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Malaysia allows Lynas to continue operating rare earths plant for six months

Malaysia says Lynas' license could be revoked if it fails to comply with curbs

Rare earth production line at Lynas鈥 plant in Kuantan, Malaysia. (Image taken from )

Malaysia has granted Australia鈥檚 Lynas Corp (ASX: LYC) an extension on its operating licence for a rare earths processing plant, subject to various conditions and valid only for six months, keeping alive concerns about the miner鈥檚 fate in the Southeast Asian country.

Among the (AELB), an agency under the Ministry of Energy, Science, Technology, Environment and Climate Change, Lynas must outline a plan to set up its cracking and leaching facility overseas, within four years of the licence renewal.聽

The company, the world鈥檚 only major producer of rare earths outside China,聽will also have to identify a specific site, approved by Malaysia, for a permanent disposal location for its low-level radioactive waste. Alternatively, Lynas will have to secure official written approval from a recipient country willing to take the waste, .

Lynas must outline a plan to set up its cracking and leaching facility overseas, within four years of the licence renewal

Analysts reacted positively to the news, saying that the four-year deadline suggested that a longer licence renewal would be forthcoming if Lynas meets the imposed requirements. Licence renewals in Malaysia are usually given for three years.

Opponents, as expected, lambasted the government鈥檚 decision. 鈥淭hose conditions have been part of the temporary operating licence since 2012,鈥 Tan Bun Tee, chairman of Save Malaysia, Stop Lynas (SMSL), said in an emailed statement. 鈥淟ynas has never bothered to comply with them so what is the point?鈥

鈥淢alaysia鈥檚 weak regulatory regime and culture, tropical rainstorms that often lead to landslides and soil erosion present safety, reliability and technical challenges for any mega-physical structure such as the requested permanent disposal facility (PDF),鈥 he noted.

Dragged-out complaints

The Sydney-based聽company, which extracts rare earths in Western Australia, but processes them in Malaysia,聽has faced several issues related to its six-year-old facility in the country 鈥 known as the Lynas Advance Material Plant (LAMP).

LAMP was the centre of relentless attacks from environmental groups and local residents while under construction in 2012. They feared the聽impact the low-level radioactive waste the refinery generates could have聽on the health of those living nearby, and to the environment.

Scrutiny escalated last year, with Kuala Lumpur setting a committee to review Lynas鈥 operations. At the time, chief executive and managing director, Amanda Lacaze,聽聽of a couple of committee members, both long time opponents of having the refinery located in Malaysia.

In December, the AELB told Lynas it had to remove 450,000聽tonnes of waste stockpiled at the local facility by September 2, the day its licence was due to expire.

Licence extension comes amid concerns that the rare earths industry聽may get embroiled in the trade war聽between China and the US

The miner ended up committing to聽build a first-stage processing plant聽in one of two preferred sites in Western Australia, where its Mt Weld mine is located. Downstream processing, however, was set to continue happening in Malaysia.

The licence extension comes amid concerns that the rare earths industry may get embroiled in the trade war between China and the US.

Lynas said in June that it had begun聽stockpiling output聽following Beijing鈥檚 threats to stop exporting rare earths as a weapon against the US, which imports about 80% from China.

The nation has used its rare earths dominance to make a political point in the past. It blocked exports to Japan after a maritime dispute in 2010, though the consequent spike in prices triggered a race to secure supplies elsewhere.

Experts believe that would be the risk again if Beijing follows through with its retaliation warnings. Lynas鈥 main products, neodymium and praseodymium, are key ingredients in permanent magnets used in electric vehicles, energy efficient consumer devices, and in the aerospace and defence industries.

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