluting business. It uses toxic chemicals, acids, sulfates, ammonia. The workers have little or no protection. But, without rare earth, Copenhagen means nothing. You buy a Prius hybrid car and think you're saving the planet. But each motor contains a kilo of neodymium and each battery more than 10 kilos of lanthanum, rare earth elements from China.
China meets 95 percent of the world's demand for rare earth, and most of the separation and extraction is done here. So, the pollution stays in China, too.
Originally posted by OBE1
Similar to deep water oil drilling, extracting minerals from beneath the ocean floor at a depth of 6000 meters would prove to be both ultra-expensive and challenging. Not to mention that the requisite mining technology hasn't even been invented yet. Someday it probably will be...then add a decade before this specialized infrastructure is built, in place, and operational. By then, traditional land based companies like Molycorp, Rare Element Resources, Lynas Corp and other early/mid stage REE concessionaires will already be in production - with much lower capital requirements and operating costs. I think the market will suss these fundamentals in a NY minute.
The Japanese 'discovery' is a distant threat at best, at this juncture, more like hollow saber rattling against a backdrop of immediate, ongoing friction between China and Japan over Beijing's REE export quotas.
WTO rules China curbs on raw material exports illegal
Tue Jul 5, 2011
(Reuters) - China broke international law when it curbed exports of coveted raw materials, the World Trade Organization ruled Tuesday, in a landmark case threatening Beijing's defense for similar export brakes on rare earths. - Full Text
edit on 6/7/11 by plumranch because: Forgot to credit OBE1
Originally posted by eLPresidente
Let's look at the dense rare earths near Japan's ocean floor, first of all, how are we going to get it?
Is Mining Rare Minerals on the Moon Vital to National Security?
- The seemingly barren moon may actually be a treasure-trove of priceless resources: a potentially bountiful, mineral-rich – yet untapped – cosmic quarry. Still, few see the moon as an alluring mining site, ripe for the picking of rare elements of strategic and national security importance.
- Given all the mineral mischief here on Earth, the moon could become a wellspring of essential resources – but at what quality, quantity and outlay to extract?
- “Yes, we know there are local concentrations of REE on the moon,” Pieters said, referring to rare earth elements by their acronym REE. “We also know from the returned samples that we have not sampled these REE concentrations directly, but can readily detect them along a mixing line with many of the samples we do have.” - Full Text
In 1998, chemical processing at the mine was stopped after a series of wastewater leaks. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of water carrying radioactive waste spilled into and around Ivanpah Dry Lake.[7] In the 1980s, the company began piping wastewater as far as 14 miles to evaporation ponds on or near Ivanpah Dry Lake, east of Interstate 15 near Nevada. This pipeline repeatedly ruptured during cleaning operations to remove mineral deposits called scale. The scale is radioactive because of the presence of thorium and radium, which occur naturally in the rare earth ore. A federal investigation later found that some 60 spills—some unreported—occurred between 1984 and 1998, when the pipeline was shut down. In all, about 600,000 gallons of radioactive and other hazardous waste flowed onto the desert floor, according to federal authorities. By the end of the 1990s, Unocal was served with a cleanup order and a San Bernardino County district attorney's lawsuit. The company paid more than $1.4 million in fines and settlements. After preparing a cleanup plan and completing an extensive environmental study, Unocal in 2004 won approval of a county permit that allowed the mine to operate for another 30 years. The mine also passed a key county inspection in 2007.[5]
Current plans are for full mining operations to resume by the second half of 2011 as a result of increased demand for rare earth metals.[16] In December 2010, Molycorp announced that it secured all the environmental permits needed to begin construction of a new ore processing plant at the mine; construction will begin in January 2011, and is expected to be completed by the end of 2012.[17]