Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Saturday, 7 December 2024
Rare earths refinery to receive $475m in government funding to challenge China's monopoly.
Anthony Albanese announced the funding during a visit to Australian Vanadium Mining company in Perth. (AAP: Richard Wainwright)
In short:
The federal government is investing $475 million in a rare earths refinery in Western Australia.
It
is aimed at increasing domestic refining of critical minerals, which
are key to technologies used in the transition to green energy.
What's next?
The
government hopes its investment will establish a sovereign supply
chain, given China currently has a near monopoly on the market.
Link copied
Mining
giant Iluka Resources will receive nearly half a billion dollars in
finance from taxpayers to develop a rare earths refinery, as part of the
federal government's efforts to set up a critical minerals supply chain
independent of China.
The $475
million — mostly in the form of a loan — will see Iluka's Eneabba
refinery produce rare earth oxides at an existing industrial facility
south of Geraldton in Western Australia.
Rare
earth oxides are used in advanced manufacturing of a wide range of
items, including electronic devices, batteries, magnets, metal alloys,
medical devices and defence weaponry.
China
has a near monopoly on the processing of critical minerals, prompting
Australia and other nations to invest more in setting up refineries
domestically to reduce reliance on China.
The funding for Iluka Resources comes from the government's $4 billion Critical Minerals Facility,
which provides low-interest loans to miners and processors of critical
minerals such as cobalt, lithium, nickel, manganese and rare earths.
Madeleine King said the refinery would support jobs locally and improve Australia's sovereign manufacturing capabilities. (AAP: Richard Wainwright)
Prime
Minister Anthony Albanese was in Western Australia to announce the
investment, describing it as a "really practical example of what we're
talking about when we're talking about wanting a future made here in
Australia".
"If we get this
right, if we get the transition to net zero, take up the opportunities
that are there in areas like rare earths and critical minerals, then we
can be even more prosperous in the future.
"But it will take a government facilitating that private sector investment."
Iluka
Resources chief executive Tom O'Leary described the funding deal as an
example of where "our own commercial objectives … have been aligned with
the policy objectives of the Australian government".
"In
Australia, and particularly Western Australia, we export a lot of
minerals but in terms of value addition and processing minerals,
particularly critical minerals, I think we've often fallen well short of
our ambition."
Resources
Minister Madeleine King said the Eneabba refinery would support jobs
locally and improve Australia's sovereign manufacturing capabilities.
"The
Iluka rare earths refinery will be one of a ribbon of rare earth
refineries going right across the continent, that together, will lessen
Australia's reliance on a single supply chain," she said.
"China
is ahead of the game. They've invested in critical minerals and rare
earths and solar panels and green technologies for 30 years. I take my
hat off to that investment. So, we need to step up."
No comments:
Post a Comment