Highlights
- Brazil is advancing rare earth production from phosphogypsum waste streams in fertilizer operations, with Mosaic and Rainbow Rare Earths targeting ~1,900 tonnes/year of NdPr oxide in Minas Gerais.
- Both projects remain pre-investment with unproven metallurgy at scale, and critically lack secured separation capacity—risking another concentrate without conversion scenario.
- The next wave of rare earth supply may come from waste rather than new mines, but whoever controls separation controls value, not just feedstock production.
This Rare Earth Exchanges™ analysis examines new developments in Brazil’s rare earth sector alongside broader U.S. chemical trade actions. It clarifies what is real progress versus early-stage signaling, and why secondary sources like phosphogypsum may matter more than headlines suggest for Western supply chain resilience.
From Fertilizer Waste to Strategic Metals
Buried in a dense week of chemical industry news is a signal worth isolating: Brazil is quietly advancing rare earth production—not from new mines, but from fertilizer waste streams. Cited in Chemical & Engineering News (opens in a new tab) and in a nutshell: companies are exploring how to extract valuable rare earth elements from byproducts of existing mining operations, potentially creating a new supply without building entirely new mines.
The Signal Beneath the Noise
Two developments stand out. Mosaic, working with Rainbow Rare Earths (opens in a new tab), is evaluating the extraction of neodymium and praseodymium (NdPr) and other rare earths from phosphogypsum in Minas Gerais. Early estimates suggest ~1,900 tonnes per year of NdPr oxide—material critical for permanent magnets.
Separately, Verde AgriTech (opens in a new tab) is raising capital to test rare earth recovery near its potash operations.
This is credible. Secondary source extraction—especially from phosphogypsum—is a known pathway. It reduces permitting friction and leverages existing infrastructure. In a constrained Western supply chain, that matters.
Where the Story Gets Ahead of Itself
But let’s not confuse progress with production.
Both projects remain pre–final investment decision. Metallurgy is unproven at scale. Recovery rates, impurity management, and cost curves are still unknown. And most importantly: separation capacity is not yet secured.
Without downstream processing, these projects risk becoming another version of the same problem—concentration without conversion.
The Quiet Truth About Supply Chains
What makes this story notable is not volume—it is strategy.
Brazil is positioning itself as a low-cost, byproduct-based feedstock supplier. That is smart. But unless paired with Western or domestic refining capacity, value will still migrate elsewhere—likely to China.
Meanwhile, U.S. trade probes into chemical oversupply signal a broader shift: governments are waking up to industrial imbalance. Rare earths sit at the center of that realization.
Investor Takeaway: Waste May Win Before Mines Do
The most important insight is simple: the next wave of rare earth supply may come from waste, not rock.
But the same rule applies. Whoever controls separation, controls value.
Bottom line: Brazil may unlock new supply—but without refining, it won’t capture the market.
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