Mount Weld In May 2009, Lynas was offered funding of $252 million by the Chinese state-owned
China Non-Ferrous Metal Mining (Group) Co., which would have taken a 51.6% stake in the company. However the deal was scrapped by Australia's
Foreign Investment Review Board on concern it would threaten supply to non-Chinese buyers. Lynas later raised $450 million in a share sale. In November 2010, it signed an agreement with the Japanese rare-earths trading company
Sojitz to export €450 million Euros worth of rare-earth minerals from its mine in Mount Weld.
Crown deposit In April 2011, Lynas was attempting to sell its Crown polymetallic deposit (which is particularly prospective for
niobium) at Mount Weld to Forge Resources. Forge, a company listed on the ASX, also shared the one common Director and CEO of Lynas, Nicholas Curtis, (Lynas current CEO is Amanda Lacaze) although former Lynas executive director Harry Wang was also involved with Forge and the transaction. In a 2007 Company presentation, Lynas claimed that the Crown deposit was worth $50 billion but have valued it at $20.7 million for sale to Forge. Curtis as a director of Forge would receive a 24,000,000 performance shares if the deal between Lynas and Forge proceeds. Certain commentators and journalists have called into question the regulatory oversight of the
Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) as to the legality of such a proposal, but were proven to have been uninformed or alarmist because the proposal was always subject to the approval of independent shareholders at an Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM). The EGM was cancelled by Lynas after shareholder opposition to the proposal became apparent, and the Crown polymetallic deposit remains owned by Lynas.
Lynas Advanced Materials Plant The Lynas Advance Materials Plant (LAMP) near
Kuantan, in the Malaysian state of
Pahang is the world's largest rare earth extraction plant outside of China. The $800 million plant By February 2023, the plant had produced over one million metric tons of radioactive waste. A civil society group "Concerned Citizens of Kuantan" was formed in December 2008 to voice concerns about the plant. In early March 2011, an article published in
the New York Times raised the public awareness concerning the LAMP. Community opposition evolved into a bigger group called
Save Malaysia Stop Lynas (SMSL) under the leadership of
Bentong MP
Wong Tack. An Australian Greens MP,
Robin Chapple, denied Lynas Corp's attempt to ship
radioactive waste from Malaysia back to Western Australia saying that the Western Australia Nuclear Waste Storage (Prohibition) Act 1999 forbids the import of radioactive waste. On 19 December 2012, the
Malaysian Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal by SMSL against a temporary operating licence granted to Lynas, with costs in favour of Lynas. The refining facility entered production in 2013, producing 1,089 tonnes of rare-earth oxides in the first quarter of 2014, with a target of 11,000 tonnes per annum. On 2 September 2014, Lynas was issued a 2-year Full Operating Stage License (FOSL) by the Malaysian
Atomic Energy Licensing Board (AELB) In September 2018, the newly elected
Pakatan Harapan government called for a thorough review of the Lynas plant. Fuziah Salleh was appointed as the chairwoman of the evaluation committee, and promised a fair review, saying that she will "look out for the best interest of Kuantan residents"
Permitting In 2020, LAMP received a 3-year operating licence. The permit required Lynas to move their cracking and leaching facilities outside of Malaysia before July 2023, to stop importing radioactive material, and come up with a permanent disposal plan for wastes. In February 2023, the Malaysian government required Lynas to stop operating the cracking and leaching portion of the plant, because they were still generating radioactive waste. They also renewed permitting for other activities for an additional 3 years. ==See also==