Skip to site menu Skip to page content

Daily Newsletter

11 August 2023

Daily Newsletter

11 August 2023

Peak signs offtake deal with Shenghe for Tanzania rare earth project

As per the offtake agreement, an initial 50% of Ngualla project’s production will be supplied to Shenghe.

Surya Akella August 10 2023

Australian miner Peak Rare Earths has entered a binding offtake agreement with Shenghe Resources (Singapore), a unit of Chinese rare earth elements (REE) producer Shenghe Resources, for its Ngualla rare earth project in Tanzania.

As part of the offtake deal, a minimum of 50% of the rare earth concentrate produced at the Ngualla project will initially be supplied to Shenghe.

Subject to further binding agreements, Shenghe will be supplied with the entire production at the mine.

The initial period of the agreement has been set at seven years. With subsequent agreements, the period can be extended further.

Shenghe is obligated to pay for and take delivery of the product.

The price will be market-driven, based on the value of the contained rare earth oxides less deductions related to value-added tax (VAT), trading fees, and refining recoveries, charges and margins. 

Besides the offtake deal, the two companies have reached a non-binding memorandum of understanding (MoU), which sets out the basis for the parties to cooperate on assessing an integrated engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) and project funding solution for the Ngualla project.

According to the MoU, Shenghe will be appointed to arrange and deliver a turnkey, fixed-price EPC solution for the project, along with a potential for Beijing General Research Institute of Mining and Metallurgy (BGRIMM) to be engaged as the EPC sub-contractor.

Peak will also appoint an owner’s team to oversee the EPC solutions’ delivery while Shenghe will provide funding for the project on mutually acceptable terms for both parties.

As part of the funding solution, they will also evaluate the potential for Shenghe to acquire a significant non-controlling interest in the project.

Peak Rare Earths executive chairman Russell Scrimshaw said: “We are delighted to be extending our strategic cooperation with Shenghe.

“The combination of a binding offtake agreement and a non-binding EPC and funding MoU differentiates Peak from its peers and supports a pathway to a successful project funding solution for the development of the Ngualla rare earths project.”

ESG 2.0 marks a shift towards stricter environmental rules

ESG is moving into a different era, which we call ESG 2.0. While ESG 1.0 was driven by voluntary corporate action, spurred by pressure from activist consumers and investors, ESG 2.0 is being driven by a new wave of government policies. The EU has taken the regulatory lead, with rules introduced or in the pipeline that will price emissions, regulate the use of the terms ‘ESG’ and ‘sustainability’ in marketing materials, and make ESG reporting mandatory. The US has taken a different approach, favoring less regulation and more financial support in the form of tax breaks for clean industry (renewables plus nuclear and hydrogen). China is planning to expand its emissions trading system to more sectors, decarbonize its heavy industry, and ramp up its use of renewables. The new policy direction is mainly motivated by the ambition to hit net zero emissions targets. But on top of this, governments are now competing for clean industry and trying to challenge China’s leadership on the production of the world’s green technologies such as solar panels and batteries, as well as the production and refinement of materials needed for energy transition such as lithium. These driving forces are leading to policy that will impact every sector, not just heavy industry, and will keep ESG near the top of the regulatory agenda over the longer term.

Newsletters by sectors

close

Sign up to the newsletter: In Brief

Visit our Privacy Policy for more information about our services, how we may use, process and share your personal data, including information of your rights in respect of your personal data and how you can unsubscribe from future marketing communications. Our services are intended for corporate subscribers and you warrant that the email address submitted is your corporate email address.

Thank you for subscribing

View all newsletters from across the GlobalData Media network.

close