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Rare Element Resources Ltd
Symbol RES
Shares Issued 44,096,674
Close 2012-01-03 C$ 3.59
Market Cap C$ 158,307,060
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Rare Element's Bear Lodge at 6.2 Mt of 3.75% REO M+I

2012-01-04 09:25 ET - News Release

Dr. Donald Ranta reports

RARE ELEMENT REPORTS 38 PERCENT INCREASE OF M & I RARE-EARTH MINERAL RESOURCES AT BEAR LODGE

Rare Element Resources Ltd. has released the results of an updated NI 43-101-compliant mineral resource estimate of rare-earth elements plus yttrium contained in three deposits located in the Bull Hill area of the Bear Lodge project, Wyoming. The updated resource estimate of the Bull Hill deposit consists of 6.8 million tons (6.2 million metric tonnes) averaging 3.75 per cent rare-earth oxides in measured and indicated categories, increased from 4.9 million tons (4.4 million metric tonnes) averaging 3.77 per cent REO last year, both using a 1.5-per-cent REO cut-off grade. The associated table documents the inferred mineral resources, which have a substantial increase. The total pounds of REO contained in all the high-grade deposits in all resource categories increased by 26 per cent from 1.45 billion pounds (660 million kilograms) to 1.83 billion pounds (830 million kg). The interim resource estimate of the M and I categories of Bull Hill was provided for inclusion in the company's current preliminary feasibility study. However, it includes less than half of the new assay results from holes drilled in 2011. The resources estimate will be updated again by the end of the second quarter of 2012, utilizing all of the 2011 drill holes. The mineral resources were estimated by Ore Reserves Engineering (ORE), an independent consultant.

"The Bear Lodge project continues to advance rapidly. The current upgraded Bull Hill resource will be used in the prefeasibility study, scheduled for completion in first quarter 2012. The company's 2011 exploration program completed a record number of drill holes, although the results of less than half of the holes have been received and logged. These interim updated results have expanded and upgraded the known resources, and discovered targets with substantial potential for defining additional rare-earth resources with significant middle and heavy REE enrichment. We will continue pilot plant metallurgical tests this year and expand our REO separation testing. With the anticipated completion of a positive prefeasibility study, we will begin working immediately on a feasibility study of the Bear Lodge project. The company is also transitioning to a management and operations team of highly skilled engineers and mining professionals," stated Dr. Don Ranta, chairman of Rare Element Resources.

The new resource estimate is derived from an REE database that includes 117 core drill holes completed by the company between 2008 and 2011. The estimate focuses on the dike sets in the main Bull Hill deposit (including Bull Hill West), plus the Bull Hill Northwest and Whitetail Ridge deposit areas. In addition, the drilling indicates significant potential for expansion of all three deposits, for discovering mineralization in the undrilled areas between the deposits, and for definition of heavy-rare-earth-element-enriched resources in the East Taylor and Carbon targets, which were both drilled during the year. The total mineral resource estimate by ORE for the three deposits is summarized in the associated tables at a range of cut-off grades and for the different oxidation zones, including the oxide, oxide-carbonate, transitional and sulphide/unoxidized zones.

 TOTAL MEASURED AND INDICATED TONS AND GRADE OF THE VARIOUS OXIDIZED ZONES

                        Oxide             Oxide-carb.         Total oxidized
Cut-off grade       Tons     Grade       Tons     Grade       Tons     Grade
(%REO)                (M)    (%REO)        (M)    (%REO)        (M)    (%REO)

0.5                 14.7      1.51       6.18      2.29       20.8      1.74
1                    5.2      2.99        3.8      3.27        9.0      3.11
1.5                  3.6      3.84        3.2      3.65        6.8      3.75
2                    3.0      4.20        3.0      3.81        6.0      4.01
2.5                  2.3      4.86        2.5      4.11        4.7      4.47
3                    1.7      5.59        1.9      4.50        3.6      5.01
3.5                  1.3      6.24        1.4      4.98        2.7      5.59
4                    1.0      6.94        1.0      5.50        2.0      6.24
4.5                  0.8      7.56        0.7      6.05        1.5      6.88
5                    0.7      8.09        0.5      6.67        1.2      7.53

                                                                           
       TOTAL INFERRED TONS AND GRADE OF THE VARIOUS OXIDATION ZONES

                       Oxide              Oxide-carb.        Total oxidized
Cut-off grade      Tons     Grade       Tons     Grade       Tons     Grade
(%REO)               (M)    (%REO)        (M)    (%REO)        (M)    (%REO)

0.5                54.6      1.08       24.5      1.38       79.1      1.18
1.0                15.4      2.12       10.9      2.22       26.2      2.16
1.5                 9.5      2.72        7.0      2.80       16.5      2.76
2.0                 6.4      3.21        5.4      3.10       11.8      3.16
2.5                 3.9      3.80        3.9      3.44        7.8      3.62
3.0                 2.3      4.57        2.4      3.90        4.7      4.23
3.5                 1.3      5.58        1.4      4.33        2.8      4.93
4.0                 0.9      6.30        0.9      4.68        1.9      5.50
4.5                 0.8      6.66        0.5      5.02        1.3      6.02
5.0                 0.7      6.98        0.2      5.52        0.9      6.65

                   Transitional            Sulphide              Total
Cut-off grade      Tons     Grade       Tons     Grade       Tons     Grade
(%REO)               (M)    (%REO)        (M)    (%REO)        (M)    (%REO)

0.5                 4.4      1.42       30.7      1.10      114.2      1.17
1.0                 1.8      2.50        8.4      2.29       36.4      2.21
1.5                 1.4      2.90        6.3      2.65       24.2      2.74
2.0                 1.2      3.08        4.7      2.94       17.7      3.10
2.5                 0.9      3.40        2.7      3.46       11.3      3.57
3.0                 0.5      3.94        1.6      3.99        6.7      4.15
3.5                 0.3      4.43        1.0      4.38        4.1      4.75
4.0                 0.2      4.80        0.6      4.88        2.6      5.31
4.5                 0.1      5.19        0.4      5.14        1.8      5.78
5.0                 0.1      5.57        0.2      5.48        1.2      6.38

                                                                          
                       RESOURCE ESTIMATES AND CONTAINED REO FOR THE THREE INDIVIDUAL DEPOSITS

Resource                     Cut-off      Bull Hill      Bull Hill NW    Whitetail R.               Total
class                          grade    Tons    Grade    Tons    Grade   Tons     Grade    Tons     Grade     REO
                  Oxidation    (%REO)     (M)   (%REO)     (M)   (%REO)    (M)    (%REO)     (M)    (%REO)   (Mlb)

M and I               Oxide      1.5     3.6     3.84       -        -      -         -     3.6      3.84     273
            Oxide+carbonate      1.5     3.2     3.65       -        -      -         -     3.2      3.65     235
             Total oxidized      1.5     6.8     3.75       -        -      -         -     6.8      3.75     508
Inferred              Oxide      1.5     6.4     2.79     1.2     2.53    1.9      2.62     9.5      2.72     517
            Oxide+carbonate      1.5     5.5     2.98     0.1     2.30    1.4      2.17     7.0      2.80     392
             Total oxidized      1.5    11.8     2.88     1.3     2.51    3.4      2.43    16.5      2.76     909
                 Transition      1.5     1.3     2.96     0.1     2.36    0.0      2.20     1.4      2.90      80
                   Sulphide      1.5     5.6     2.62     0.7     2.88    0.0      2.03     6.3      2.65     335
             Total inferred      1.5    18.7     2.68     0.8     2.63    3.4      2.42    24.2      2.74   1,323

The distribution of individual rare-earth oxides for the total measured, indicated and inferred resources in the oxide and oxide-carbonate zones are given in the associated tables.

                                                                                                                  
    DETAILED RARE-EARTH-ELEMENT GRADES OF INDIVIDUAL REO FOR MEASURED  
 AND INDICATED RESOURCES OF OXIDE AND OXIDE-CARBONATE ZONE MINERALIZATION   
                                                                            
Parameters and %REO                          Oxide   Oxide-Carb. Total oxide

Cut-off (%REO)                                 1.5          1.5          1.5
Tons resource              (millions)         3.56         3.22         6.78
Tonnage factor              (ft3/ton)         15.3         14.8         15.1
%REO                                          3.84         3.65         3.75
REO (Mlb)                                      273          235          508
%Cerium oxide                   Ce2O3         1.66         1.60         1.63
%Lanthanum oxide                La2O3         1.11         0.99         1.05
%Neodymium oxide                Nd2O3         0.66         0.66         0.66
%Praseodymium oxide             Pr2O3         0.19         0.18        0.187
%Samarium oxide                 Sm2O3         0.10         0.10        0.102
%Gadolinium oxide               Gd2O3         0.05         0.05        0.049
%Yttrium                         Y2O3         0.03         0.03        0.030
%Europium oxide                 Eu2O3         0.02         0.02        0.021
%Dysprosium oxide               Dy2O3         0.01         0.01       0.0106
%Terbium oxide                  Tb2O3       0.0039       0.0035       0.0038
%Erbium oxide                   Er2O3       0.0025       0.0023       0.0024
%Ytterbium oxide                Yb2O3       0.0015       0.0014       0.0015
%Holmium oxide                  Ho2O3      0.00123      0.00104      0.00118
%Lutetium oxide                 Lu2O3      0.00019      0.00018      0.00019
%Thulium oxide                  Tm2O3      0.00021      0.00018      0.00021

                                                                          
 REE GRADES OF INDIVIDUAL REO FOR INFERRED RESOURCES OF ALL MINERALIZED ZONES

                                      Oxide-    Total
Parameters and %REO            Oxide    Carb.   oxide Transition Sulphide   Total

Cut-off (%REO)                   1.5     1.5      1.5        1.5      1.5     1.5
Tons resource  (M)               9.5     7.0     16.5        1.4      6.3    24.2
Tonnage factor  (ft3/ton)       15.3    14.8     15.1       14.1     11.8    12.2
%REO                            2.72    2.80     2.76       2.90     2.65    2.74
REO (Mlb)                        517     392      909         80      335   1,323
%Cerium oxide        Ce2O3      1.19    1.22     1.20       1.28     1.19    1.20
%Lanthanum oxide     La2O3      0.74    0.71     0.73       0.78     0.73    0.73
%Neodymium oxide     Nd2O3      0.48    0.53     0.50       0.53     0.46    0.49
%Praseodymium oxide  Pr2O3     0.136   0.144    0.139      0.144    0.131   0.138
%Samarium oxide      Sm2O3     0.077   0.085    0.081      0.083    0.069   0.078
%Gadolinium oxide    Gd2O3     0.040   0.042    0.041      0.037    0.032   0.038
%Yttrium             Y2O3      0.029   0.030    0.029      0.021    0.017   0.026
%Europium oxide      Eu2O3     0.017   0.018    0.018      0.017    0.014   0.017
%Dysprosium oxide    Dy2O3    0.0107  0.0104   0.0106     0.0075   0.0063  0.0093
%Terbium oxide       Tb2O3    0.0034  0.0034   0.0034     0.0027   0.0023  0.0031
%Erbium oxide        Er2O3    0.0020  0.0022   0.0021     0.0016   0.0015  0.0019
%Ytterbium oxide     Yb2O3    0.0011  0.0012   0.0011     0.0010   0.0009  0.0011
%Holmium oxide       Ho2O3   0.00117 0.00117  0.00117    0.00082  0.00068 0.00102
%Lutetium oxide      Lu2O3   0.00015 0.00016  0.00015    0.00014  0.00012 0.00014
%Thulium oxide       Tm2O3   0.00019 0.00020  0.00019    0.00015  0.00013 0.00017

(1) REO (rare-earth oxides) include Ce2O3, La2O3, Nd2O3, Pr2O3, Sm2O3, Gd2O3,
Y2O3, Eu2O3, Dy2O3, Tb2O3, Er2O3 and other minor oxides listed in general order
of decreasing abundance in the deposits.
(2) The resources estimates are classified as measured, indicated and inferred
mineral resources as defined by CIM and referenced in NI 43-101.
(3) ORE considers a range of 1.0 per cent to 2.5 per cent REO cut-off grade to
be reasonable in estimation of potentially economic resources. A cut-off
grade of 1.5 per cent REO has been selected as the base case and it is
highlighted; a cut-off grade of 3.0 per cent REO is also highlighted to show
the higher-grade tons above the cut-off. Low-grade material above 0.5 per cent
cut-off grade is undergoing metallurgical testing to determine if a simple
low-cost process can result in its being upgraded.
(4) A detailed program of core sampling and bulk density measurement was
conducted successfully during the 2010 to 2011 drilling programs, especially
for oxide mineralization to ensure the most accurate data.

Resources were estimated using inverse distance weighting with grade zones to differentiate between high-grade and stockwork mineralization. High-grade mineralization was defined as a minimum 30 feet (6.1 metres) true width above 1.5 per cent for the main southwest area. Slightly different cut-off grades and minimum widths were used in other areas. Drill holes were composited to nominal 10-foot (3.05 m) true-width intervals for estimation. Grades were not capped, but oxide and oxide-carbonate grades were adjusted downward for estimation of the transition and sulphide zones to compensate for the significant increase in grade in the oxidized zones. Grades were estimated using trend surfaces to interpolate parallel to the carbonatite/FMR dike orientation. The resource model blocks are 10-foot-by-10-foot-by-10-foot cubes. Based on four-year average REO prices, the cut-off grade of 1.5 per cent REO was selected near the high point of a range of likely cost scenarios. As additional data are gathered, work will continue on the resource estimates with further evaluation and refinement.

Geology and mineralization

The Bull Hill deposit (formerly known as Bull Hill Southwest) contains the bulk of the current resources. The deposit comprises a steeply dipping FMR-carbonatite dike swarm with a dominant northwesterly trend. FMR refers to the major constituents of the highly oxidized, former carbonatite dikes that occur from the surface to 500 feet to 600 feet beneath the surface -- F (iron oxide) -- M (manganese oxide) -- R (REE minerals). FMR bodies range in size from veinlets to large dikes more than 100 feet in width and transition to carbonatite dikes as deep as 600 feet. In some portions of the dikes, FMR transitions laterally or vertically to oxide-carbonate dikes that retain some or all of their gangue carbonates and can occur from the surface to similar depths. The Bull Hill Northwest deposit shares many characteristics with the Bull Hill Southwest deposit. It appears that northerly striking mineralized bodies predominate. The dikes are part of an FMR/carbonatite dike system that is most likely separate from the Bull Hill dike system.

The Whitetail Ridge deposit is more enriched in heavy rare earths and is distinguished by a zone of FMR stockwork, some dikes and a coincident geophysical anomaly. The size of the geophysical anomaly (approximately 1,400 feet by 2,000 feet elongate northeasterly) provides an indication that the REE target may be larger than others in the district. Only a part of this target area has been tested by the company's drill holes. Whitetail Ridge is a key target for further resource development drilling during 2012.

The major dike sets in all of the resource areas are accompanied by peripheral zones of lower-grade stockwork REE mineralization. The term stockwork refers to a rock cut by a network of small veins or dikes that contain the mineralization. REE grades in the stockwork zones range between about 0.5 per cent to 2 per cent REO. The company is investigating low-cost physical processing methods to upgrade the contained REE mineralization in the stockwork for eventual inclusion with the resources.

Cut-off grade and metallurgy

The resource size is sensitive to an assumed cut-off grade, which is sensitive to metallurgical operating costs. The company is advancing its rare-earth metallurgical studies at: Mountain States Research & Development International, Vail, Ariz.; Nagrom, Perth, Australia; and Hazen Research, Golden, Colo. The objective for each of these testing laboratories is developing and optimizing an effective and cost-efficient metallurgical flowsheet. The metallurgical testing program will continue through 2012 on mineralized bulk core samples and surface bulk samples collected during 2011. Metallurgy of the FMR oxide zone is well established and has been reported previously. Metallurgical testing of the oxide-carbonate zone resource is progressing.

Mineral resources are not reserves

Mineral resources that are not mineral reserves do not have demonstrated economic viability. Mineral resource estimates do not account for minability, selectivity, mining loss and dilution. These mineral resource estimates are in the measured, indicated and inferred mineral resource categories. Inferred mineral resources are normally considered too speculative geologically for the application of economic considerations that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves. There is also no certainty that these inferred mineral resources will be converted to measured and indicated mineral resource categories through further drilling, or into mineral reserves once economic considerations are applied.

Quality assurance

The mineral resource estimate was completed by Alan Noble, PE, principal engineer of Ore Reserves Engineering, and is based on geological interpretations supplied by the company to ORE and subsequently modified by ORE. Mr. Noble is an independent qualified person for the purposes of National Instrument 43-101 and has verified the data disclosed in this release.

The company's field programs were carried out under the supervision of Dr. James Clark, the company's vice-president of exploration, John Ray, and by Dr. Ellen Leavitt, who is a qualified person for the purposes of National Instrument 43-101. A detailed quality assurance/quality control program was implemented for the 2007 through 2011 drill programs. The QA/QC program was organized by Dr. Jeffrey Jaacks. Dr. Jaacks and Dr. Clark have verified the sampling procedures and QA/QC data delivered to ORE. They share the opinion that the data are of good quality and suitable for use in the resource estimate.

A full table of significant drill results from the company's 2004 to 2011 exploration programs, along with maps and sections detailing the drill hole locations, are available at the company's website.

Markets for rare earths

Rare-earth elements are key components of the green energy technologies and other high-technology applications. Some of the major applications include hybrid automobiles, plug-in electric automobiles, advanced wind turbines, computer hard drives, compact fluorescent light bulbs, metal alloys in steel, additives in ceramics and glass, petroleum cracking catalysts, and many others. China currently produces more than 96 per cent of the 124,000 tonnes of rare earths consumed worldwide annually, and China has been reducing its exports of rare earths each year. The rare-earth market is projected to grow rapidly as these green technologies are implemented on a broad scale. Rare earths are critical and enabling metals for the green technologies.

Donald Ranta, PhD, PGeo, serves the board of directors of the company as an internal, technically qualified person. Technical information in this news release has been reviewed by Dr. Ranta, in addition to the others mentioned above, and has been prepared in accordance with Canadian regulatory requirements that are set out in National Instrument 43-101. This news release was prepared by company management, which takes full responsibility for content.

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