Electrokinetic Mining Steps Forward: A New Malaysian Design Filing Signals Innovation in Sustainable REE Extraction

Nov 13, 2025

Highlights

  • Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS secured industrial design registration for a Modified Scaled-Up Electrokinetic Mining (EKM) apparatus through MyIPO.
  • This positions Malaysia as an emerging player in sustainable rare earth extraction technology.
  • The electrokinetic mining approach promises reduced chemical and water usage compared to traditional methods.
  • Potential benefits include unlocking lower-grade deposits and addressing environmental concerns in ionic-clay REE extraction.
  • While the design registration confirms institutional backing and procedural legitimacy, commercial viability remains unproven.
  • Energy efficiency data, cost feasibility, and field-scale pilot results are still needed before deployment.

In a field long criticized for its environmental footprint, a new development out of Malaysia offers a glimpse of what rare earth extraction might look like in a cleaner, more resource-efficient future. The “Modified Scaled-Up Electrokinetic Mining (EKM) Experimental Setup”, officially filed and accepted for industrial design registration by Patentsworth Malaysia under MyIPO, positions UniversitiTeknologi PETRONAS ( (opens in a new tab)UTP) as an emerging technical player innext-generation extraction technologies.

At a time when global rare earth supply chains are under geopolitical and environmental strain, incremental innovations like this deserve attention—not because they immediately reshape global output, but because they hint at where sustainable extraction science is heading.

A New Tool in the Sustainability Arsenal

Electrokinetic mining (EKM) has been floating at the fringes of academic literature for decades, promising selective extraction with reduced chemical and water footprints. The newly registered design—validated through Patentsworth’s notice dated 13 November 2025—formalizes a scaled-up experimentalapparatus intended to make EKM more practical, more measurable, and moreapplicable to real-world REE deposits.

This matters. If electrokinetic methods can be deployed economically, they could help regions with heavy clays, ionic adsorption ores, tailings, or lower-grade deposits reduce ecological disturbance—a central grievance in communities resisting traditional mining.

For Malaysia, which hosts ionic-clay-style REE occurrences and has been tightening environmental regulations, such technologies align with both national and ASEAN-level sustainability goals.

The Inventor: Dr. Syed Muhammad Ibad

We've recently met with Dr. Syed Muhammad Ibad on our podcast and showcased more of his involvement here at REEx in this industry. Learn more about Malaysia's hidden rare earth wealth.

What’s Solid and What Needs Caution

Grounded Signals

  • The design filing is real and formally recorded with MyIPO, confirming institutional support and procedural legitimacy.
  • UTP’s Technology Transfer Office is actively backing the innovation—an encouraging sign for Southeast Asia’s applied research pipeline.
  • Electrokinetic mining can theoretically reduce reagent use and improve selectivity.

Where the Hype Should Stay Grounded

  • No data yet supports commercial scalability; the filing is for design, not performance validation.
  • EKM remains energy-intensive in many configurations, and field deployment in heterogeneous ore bodies is unproven.
  • Industrial design registration does not confirm viability—it simply protects the physical form and configuration of the setup.

We still lack:

  • Energy-to-yield ratios
  • Cost-per-kg feasibility estimates
  • Field-scale pilot results
  • Comparison to solvent extraction, in-situ leaching, or optimized hydromet flowsheets

Still, innovation begins with prototypes, and Southeast Asia’s academic ecosystem is showing encouraging momentum.

Why Investors Should Care

While this is not yet a commercial breakthrough, it is precisely the kind of upstream R&D that can diversify future supply chains. If electrokinetic processes evolve into deployable technology, they could reduce capex, shrink footprints, and unlock deposits currently considered uneconomic or politically sensitive.

In a market dominated by China’s well-oiled rare earth machine, any credible movement toward cleaner extraction—especially from rising hubs like Malaysia—deserves attention.

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Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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