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  • Rare Earth Elements and their Uses

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    Home » Articles » REE – Rare Earth Elements

    REE – Rare Earth Elements and their Uses
    The demand for rare earth elements has grown rapidly, but their occurrence in minable deposits is limited.

    Rare Earth Element Production
    This chart shows a history of rare earth element production, in metric tons of rare earth oxide equivalent, between 1950 and 2013. It clearly shows the United States’ entry into the market in the mid-1960s when color television exploded the demand. When China began selling rare earths at very low prices in the late-1980s, mines in the USA cut production and then went inactive in the late 1990s. When China cut exports in 2010, rare earth prices skyrocketed. That motivated new production in the United States and other countries.
    What Are Rare Earth Elements (REEs)?

    Rare earth elements are a group of seventeen chemical elements that occur together in the periodic table (see image at right). The group consists of yttrium and the 15 lanthanide elements (lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, promethium, samarium, europium, gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium, holmium, erbium, thulium, ytterbium, and lutetium). Scandium is found in most rare earth element deposits and is sometimes classified as a rare earth element. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry includes scandium in their rare earth element definition.

    The rare earth elements are all metals, and the group is often referred to as the “rare earth metals.” These metals have many similar properties and that often causes them to be found together in geologic deposits. They are also referred to as “rare earth oxides” because many of them are typically sold as oxide compounds.
    Uses of Rare Earth Elements

    Rare earth metals and alloys that contain them are used in many devices that people use every day such as computer memory, DVDs, rechargeable batteries, cell phones, catalytic converters, magnets, fluorescent lighting and much more.

    During the past twenty years, there has been an explosion in demand for many items that require rare earth metals. Twenty years ago there were very few cell phones in use, but the number has risen to over 7 billion in use today. The use of rare earth elements in computers has grown almost as fast as cell phones.

    United States Usage
    (2013 data from USGS)
    Chemical catalysts
    65%
    Metallurgy & alloys
    19%
    Glass polishing
    6%
    Permanent magnets
    9%
    Other
    1%
    Many rechargeable batteries are made with rare earth compounds. Demand for the batteries is being driven by demand for portable electronic devices such as cell phones, readers, portable computers, and cameras.

    Several pounds of rare earth compounds are in batteries that power every electric vehicle and hybrid-electric vehicle. As concerns for energy independence, climate change and other issues drive the sale of electric and hybrid vehicles, the demand for batteries made with rare earth compounds will climb even faster.

    Rare earths are used as catalysts, phosphors, and polishing compounds. These are used for air pollution control, illuminated screens on electronic devices, and the polishing of optical-quality glass. All of these products are expected to experience rising demand.

    Other substances can be substituted for rare earth elements in their most important uses; however, these substitutes are usually less effective and costly.

    From the 1950s until the early 2000s, cerium oxide was a very popular lapidary polish. It was inexpensive and very effective. The recent price increases have almost eliminated the use of cerium oxide in rock tumbling and the lapidary arts. Other types of polish, such as aluminum and titanium oxide, are now used in its place.
    Critical Defense Uses

    Rare earth elements play an essential role in our national defense. The military uses night-vision goggles, precision-guided weapons, communications equipment, GPS equipment, batteries and other defense electronics. These give the United States military an enormous advantage. Rare earth metals are key ingredients for making the very hard alloys used in armored vehicles and projectiles that shatter upon impact.

    Substitutes can be used for rare earth elements in some defense applications; however, those subsitutes are usually not as effective and that diminishes military superiority. Several uses of rare earth elements are summarized in the table below (5).

    Defense Uses of Rare Earth Elements
    Lanthanum night-vision goggles
    Neodymium laser range-finders, guidance systems, communications
    Europium fluorescents and phosphors in lamps and monitors
    Erbium amplifiers in fiber-optic data transmission
    Samarium permanent magnets that are stable at high temperatures
    Samarium precision-guided weapons
    Samarium “white noise” production in stealth technology
    Are These Elements Really “Rare”?

    Rare earth elements are not as “rare” as their name implies. Thulium and lutetium are the two least abundant rare earth elements – but they each have an average crustal abundance that is nearly 200 times greater than the crustal abundance of gold (1). However, these metals are very difficult to mine because it is unusual to find them in concentrations high enough for economical extraction.

    The most abundant rare earth elements are cerium, yttrium, lanthanum and neodymium (2). They have average crustal abundances that are similar to commonly used industrial metals such as chromium, nickel, zinc, molybdenum, tin, tungsten and lead (1). Again, they are rarely found in extractable concentrations.
    History of Rare Earth Production and Trade

    Pre-1965

    Before 1965 there was relatively little demand for rare earth elements. At that time, most of the world’s supply was being produced from placer deposits in India and Brazil. In the 1950s, South Africa became the leading producer from rare earth bearing monazite deposits. At that time, the Mountain Pass Mine in California was producing minor amounts of rare earth oxides from a Precambrian carbonatite.

    Color Television Ignites Demand

    The demand for rare earth elements saw its first explosion in the mid-1960s, as the first color television sets were entering the market. Europium was the essential material for producing the color images. The Mountain Pass Mine began producing europium from bastnasite, which contained about 0.1% europium. This effort made the Mountain Pass Mine the largest rare earth producer in the world and placed the United States as the leading producer.

    China Enters the Market

    China began producing noteable amounts of rare earth oxides in the early 1980s and became the world’s leading producer in the early 1990s. Through the 1990s and early 2000s, China steadily strengthened its hold on the world’s rare earth oxide market. They were selling rare earths at such low prices that the Mountain Pass Mine and many others throughout the world were unable to compete and stopped operation.

    Defense and Consumer Electronics Demand

    At the same time, world demand was skyrocketing as rare earth metals were designed into a wide variety of defense, aviation, industrial and consumer electronics products. China capitalized on its dominant position and began restricting exports and allowing rare earth oxide prices to rise to historic levels.

    China as the Largest Rare Earth Consumer

    In addition to being the world’s largest producer of rare earth materials, China is also the dominant consumer. They use rare earths mainly in manufacturing electronics products for domestic and export markets. Japan and the United States are the second and third largest consumers of rare earth materials. It is possible that China’s reluctance to sell rare earths is a defense of their value-added manufacturing sector.

    China’s Apex of Production Dominance?

    The Chinese dominance may have peaked in 2010 when they controlled about 95% of the world’s rare earth production and prices for many rare earth oxides had risen over 500% in just a few years. That was an awakening for rare earth consumers and miners throughout the world. Mining companies in the United States, Australia, Canada and other countries began to reevaluate old rare earth prospects and explore for new ones.

    High prices also caused manufacturers to do three things: 1) seek ways to reduce the amount of rare earth elements needed to produce each of their products; 2) seek alternative materials to use in place of rare earth elements; and, 3) develop alternative products that do not require rare earth elements.

    This effort has resulted in a decline in the amounts of rare earth materials used in some types of magnets and a shift from rare earth lighting products to light-emitting diode technology. In the United States, the average consumption of rare earths per unit of manufactured product has decreased but the demand for more products manufactured with rare earth elements has increased. The result has been higher consumption.

    China Buying Resources Outside of China

    Chinese companies have been purchasing rare earth resources in other countries. In 2009 China Non-Ferrous Metal Mining Company bought a majority stake in Lynas Corporation, an Australian company that has one of the highest outputs of rare earth elements outside of China. They also purchased the Baluba Mine in Zambia.

    Rare Earth Production Outside of China

    Mines in Australia began producing rare earth oxides in 2011. In 2012 and 2013 they were supplying about 2% to 3% of world production. In 2012, the Mountain Pass Mine came back into production and the United States produced about 4% of the world’s rare earth elements in 2013. India has been producing about 3% of the world’s supply for the past decade. Indonesia, Russia, Nigeria, North Korea, Malaysia, and Vietnam are minor producers [3].

    As of 2013 rare earth assessments were underway in Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Finland, Greenland, India, Kyrgyzstan, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, Sweden, Tanzania, Turkey, and Vietnam [2]. Some of these might result in additional production.

    The United States Geological Survey estimates that although China is the world-leader in rare earth production they only control about 50% of the world’s reserves. This provides an opportunity for other countries to become important producers now that China is not selling rare earth materials below the cost of production.

    Dangers of a Dominant World Producer

    Supply and demand normally determine the market price of a commodity. As supplies shrink, prices go up. As prices go higher, those who control the supply are tempted to sell. Mining companies see high prices as an opportunity and attempt to develop new sources of supply.

    With rare earth elements, the time between a mining company’s decision to acquire a property and the start of production can be several years or longer. There is no fast way to open a new mining property.

    If a single country controls almost all of the production and makes a firm decision not to export, then the entire supply of a commodity can be quickly cut off. That is a dangerous situation when new sources of supply take so long to develop.

    In 2010 China significantly restricted their rare earth exports. That was done to ensure a supply of rare earths for domestic manufacturing and for environmental reasons. This shift by China triggered panic buying and some rare earth prices shot up exponentially. In addition, Japan, the United States, and the European Union complained to the World Trade Organization about China’s restrictive rare earth trade policies.
    World Rare Earth Mineral Resources

    “Rare earths are relatively abundant in the Earth’s crust, but discovered minable concentrations are less common than for most other ores. U.S. and world resources are contained primarily in bastnäsite and monazite. Bastnäsite deposits in China and the United States constitute the largest percentage of the world’s rare-earth economic resources, while monazite deposits in Australia, Brazil, China, India, Malaysia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and the United States constitute the second largest segment.

    Apatite, cheralite, eudialyte, loparite, phosphorites, rare-earth-bearing (ion adsorption) clays, secondary monazite, spent uranium solutions, and xenotime make up most of the remaining resources. Undiscovered resources are thought to be very large relative to expected demand.” Quoted from the United States Geological Survey’s Mineral Commodity Summary (2).
    Rare Earth Element Outlook

    The global demand for automobiles, consumer electronics, energy-efficient lighting, and catalysts is expected to rise rapidly over the next decade. Rare earth magnet demand is expected to increase, as is the demand for rechargeable batteries. New developments in medical technology are expected to increase the use of surgical lasers, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography scintillation detectors.

    Rare earth elements are heavily used in all of these industries, so the demand for them should remain high.
    Contributor: Hobart King

  • Who’s a dirty rotten tax dodger? Daney – GetUp!

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    Who’s a dirty rotten tax dodger?

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    Daney – GetUp!

    3:41 PM (3 minutes ago)

    to me
    Dear NEVILLE,

    In shocking whistleblower revelations last night, ten foreign multinationals shifted $31 billion in revenue in one year to dodge Australian tax.1

    Among the worst of the corporate tax dodgers are the dirty old energy companies.

    These big polluters pay nothing on their carbon pollution emissions and receive enormous government handouts – a whopping $1,712 from every Australian.2 All the while, they’re shipping billions in Australian profits to overseas investors, with little to no tax paid into our economy to help fund our public schools and hospitals.

    Well, their day of reckoning is coming with a Senate inquiry likely kicking off next week. But there’s a catch: if no one’s paying attention, it tells our politicians we don’t care and gives them little incentive to take action. These companies could walk away scot-free, while ordinary Australian taxpayers are left to pick up the bill.

    So to show the Abbott Government we mean business, we’re doing an Australian first: placing the biggest ad possible in a major newspaper to draw attention to these critical Senate hearings. (We’re checking ad prices now and need to book soon.)

    Click here to check out our ‘Who’s a Dirty Rotten Tax Dodger?’ ad and chip in to make sure all eyes are on the explosive hearings into tax dodging by dirty energy companies.

    Here’s some of the dirty details we know already. Shell service stations paid $0 tax on $60 billion in Australian revenue over the past three years.3 And a group of multinationals, including Chevron, ExxonMobil and Shell, have allegedly arranged to extract $60 billion in tax free profits from the massive Gorgon gas project.4

    Then, last night’s Channel 7 exclusive revealed that:

    • Ten corporations sent $31 billion in profits to offshore tax havens to avoid paying tax in Australia;
    • One corporation alone sent an enormous $11 billion in revenue from Australia to Singapore to avoid paying tax in Australia;
    • Up to $30 billion in tax revenue is lost to Australia thanks to corporate tax dodging each year.5 That’s enough to eliminate the deficit and roll back the Abbott Government’s massive cuts to our schools and hospitals.

    Last time we checked, Australian workers don’t get to ship their wages to overseas tax havens to avoid paying tax. Yet Treasurer Joe Hockey is hinting at GST hikes for everyday Australians, proving that when multinational corporations don’t pay their dues, we pay the price.

    Chip in to place an ad in a major newspaper to call out the worst of the corporate tax dodgers and hold our politicians to account over their inaction: www.getup.org.au/tax-time

    Mr Hockey can’t dodge immense public pressure to deal with corporate tax dodgers, but it all depends on how much we can crank up the volume on these Senate hearings. Let’s make sure that all eyes are on the tax dodging of the dirtiest energy companies next week.

    Thanks for speaking out,
    Daney, Mark, Nat and Alycia, for the GetUp team

    PS – Today, the Senate committee investigating corporate tax dodgers handed down a damning interim report. The report included some key recommendations that would force more transparency on these companies and give regulators new powers to crack down on corporate tax dodging. Whether these recommendations get up will depend on how much pressure the Abbott Government feels to finally do something. If each of us chips in a small amount today, we can shine a big spotlight on the actions of tax dodging fossil fuel companies next week – but we need to act quickly to get the ad space booked. Click here to chip in

    References
    [1] Exclusive: $31 bn sent offshore to avoid tax, Sunday Night, Channel Seven, 16 August 2015
    [2] G20 countries pay over $1000 per citizen in fossil fuel subsidies, The Guardian, 4 August 2015
    [3] Shell pumped $20 billion a year from motorists but paid no tax, Sydney Morning Herald, 9 August 2015
    [4] ATO looks into Chevron, ExxonMobil and Shell’s $60 bn tax-free windfall, Australian Financial Review, 17 August 2015
    [5] Exclusive: Corporate tax dodge, Sunday Night, Channel Seven, 16 August 2015

  • CCL event in Ultimo on Thursday the 20th of August at 7pm

    CCL event in Ultimo on Thursday the 20th of August at 7pm

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    Jeevan Witt <jeevan@ccl.org.au>

    Attachments9:40 PM (5 minutes ago)

    to bcc: me
    Hi All,
    Would you like to attend the CCL (Citizens’ Climate Lobby) event in Ultimo this Thursday the 20th of August at 7pm?  This is the first event for the Sydney electorate.  More details on the flyer attached.  We are planning to have a short pub dinner before hand at the Lord Wolseley Hotel Ultimo at 6:00pm.  Please reply by Tuesday for this event and dinner.
    We are also considering having another event in the evening on Thursday the 10th of September if there is interest.  I am looking forward to meet you and the other Sydney members soon.
    Kind Regards,
    Jeevan Witt
  • BREAKING TONIGHT: Corporate tax dodging exposed Daney – GetUp!

    2 of 52

    BREAKING TONIGHT: Corporate tax dodging exposed

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    3:06 PM (1 hour ago)

    to me
    Dear NEVILLE,

    Tonight a courageous whistleblower is risking years in jail to expose massive corporate tax dodging. Sunday Night on Channel Seven will air the major revelations at 7pm.

    To make sure he’s not taking this great personal risk in vein, let’s hear what he has to say — and make sure our friends do too. Because the only way we’ll be able to fight back against the lobbying power of these major corporations is with red hot public pressure.

    You can forward this email to let your friends know about tonight’s programme or click here to share on Facebook.

    While politicians are talking about raising the GST for everyday Australians, it’s estimated a massive $380 billion made by companies in Australia escapes tax each year — proving that when corporations don’t pay their share of tax, we pay the price.

    So be sure to tune in tonight and then stay tuned for actions to follow this week to make sure the government cracks down on corporate tax dodgers.

    Yours in anticipation,
    Daney, Mark, Nat and Aly for the GetUp team

    PS – The promotion for the Channel 7 story can be seen here: https://www.getup.org.au/sunday-night-promo

  • Before the bulldozers arrive Emily Mulligan – Avaaz

    1 of 51

    Before the bulldozers arrive

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    Emily Mulligan – Avaaz Unsubscribe

    8:00 AM (1 hour ago)

    to me

    The Palestinian town of Susiya could be bulldozed at any time. Australian aid money helped pay for Susiya’s clinic and school. Let’s get Foreign Minister Julie Bishop, an ally of Israel speak up against this unjust demolition and destruction of our aid investment. Sign the petition now:

    Sign now
    Dear friends,

    The Palestinian town of Susiya is about to be demolished by Israeli bulldozers to make way for nearby settlements. The people of Susiya have lived there for generations and they have no where else to go. We can help.

    Australian aid money helped buy the town it’s clinic, it’s school and the beehives that provide the town’s honey trade. We could see our aid investment bulldozed within days, impoverishing the 340 people that live there. International pressure is all that is standing in the way of the bulldozers; Australia can stop this community from seeing their homes crushed into the dirt.

    Israel spends millions on it’s diplomacy, and is already coming under fire for this decision. If Julie Bishop, our formidable Foreign Minister and strong ally of Israel spoke out, it would be almost impossible to demolish Susiya. Let’s call on Minister Bishop to act immediately, before the bulldozers arrive — sign now:

    https://secure.avaaz.org/en/australia_save_susiya_loc/?bhPqncb&v=63402

    The Israeli settlements in the West Bank are illegal under international law and have been widely and repeatedly condemned by the international community. In the dry hills around Hebron, the settlements gobble up the water and make subsistence agriculture near impossible for the people in the area.

    Susiya is in between an illegal Israeli settlement and an Israeli managed archeological site and the land is prized because it can connect the two. Moving residents off their land in this way is forcible transfer, which is considered a war crime, punishable at the International Criminal Court. Global scrutiny is the only defense against the bulldozers before they arrive to tear down the community.

    Rabbi’s for Human Rights have been defending Susiya in the courts for years and rallying for the protection of the town. Already officials from the Australian consulate in Ramallah have visited Susiya, but now it will take serious diplomatic muscle to stop the demolition. Sign now to call on Julie Bishop to protect Susiya and the people that call it home:

    https://secure.avaaz.org/en/australia_save_susiya_loc/?bhPqncb&v=63402

    The Avaaz community is one of the strongest global voices for justice in Palestine. During the bombardment of Gaza last year almost two million of us from all over the world came together to stop the economy that profits from the illegal settlements. Already Barclays and Veolia have withdrawn their businesses from the settlements. Let’s now help to save the town of Susiya in their David and Goliath battle.

    With hope,

    Emily, Nic, Fadi, Mais, Falastine, Rewan and the whole Avaaz team

    More Information

    Susiya: Palestinian village receiving Australian aid money facing demolition by Israeli authorities (ABC)
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-07-30/palestinian-susiya-receiving-australian-aid-facing-demolition/…

    Susiya: Palestinian West Bank village faces bleak end (BBC)
    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-33651356

    Defiant Palestinian Bedouins dread eviction from Susiya (Al Jazeera)
    http://www.aljazeera.com/blogs/middleeast/2015/07/defiant-palestinian-bedouins-dread-eviction-susiya…

    Life in Susiya, the Palestinian village under threat from Israeli bulldozers (CNN)
    http://edition.cnn.com/2015/07/24/middleeast/susiya-palestinian-village-under-threat/

  • Here’s my plan Richard Denniss | Australia Institute

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    Here’s my plan

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    Richard Denniss | Australia Institute <richard@tai.org.au>

    8:01 AM (2 hours ago)

    to me
    The Australia Institute

    Dear Neville –When I stepped down last month we said we’d tell you soon what my next big project would be. Well, here it is.

    It is time the world admitted a simple truth: we need to stop building new coal mines.

    There is no room for more coal mines in a world economy that is tackling climate change. You may have read recently that the President of Kiribati, President Tong, has called for a global moratorium on all new coal mines and has written to all of the world’s leaders to ask them to support his call.

    Put simply, if Australia succeeds in its coal export ambitions, the world will fail in its efforts to tackle global warming. That is why The Australia Institute has launched the No New Coal Mines initiative, including a petition to the President of France asking him to put coal exports on the agenda for Paris.

    Back the global moratorium on new coal mines, add your name to the petition.

    Today I am heading off to London to ensure that the world understands the scale and significance of Australia’s coal export ambitions; and that our Prime Minister believes that Australia’s ‘contribution’ to tackling climate change involves building enormous new coal mines.

    Next Wednesday I will be presenting the research that backs up the call for no new coal mines at Sir Nicholas Stern’s research centre, The Grantham Institute, at the London School of Economics. On hearing of the call from President Tong, Lord Stern said:

    Nicholas Stern testimonial

    Thanks to supporters like you, The Australia Institute is perfectly placed to help the world understand both the scientific and economic significance of a global moratorium on new coal mines. Our research shows that Adani’s Carmichael mine alone would produce more than 4 billion tonnes of CO2 over the proposed course if its life.

    While the scientific case for a moratorium on new coal mines is obvious, the economic case is actually quite startling.

    As a supporter of The Australia Institute, you will already be aware of our research showing that the coal industry doesn’t employ many people, doesn’t pay much tax, but does receive billions of dollars in taxpayer-funded subsidies from state and federal governments. Our research also shows preventing new mines from going ahead would be beneficial to the economy.

    In the coming months I will be presenting The Australia Institute’s research all around the world. I’ll be helping individuals, organisations, companies and indeed countries understand the need to stop building new coal mines.

    A global moratorium on new coal mines makes good climate sense, good economic sense, and good political sense.

    Thank you for your support, we literally couldn’t do it without you.

    Wish me luck!

    Richard

    Chief Economist, The Australia Institute

    P.S. If you want to stay up to date with my movements and the state of play regarding the moratorium more generally, then head over to our new No New Coal Mines website and add your name.

    P.P.S If you know someone in London who’d be interested, send them along to my seminar at The Grantham Institute next Wednesday.