Mr. William Dawes reports
MKANGO RESOURCES LIMITED ANNOUNCES PILOT PLANT SUCCESSFULLY COMMISSIONED
Mkango Resources Ltd.'s Mkango Rare Earths U.K. has commissioned a pilot plant designed to produce separated magnet rare earths (neodymium/praseodymium and dysprosium/terbium carbonates or oxides) through a long-loop recycling process. Mkango U.K. is 100 per cent owned by Maginito Ltd., which is 79.4 per cent owned by Mkango and 20.6 per cent owned by Cotec Holdings.
The long-loop pilot plant received 70 per cent of its funding from the UKRI's driving electric revolution challenge, delivered by Innovate U.K., as part of the grant-funded project secure critical rare earth magnets for the U.K. Project partners include HyProMag, Bowers & Wilkins, European Metal Recycling (EMR), GKN Automotive, Jaguar Land Rover, and the University of Birmingham.
William Dawes, chief executive officer of Mkango, stated: "This is a significant achievement for the Mkango U.K. team. We considered it key to develop this technical capability, given that some of the HPMS product not suitable for short-loop magnet manufacture and all swarf produced by HyProMag will require long-loop chemical processing. This pilot plant enables us to determine the cost structure and carbon footprint of the baseline process, enabling the evaluation of different options for long-loop recycling on a commercial basis."
Nielson Beddoe, processing engineering manager of Mkango U.K., stated: "We're very excited to have reached this major milestone. This is a credit to our excellent technical team in Birmingham, and we are looking forward to the next steps as we progress through process optimization, scoping studies and evaluation of bolt-on technology enhancements. The development of the long-loop process enhances the technical flexibility to process different scrap streams, including swarf, and to produce a range of rare earth products. This strengthens ongoing customer engagement working closely with the HyProMag team."
Prof. Allan Walton, head of the magnetic materials group at University of Birmingham and founding director of HyProMag stated: "We are excited to see this additional capability for long-loop chemical processing brought to Tyseley Energy Park with the support of the University of Birmingham. Commissioning of the short-loop recycling plant is gathering momentum following commissioning of the commercial-scale magnet manufacturing presses in December last year, with infrastructure development starting in the coming weeks, and delivery of the powder processing plant and HPMS vessel expected in July and August, respectively."
Rare earth magnets play a key role in clean energy technologies including electric vehicles and wind turbine generators, and they are also a key component in electronic devices, including mobile phones, hard disk drives and loudspeakers. The United Kingdom has no domestic source of primary rare earths. The development of domestic sources of recycled rare earths via HPMS, a homegrown technology, is a significant opportunity for the U.K. to fast-track the development of sustainable and competitive rare earth magnet production.
Both long-loop and short-loop recycling technologies are underpinned by the patented HPMS technology developed at University of Birmingham, which liberates magnets from end-of-life scrap streams in a cost-effective and energy-efficient way to produce a recycled NdFeB alloy powder, which is manufactured into a magnet (through the short-loop process) or into a rare earth carbonate or oxide (through the long-loop chemical process).
Optimization of long-loop pilot operations is under way, targeting near-term pilot-scale production of the first 50-kilogram batch of rare earth carbonates and oxides, in parallel with completion of scoping studies and evaluation of options to advance long-loop recycling through stand-alone development, joint venture or other commercial arrangements. The long-loop recycling route is used to process NdFeB, with HPMS powder not suitable for short-loop recycling or for the processing of magnet swarf (that is, the powder produced from grinding and finishing magnets).
In parallel, commissioning of the commercial-scale short-loop magnet recycling plant by University of Birmingham and HyProMag (main industrial partner and exclusive HPMS licensee) is under way.
HyProMag is also commercializing HPMS recycling technology in Germany and United States, with commercial production targeted for 2025 and 2026, respectively.
HPMS technology is underpinned by approximately $100-million (U.S.) of research and development funding, and has major competitive advantages versus other rare earth magnet recycling technologies, which are largely focused on chemical processes but do not solve the challenges of liberating magnets from end-of-life scrap streams. HPMS provides the solution.
HyProMag's HPMS recycling technology was selected by the Minerals Security Partnership for support as one of its key projects. The technology was selected because the MSP determined its strong potential to contribute toward the development of responsible critical mineral supply chains.
The MSP was formed in 2022 by 14 governments, and aims to ensure adequate supplies of minerals such as rare earths, to meet net zero-carbon goals. It aims to support public and private sector investments, building diverse, secure and responsible global critical mineral supply chains.
About Mkango Resources Ltd.
Mkango is listed on the Alternative Investment Market and the TSX Venture Exchange. Mkango's corporate strategy is to become a market leader in the production of recycled rare earth magnets, alloys and oxides, through its interest in Maginito, which is owned 79.4 per cent by Mkango and 20.6 per cent by Cotec, and to develop new sustainable sources of neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium and terbium to supply accelerating demand from electric vehicles, wind turbines and other clean energy technologies.
Maginito holds a 100-per-cent interest in HyProMag, a 90-per-cent direct and indirect interest (assuming conversion of Maginito's convertible loan) in HyProMag GmbH, focused on short-loop rare earth magnet recycling in the U.K. and Germany, respectively, and a 100-per-cent interest in Mkango Rare Earths U.K., focused on long-loop rare earth magnet recycling in the U.K. through a chemical route.
Maginito and Cotec are also rolling out HyProMag's recycling technology into the United States through the 50/50-owned HyProMag USA LLC joint venture company.
Mkango also owns the advanced-stage Songwe Hill rare earth project, an extensive rare earth, uranium, tantalum, niobium, rutile, nickel and cobalt exploration portfolio in Malawi, and the Pulawy rare earth separation project in Poland. Discussions with the government of Malawi in relation to the mining development agreement for Songwe Hill are continuing.
We seek Safe Harbor.
© 2025 Canjex Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.