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Showing posts with label CRML. Ucore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CRML. Ucore. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Why the Heavy Rare Earths at Tanbreez are "Critical Metals" for America and the west


 

Investor / Business Report: Tanbreez (Greenland) and Critical Metals Corp. (NASDAQ: CRML)

1) Executive summary

Tanbreez (Killavaat Alannguat, southern Greenland) is an advanced rare-earth project that has attracted attention because it is positioned as a large, Western-aligned source of “magnet” rare earths, including heavy rare earth elements (HREEs) that are strategically important to the U.S. and its allies. CRML’s investment case is therefore a hybrid of (a) critical-minerals geopolitics and (b) traditional mining execution (metallurgy, capex, logistics, financing, permitting discipline). Reuters reporting in 2025 tied Tanbreez directly to U.S. policy tools (EXIM debt support discussions; Defense Production Act-related funding conversations), highlighting the project’s national-security framing. Reuters+2Reuters+2

Market snapshot (today, Dec 17, 2025): CRML last trade reported at ~$7.69.


2) What Tanbreez is, where it is, and why it matters

Location & logistics: Tanbreez sits near Kangerluarsuk Fjord in southern Greenland, with the nearby community of Qaqortoq discussed in the SEC technical report as a relevant logistics node. SEC

Why investors and governments care:

  • HREE exposure: The project is marketed as having a comparatively high HREE component (the segment most tied to high-performance magnets for EVs, wind turbines, and defense). tanbreez.com+1

  • Non-China supply chain: Reuters documented U.S./Danish lobbying to keep Tanbreez from Chinese-linked buyers and to align it with Western interests—an unusually explicit “geopolitics premium” for a single mining asset. Reuters

  • Arctic strategic relevance (context): Multiple reputable outlets describe Greenland’s rising importance in the Arctic security and minerals competition, with Tanbreez often cited as among the more advanced mining candidates. The Washington Post+1


3) Permitting / license status

A key differentiator is that Tanbreez has an active exploitation license:

  • License code: MIN 2020-54

  • Grant date: September 8, 2020

  • Expiry: September 7, 2050

  • Area: 18 km² SEC+1

This does not eliminate execution risk, but it reduces a common early-stage obstacle (the “can it ever be permitted?” question).


4) Resource base (what is actually disclosed in formal technical reporting)

In CRML’s SEC-filed technical reporting (S-K 1300 TRS referencing a JORC-style estimate), the 2016 Mineral Resource Estimate summary for “Tanbreez Hill and Fjord” is presented as:

  • Indicated: 25.42 Mt @ 0.37% TREO, 1.37% ZrO₂, 0.13% Nb₂O₅

  • Inferred: 19.45 Mt @ 0.39% TREO, 1.42% ZrO₂, 0.15% Nb₂O₅

  • Total: 44.87 Mt @ 0.38% TREO, 1.39% ZrO₂, 0.14% Nb₂O₅ SEC

Important nuance for small investors: Much larger “project scale” numbers and exploration targets circulate in marketing and third-party commentary; the figures above are what the SEC-filed technical report explicitly summarizes from the 2016 work.


5) Development plan (throughput and timeline references)

The SEC technical report describes an initial mining right/plan that begins at 0.5 million tonnes per year of eudialyte ROM material (with broader material movements referenced), with the potential for later expansion subject to approvals. SEC

Reuters reporting adds the capital-and-schedule framing investors have been watching:

  • Project cost referenced at ~$290 million

  • “Initial production by 2026” (Reuters phrasing)

  • Expected output cited at ~85,000 metric tons/year of rare earth concentrate once operational Reuters+1


6) Ownership and control: why it matters to valuation

Control has been evolving, and this is material because rare-earth projects often trade on “who controls the feedstock” (especially when offtakes and government support are involved).

Key disclosed points:

  • A September 2025 filing/announcement indicates CRML had the right to increase its stake from 42% to 92.5%, tied to issuing shares to Rimbal (controlled by founder geologist Gregory Barnes). Critical Metals+1

  • A CRML 6-K references that European Lithium (a major shareholder) would retain a 7.5% interest in Tanbreez in the described structure. Critical Metals+1

Investor implication: Moving toward ~92.5% consolidates upside but can also come with dilution and “deal-structure complexity” risk.


7) Commercial traction: offtakes and “who wants this material”

A recurring weakness in rare earth projects is the lack of credible downstream demand and processing pathways. Tanbreez has recently shown more tangible pull from North American counterparts:

  • Ucore (TSXV: UCU): Reuters and Ucore describe a 10-year arrangement (reported as 10% of initial production; Reuters cites up to 10,000 t/year of concentrate) intended as feedstock for Ucore’s Louisiana processing facility. Reuters+1

  • REalloys: CRML announced a 15% of production offtake; Reuters notes this brings total committed U.S. customer offtake to ~25% (Ucore + REalloys). GlobeNewswire+2Reuters+2

Why that matters: In rare earths, valuation improves when the story shifts from “a deposit” to “a deposit with a route to cash flow through qualified processing and contracted demand.”


8) Financing and U.S. policy tailwinds: the “strategic premium”

CRML/Tanbreez has been repeatedly linked to U.S. government tools that are unusual for a junior miner:

  • EXIM debt support discussions: Reuters reported EXIM was considering a ~$120M loan to support Tanbreez development, contingent on broader capitalization. Reuters+1

  • Potential U.S. government equity stake: Reuters reported discussions that could convert a Defense Production Act-related grant concept into an equity position (Reuters described an ~8% stake concept in October 2025 coverage). Reuters+1

  • Additional funding: Reuters also reported a $50M PIPE raise (October 2025) to support project development. Reuters

Investor takeaway: If policy support is formalized (binding debt package, equity partnership, or grant), it can reduce financing risk and increase perceived strategic value. If it does not, CRML reverts to a more typical junior-mine risk profile (capital intensity + dilution).


9) “Real value” going forward: what would make this a winner

The project becomes genuinely valuable (beyond headline geopolitics) if it clears four practical gates:

  1. Metallurgy and recoveries at scale
    Eudialyte-hosted REEs can be attractive (lower radioactivity narrative), but processing complexity is a known risk factor; the market will reward independently validated recoveries and stable concentrate specs. Reuters+1

  2. Bankable financing stack
    A credible “equity + debt” package (EXIM plus strategic equity/industry partner capital) is the difference between a tradable story and a buildable mine. Reuters+2Reuters+2

  3. Downstream qualification and conversion to separated oxides/metals
    Offtakes are a start; what matters next is qualification through actual processing campaigns and sales into magnet supply chains. Reuters+1

  4. Execution in Greenland (logistics, labor, environmental/social license)
    Major publications emphasize Greenland’s infrastructure and cost challenges; even advanced projects face execution friction that can delay commissioning and raise capex. The Washington Post+1


10) Key catalysts to monitor (12–24 months)

  • Binding documentation and drawdown pathway for EXIM financing (or other sovereign/strategic lenders) Reuters+1

  • Any formalized U.S. government participation structure (equity, warrants, grant) Reuters+1

  • Updated, independently validated technical work (recoveries, concentrate specs, mine plan updates)

  • Conversion of non-binding arrangements into definitive offtakes / processing commitments ucore.com+1

  • Ownership consolidation mechanics (moving toward 92.5%) and associated dilution terms Critical Metals+1


11) Principal risks (what can impair value)

  • Metallurgical/process risk (rare earth projects fail here more than at the “resource” stage) Reuters+1

  • Financing/dilution risk (capex-heavy builds; multiple raises) Reuters+1

  • Geopolitical headline volatility (policy-driven enthusiasm can reverse quickly if terms disappoint) Reuters+1

  • Greenland execution risk (infrastructure, costs, workforce constraints, community/environmental issues) The Washington Post+1


12) Bottom-line view for a small investor

Tanbreez/CRML looks strategically “important” because (a) it is one of the more advanced Greenland rare-earth projects with an exploitation license, (b) it is being pulled into the U.S. critical-minerals agenda via financing and supply-chain actions, and (c) it has begun to show downstream traction through U.S.-linked offtakes. Reuters+3SEC+3Reuters+3

The pathway to “real value,” however, is not the geopolitics alone—it is construction-capable financing + proven metallurgy + qualified downstream conversion. If those three converge, CRML can justify a meaningful strategic premium; if they do not, it behaves like a volatile junior developer with dilution and schedule risk even though investors have been intrigued by the keen interest shown by the President of the United States.

Editors Note:

We are long both CRML and UCU as this project advances toward production