logo
St George drills Brazilian target amid global rare earths ambitions

St George drills Brazilian target amid global rare earths ambitions

West Australian15 hours ago
St George Mining has development studies in full swing at its Araxa niobium and rare earth elements project in Brazil's premier mining state of Minas Gerais, as part of a global push to find new supplies.
The company's inaugural drilling campaign is charging ahead, with 40 auger holes on a 500-metre grid completed for 512m as part of a reconnaissance program to test areas beyond the current resource envelope.
A total of 404 samples have been sent for assay, with initial results expected this month. The results from the first 100 samples are slated to be available by the end of the month.
St George also launched a reverse circulation drilling program last Friday, comprising a planned 2500m, focused on infill drilling for its JORC-compliant mineral resource estimate of 40.64 million tonnes averaging 4.13 per cent total rare earth oxides (TREO), containing 1.7Mt TREO.
The resource includes 320,000 tonnes of high-demand neodymium-praseodymium at a combined grade of 7800 parts per million (ppm). The key rare earths are used to manufacture permanent magnets.
A 7200m diamond drilling campaign is set to begin in three weeks to further delineate high-grade zones and provide metallurgical samples.
St George has completed a 270-line-kilometre drone-borne aeromagnetic survey.
Brazilian processing company Geoscan is mapping the structural features, lithological boundaries and mineralised zones to refine the geological model of the host carbonatite and locate new drill targets.
St George has also advanced its environmental studies to expedite open-pit mine permitting through which the company hopes it can leverage early development of the deposit's near-surface high-grade niobium, which is up to 8.29 per cent niobium pentoxide and rare earths mineralisation up to 32.98 per cent TREO.
The environmental work includes flora and cave studies, alongside ongoing air quality and noise monitoring, to further support the company's permitting obligations.
Araxa's strategic location near Brazilian explorer Companhia Brasileira de Metalurgia e Mineração's (CBMM) world-leading niobium operations ensures access to robust infrastructure, including power and transport, and a skilled workforce, which will ease St George's development pathway.
CBMM specialises in processing niobium from its pyrochlore mine near the city of Araxa and just a few kilometres south of St George's Araxa operation.
St George's project hosts high-grade mineralisation, which remains open in all directions, positioning it for a significant mineral resource expansion and enhancing its status as a globally significant niobium and rare earths resource.
Global demand for rare earths is surging, driven by China's April 2025 export controls on rare earths and Chinese-manufactured rare earths magnets, which until recently have supplied up to 90 per cent of global demand.
In response, the United States Department of Defence has invested US$400 million (A$610 million) in MP Materials' Mountain Pass mine, the US's only operating rare earths mine. The investment, which includes a 15 per cent stake and a US$150 million (A$229 million) loan for a new processing facility, underscores Western efforts to secure non-Chinese rare earths supply chains.
St George Mining's executive chairman John Prineas said: '
We are excited to be progressing development activities at a time when the geopolitical background is driving unprecedented interest to establish rare earths supply chains ex-China – as seen last Friday with a landmark multi-billion-dollar investment by the US Department of Defence in MP Materials.'
In Brazil, St George participates in the MAGBRAS initiative, a Brazilian government-backed program focused on establishing a domestic supply chain for rare earth products, including permanent magnets. St George Mining is participating as a potential supplier.
The company is also working with leading Brazilian scientific agency SENAI and the Federation of Industries of Minas Gerais to establish a sustainable rare earths supply chain, including for magnet production.
Araxa's high neodymium-praseodymium content aligns it with the initiative and positions St George as a key supplier. It opens the possibility of government support for expedited approvals and, with an experienced in-country team, puts the project in a rare position to capitalise on favourable logistics and current global market dynamics.
If the stars align favourably, the opportunity to meet critical supply chain vulnerabilities and support the clean energy and defence sectors could boost St George's profile and fortunes.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:
matt.birney@wanews.com.au
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Patient, deliberate, calibrated': Albanese walks trade-security tightrope in China
‘Patient, deliberate, calibrated': Albanese walks trade-security tightrope in China

The Age

time34 minutes ago

  • The Age

‘Patient, deliberate, calibrated': Albanese walks trade-security tightrope in China

Shanghai: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will use a meeting with China's Premier Li Qiang on Tuesday to spruik the benefits of Australia's stabilised relationship with its largest trading partner after vowing not to back down on security issues, including taking back the Port of Darwin. Speaking after a green steel roundtable on Monday, designed to bolster Australia's crucial $100 billion iron ore exports to China, mining magnate Andrew 'Twiggy' Forrest warned that an overemphasis on security risks was hurting trade. The prime minister used his remarks after the roundtable, which included industry leaders from both nations, to paint Australia as a stable, open trading nation against the backdrop of US President Donald Trump's stop-start trade wars. 'I think that Australia's support for free and fair trade does provide potential opportunities for Australia in this region as well, not just with China, but with ASEAN nations,' Albanese said. Trade will be central to Albanese's talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping and premier Li – who famously referred to Albanese as a 'handsome boy' in 2023 – on Tuesday. For the first time in almost a decade, Albanese and a delegation of business leaders, including Macquarie Group chief executive Shemara Wikramanayake and BHP Australia president Geraldine Slattery, will meet with Chinese counterparts in Beijing. Albanese will use the CEO meeting to talk up the removal of Chinese trade strikes on goods like coal, barley, wine and rock lobster that were imposed after the Morrison government criticised China's handling of COVID-19 and its assertive foreign policy. 'Of course [more open trade] has also benefited China,' Albanese will say, according to draft notes of his speech provided to this masthead.

Australian news and politics live: Albanese meets Xi in Beijing as trade, green steel and Taiwan tensions rise
Australian news and politics live: Albanese meets Xi in Beijing as trade, green steel and Taiwan tensions rise

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

Australian news and politics live: Albanese meets Xi in Beijing as trade, green steel and Taiwan tensions rise

Scroll down for the latest news and updates. Political differences will bump up against economic opportunities as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meets his Chinese counterparts in the imposing Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Tuesday's bilateral meetings with President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang and Communist Party Chairman Zhao Leji - the three highest-ranking members of China's ruling committee - mark the centrepiece of Mr Albanese's six-day tour of the Middle Kingdom. President Xi is top dog in China, and the optics of Mr Albanese's rendezvous with one of the world's most influential leaders will be powerful. But it's his meeting with Premier Li, notionally the Head of Government in China, that will deliver any tangible agreements from the trip if they occur. Read more.

Anthony Albanese weighs business and security ahead of Xi Jinping talks in Beijing
Anthony Albanese weighs business and security ahead of Xi Jinping talks in Beijing

West Australian

time2 hours ago

  • West Australian

Anthony Albanese weighs business and security ahead of Xi Jinping talks in Beijing

Political differences will bump up against economic opportunities as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meets his Chinese counterparts in the imposing Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Tuesday's bilateral meetings with President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang and Communist Party Chairman Zhao Leji - the three highest-ranking members of China's ruling committee - mark the centrepiece of Mr Albanese's six-day tour of the Middle Kingdom. President Xi is top dog in China, and the optics of Mr Albanese's rendezvous with one of the world's most influential leaders will be powerful. But it's his meeting with Premier Li, notionally the Head of Government in China, that will deliver any tangible agreements from the trip if they occur. The meetings come as the Chinese-Australian free trade agreement passes its 10th anniversary. Co-operation between the two nations has increased following a falling out during the COVID-19 pandemic. Mr Albanese will emphasise the potential for further developing business links at a CEO roundtable hosted by the Business Council of Australia on Tuesday evening. Greater engagement between China and Australia has delivered practical benefits to both nations, building understanding between governments and businesses. 'It enables us to express our differences and to manage them, without our relationship being defined by them,' he will say. 'This is about building stronger ties where our national interests are aligned.' Dialogue will help the countries work together to address the structural imbalances of global steel supply, maximise the economic opportunities of the global shift to net zero, and provide certainty and confidence for businesses to invest, he will say. But fundamental political differences limit the extent of economic co-operation. Mr Albanese is likely to raise Australian concerns over increased Chinese militarism, including Chinese naval exercises off Australian waters, and the detention of Chinese-Australian writer Yang Hengjun. Beijing's dissatisfaction over Australia's plan to tear up a Chinese-owned company's lease of Darwin Port is also likely to be broached. An article by a Chinese state media influencer suggested Beijing could restrict Australian imports as retaliation, risking financial blow back for Australian companies. Business Council of Australia chief executive Bran Black says the two nations' challenges and opportunities would be best met with dialogue. 'And that's exactly what this roundtable is about,' he will say at the event. 'Today's agenda points to the breadth of that shared opportunity: education, smarter agriculture, the green economy and low-carbon transformation. 'But that opportunity is underpinned by the personal connections that we, collectively and personally, have the privilege to establish, re-establish, confirm and enhance today.' Expanding the free trade agreement further into the services and investment sectors will be high on the agenda of the roundtable, as will exploring co-operation in education, smart agriculture, health and aged care. Green energy and low-carbon steel will once again be a hot topic after it formed the focus of a roundtable between Australian iron ore miners and Chinese steelmakers in Shanghai.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store