Highlights
- Lynas is the largest non-China rare earth element producer facing environmental and political scrutiny.
- The company operates processing facilities in Malaysia and Australia, with ongoing waste management challenges.
- Despite controversies, Lynas remains crucial to allied nations' critical minerals supply chain strategy.
Lynas Rare Earthsโthe largest non-China producer of rare earth element productโand its pollution controversies were a topic today via Independent Australia (opens in a new tab). The article paints a sharp picture of radioactive waste, water disputes, and strained government ties. But how much of this is grounded fact, how much leans into speculation, and where does bias shape the narrative? Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) probes.
Grounded in Hard Rock
Itโs accurate that Lynasโ cracking and leaching stages produce radioactive byproducts. Malaysia did pressure Lynas to relocate this processing step, resulting in Kalgoorlieโs 2023 facility. The water-use deal with Kalgoorlie-Boulder is also a matter of record, with 1.7 gigalitres of recycled water annually pledged. Likewise, Lynasโ license challenges in Malaysia, including thorium waste obligations by 2026, are well documented. These are genuine, material risks investors must weigh.
When Facts Blur at the Edges
The article claims Lynas has โno progressโ on thorium extraction with only months left on its licenseโthis veers into speculation. R&D timelines are opaque, and the absence of disclosure doesnโt always equal the absence of progress. Similarly, the suggestion that wastewater โnon-complianceโ in Texas proves unlawful conduct in Malaysia and Australia is an inference, not a confirmed fact. These leaps matter: they shape perception beyond what evidence currently supports.
The Tilt of the Lens
Independent Australiaโs editorial stance leans environmental-first, often skeptical of mining. That bias surfaces hereโstrategic imperatives and the reality of Chinaโs 80%+ dominance in REE refining are mentioned only in passing. By foregrounding pollution and downplaying geopolitics, the article risks skewing the debate toward outrage without acknowledging why Lynas remains indispensable to alliesโ supply chains.
Investor Reality Check
Yes, Lynas faces environmental and political headwinds. But the bigger picture is that Lynas, Iluka, Arafura, and others are linchpins of Australiaโs role in ex-China supply. While Independent Australia frames Lynas as an outlier to Canberraโs strategy, the truth is more nuanced: Lynasโ downstream magnet ambitions in Australia and the U.S. directly align with allied industrial priorities, even if disagreements over waste and policy linger.
Bottom Line
Independent Australia raises real concerns but drapes them in speculation and editorial tilt. For investors, the key is balance: Lynas has warts, but it also anchors the only ex-China rare earth production chain at scale.
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Astonishing ignorance of the science and the FACTS.
Itโs my understanding that in fact Lynasโs Mt Weld deposits not only the richest proven RE mine in the world; its orebody is actually the least radioactive and its products have not required ACC by rails rove labelling internationally – except in Malaysia that sets a radioactive threshold 10 times lower than the rest of the world!
My further understanding is that it was Chinese pressure, never revealed, that caused many years of political obstacles in KL that led to Lynas building its new plant in Kalgoorlie. However Malaysia has now realised its former idiocy- and welcomes Lynas operations for economic reasons.
If Lynas after 15 years is still facing these environmental issues then heaven help all the RE wannabees out there who have done nothing yet in terms of proving their potential mining and processing abilities. Let’s not even get started on those RE mines in Myanmar and the DRC, never mind within China itself. Isn’t Lynas the most transparent RE miner globally and now too big to fail for AUS and US govs to allow? Wouldn’t the shockwaves on the ROW RE sector be traumatic? We will see. GLTA – REI