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American Resources Policy Network
Promoting the development of American mineral resources.
  • Happy Rhenium Month!

    In light of the recently announced investment deal between Molymet of Chile and U.S. Rare Earths miner Molycorp, which has significant strategic implications outlined by our very own Daniel McGroarty this weekend, it is only fitting that American Resources continues our ongoing educational campaign to highlight the breadth of U.S. mineral needs by designating “rhenium” as metal of the month for February.

    Rhenium is a specialty metal highly relevant to the aviation industry as part of high-temperature superalloys used in the manufacture of jet engines, as well as the chemical industry.  While not a Rare Earth Element (REE) itself, rhenium is extremely scarce in the earth’s crust and is almost exclusively recovered in very limited quantities as a byproduct of molybdenum and copper refinement.

    With the U.S.’s foreign import dependency rate currently standing at 86% for its rhenium supply and China and Kazakhstan topping the list of our foreign supplier nations, the element has all the makings of a critical mineral from a U.S. point of view.  The Department of Defense (DoD) has taken note, the question is – will our policy makers?

    Stay tuned for more for rhenium-related updates on blog, as well as on Twitter and Facebook throughout the month of February.

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  • From rare earths to rare metals: Molymet takes a stake in Molycorp

    American Resources followers know their Rare Earths from their rare metals, and that distinction is key to understanding a strategic investment that’s getting a lot of attention right now: Molymet of Chile’s $390 million investment in Molycorp, the U.S. Rare Earths miner. But while most analysts are looking for the commercial synergies in the deal, I’m intrigued by what it might tell us about the evolution of U.S. public policy on strategic metals.

    What do I mean? Many metals analysts speak often of Molycorp’s mine-to-magnets vertical integration strategy; what I find interesting in the Molymet deal is the first hint of what might be a “horizontal” strategy, bringing into one company a basket of strategic metals, ranging from Molycorp’s Rare Earths to Molymet’s Rhenium and Molybdenum.

    While Rare Earths, Rhenium and Molybdenum have not historically been a part of the U.S. National Defense Stockpile, all are on various DoD “study lists” of critical materials, and the establishment of a Rare Earths “inventory” is an element in Congressman Mike Coffman’s proposed bill. According to the new USGS Mineral Commodities Survey, the U.S. is 86% foreign-dependent for its Rhenium supply; Rhenium can be recovered during Molybdenum production. And as we know, even with the return of mining at Molycorp’s Mountain Pass Mine, the U.S. is still more than 99% dependent on China for its Rare Earths. (Interestingly, the Molymet investment brings Molycorp full circle, as it bought the Mountain Pass property in 1950 to mine for Molybdenum, light years before the mini-computer/Internet era tech boom would vault Rare Earths into high demand.)

    Wheels are turning in the defense industrial sector on how to source critical metals. While public policy coalesces, the Molycorp-Molymet deal may offer a first hint from the private sector on how a multi-metal mining operation might position itself to meet strategic resource needs. American Resources will follow the policy debate for signs that awareness on the strategic resource issue is beginning to grow.

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  • ARPN to testify on metals, minerals policy challenges before U.S. House Subcommittee

    Tuesday, May 24th at 9:00 a.m. EST, I will be testifying on behalf of ARPN before the House Committee on Natural Resources’ Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources, which is holding a hearing on the issue of “domestic minerals supplies and demands in a time of foreign supply disruption.” Download and read the release announcing [...]

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