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Big players line up to fund Lindian rare earths mine

Big players line up to fund Lindian rare earths mine

West Australian14-05-2025

Rare earths developer Lindian Resources is juggling a slew of financing proposals from leading African and European commercial and investment banks to fund construction of its world-class Kangankunde hard rock rare earths project in Malawi.
The company says it is riding a wave of financial momentum, with multiple funding proposals to bankroll Kangankunde's Stage 1 development. One standout non-binding proposal involves a US$30 million loan from Ecobank Malawi and another proposal involves a US$30M – US$40M secured debt/equity bond from a leading European investment bank.
Another US$50M proposal from Gerald group dates back to last December and the company also has a number of offtake prepayment proposals from numerous commodity traders.
The latest offer from Malawi's Ecobank includes a five-year pledge to act as mandated lead financier, with other commercial banks apparently circling for a syndicated deal. The support of Ecobank underscores Malawi's rising status as a growing mining jurisdiction for global investment and critical minerals supply.
A leading European investment bank has tossed its hat in the ring with a Nordic-style bond, targeting a 60:40 debt-to-equity split for up to US$40M over five-years. Lindian says the bond is tailor made for upstream projects like Kangankunde, promising flexibility for construction costs.
The company's existing US$50M non-binding term sheet with Gerald Group, to lock up the remaining 60 per cent of monazite product for a full offtake right to Stage 1, remains a solid contender too. Lindian's board will now sift through all of the proposals with a view to locking one in for its final investment decision.
An optimised feasibility study for Kangankunde is also nearing completion and is set to wrap up in late June and will look to build on last year's blockbuster numbers.
The project shows around 23.7-million-tonnes in reserve grading a weighty 2.9 per cent total rare earth oxides (TREO), placing it in rarified air on the global rare earths stage.
Stage 1 is set to churn out 15,300t of premium 55 per cent TREO monazite concentrate annually for a massive 45 years, pegging a post-tax net present value at Kangankunde of some US$555 million, despite seriously depressed rare earths prices since 2023 that many believe will eventually move skywards.
At a lean US$40 million pre-production capex and a miniscule US$2.92/kg TREO operating cost, the project is expected to pay for itself in under two years according to Lindian.
Management says the preconstruction works are now in full swing on the ground in Malawi including the company's 5km access road that is expected to be delivered ahead of schedule and under budget. That road will allow construction crews to tackle run-of-mine (ROM) pad earthworks, storage facilities and security yards, shaving precious time and costs off the schedule.
With 40 per cent of Stage 1 production already locked in under binding offtake terms with Gerald Group, production is slated for mid-2026, with the bidding process heating up for the remaining 60 per cent.
Management also notes that joint venture discussions in the US and CIS countries are gaining traction, aligning with Presidential executive orders and Western efforts to diversify critical mineral supply chains.
With a treasure trove of financing options, construction milestones and a low-cost foothold in the global rare earths market, Lindian is charging towards becoming a global rare earths supplier in 2026. Kangankunde's sky-high grade and dirt-cheap costs make it a first-class alternative to Chinese rare earths production as the West clamours for strategic rare earths alternative suppliers .
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:
matt.birney@wanews.com.au

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