Investments Raising the Bar in Sustainable Mineral Supply Chains

-

Raising the Bar in Sustainable Mineral Supply Chains

Raising the Bar in Sustainable Mineral Supply Chains

To support decarbonization, electrification and clean energy, it is necessary to boost global critical minerals production.

At present, the world faces multiple supply shortfalls, including but not limited to lithium, rare earths and copper. Achieving a meaningful transition means sustainability must be integrated not just in production, but throughout the supply chain.

Given their capacity to incorporate sustainable practices throughout their value chain processes and protocols, mining companies with vertical integration strategies can offer a unique value proposition for investors.


​Proven model

Vertically integrated value chains have existed in the resource sector for decades, driving many mergers and acquisitions while serving as the key value proposition for mining and resource companies of all sizes.

Certain resources, particularly those with high asset specificity, such as bauxite, are produced and processed almost entirely under vertical integration or quasi-vertical integration arrangements. The core reasons for these arrangements have remained relatively constant over the years.

For one, vertical integration provides resilience against market volatility, insulating against both downstream and upstream impacts through greater control and lower production costs. This business model also allows a mining company to take advantage of improved margins in adjacent sectors of the value chain, and boost upstream channels to market and generate incremental demand for commodities.

​Sustainability strategies

The transition to cleaner forms of energy and electric vehicles will not happen overnight. It’s an expensive and complex long-term undertaking. Moreover, it requires a massive amount of raw materials — and ensuring a company’s entire supply chain is traceable and sustainable can be challenging.

A vertical integration strategy can provide a pathway for a company to ensure a sustainable and responsible supply chain — from extraction and processing to sale and distribution, and potentially even product development.

As an investor, one must examine a mining company’s entire supply chain to verify claims of vertical integration and sustainability, including extraction, processing and refinement.

​Vertically integrated mining companies to watch

Given how long vertical integration strategies have existed in mining and resources, it should come as little surprise that many companies embrace them, including some of the largest producers in the world. Below, you’ll find a few examples we believe could make for particularly valuable investment targets.

Aclara Resources (TSX:ARA,OTC Pink:ARAAF)

A development-stage company focused on ion-adsorption-clay-hosted heavy rare earth minerals, Aclara leverages its patented Circular Mineral Harvesting process that produces no solid or liquid waste, requires no explosives, milling or crushing, and recirculates up to 95 percent of used water. The company has committed to fully revegetating and revitalizing the extraction zones at its projects in Chile and Brazil.

Beyond its Circular Mineral Harvesting process, Aclara plans to become a vertically integrated rare earth production company, from mine to metals and alloys, while consistently prioritizing and implementing sustainable practices throughout the value chain. In collaboration with the Saskatchewan Research Council and Hatch, the company is developing a rare earth separation facility in the US using a solvent extraction process. In addition, Aclara’s recently announced joint venture with CAP S.A. aims to offer a geopolitically independent alternative supply of rare earths for the permanent magnets market. In further demonstration of its resolve toward sustainability, Aclara recently joined the United Nations Global Compact, the world’s largest corporate sustainability initiative. With over 24,000 participating organizations across 160 companies, the Global Compact defines a ten-principle framework on labor, human rights, anti-corruption and environmental practices.

Northern Graphite (TSXV:NGC,OTCQB:NGPHF)

As the only producer of graphite in North America, Northern (formerly Northern Graphite) recently rebranded to emphasize its new strategy to evolve into a vertically integrated mine-to-market-to-battery company. Northern owns and operates the Lac des Iles graphite mine in Quebec, the Bissett Creek project in Ontario and a Namibian project that it is waiting to bring back online. Once the Namibian project is operational, Northern will be one of the largest non-Chinese natural graphite producers in the world.

This puts the company in an excellent position to expand downstream, leveraging its pre-existing expertise to help establish a stable North American battery supply chain.

Arafura Resources (ASX:ARU,OTC Pink:ARAFF)

An Australian REE company focused on sustainable development, Arafura maintains full ownership of the Nolans Project. Located 135 kilometers north of Alice Springs, the project is rich in both neodymium and praseodymium. Arafura has secured government funding to support the project, which it plans to develop into a vertically integrated operation with on-site processing facilities.

Once completed, the mine is expected to have a 38-year life with a capacity of 4,400 MT of annual neodymium-praseodymium concentrate production.

Fortune Minerals (TSX:FT,OTCQB:FTMDF)

A diversified development-stage mining company based in North America, Fortune Minerals owns the NICO cobalt-gold-bismuth-copper project in the Northwest Territories, Canada. The company is currently working to advance the vertically integrated project, producing bulk concentrate through a mine and onsite mill and then shipping the concentrate to a company-owned plant in Southern Canada for refinement. Fortune Minerals is also actively dedicated to sustainability, Indigenous relations and community outreach; the company currently maintains a working relationship with the Tlicho First Nation on the project.

Elcora Advanced Materials (TSXV:ERA)

Founded in 2011, Elcora is a vertically integrated battery materials company structured to address the entire battery value chain. The company is particularly noteworthy for its proprietary refinement process to cost-effectively purify battery metals and minerals. Through this process, Elcora is able to produce high-quality graphene.

Elcora currently owns and operates the Sakura graphite mine in Sri Lanka and the Atlas Lion vanadium deposit in Morocco. The company also operates a processing facility near the Ragedara Mine in Sri Lanka.

​Investor takeaway

Vertical integration is nothing new for the mining sector. But with sustainable and cost-effective production now front-of-mind for more stakeholders than ever, vertical integration strategies have never been more relevant. Companies that can successfully execute a vertical integration initiative gain a significant competitive advantage, greatly improving their potential investment value as a result.

This INNSpired article is sponsored by Aclara Resources (TSX:ARA,OTC Pink:ARAAF). This INNSpired article provides information which was sourced by the Investing News Network (INN) and approved by Aclara Resources in order to help investors learn more about the company. Aclara Resources is a client of INN. The company’s campaign fees pay for INN to create and update this INNSpired article.

This INNSpired article was written according to INN editorial standards to educate investors.

INN does not provide investment advice and the information on this profile should not be considered a recommendation to buy or sell any security. INN does not endorse or recommend the business, products, services or securities of any company profiled.

The information contained here is for information purposes only and is not to be construed as an offer or solicitation for the sale or purchase of securities. Readers should conduct their own research for all information publicly available concerning the company. Prior to making any investment decision, it is recommended that readers consult directly with Aclara Resources and seek advice from a qualified investment advisor.

INN

Source : https://investingnews.com/raising-the-bar-in-sustainable-mineral-supply-chains/

Latest news

Exploring Sui’s Object-Centric Model and the Move Programming Language

A closer look at how Sui’s object-centric model and the Move language can improve blockchain scalability and...

Spot Ethereum ETF launch delayed by SEC comments

The SEC commented on the S-1 forms and requested resubmissions by July 8, potentially delaying the launch...

BTC could hit $500k in 2029, $1m by 2033; these altcoins could follow a similar trend

BTC could hit $500k in 2029, $1m by 2033; these altcoins could follow a similar trend Bitcoin's bullish forecast and...

Why is Ripple Labs being sued now?

Why is Ripple Labs being sued now? Ripple Labs executives are now openly criticizing the SEC on Twitter, and claim...

Can Trump’s return to power and pro-crypto policies spark a historic bull run?

Can Trump’s return to power and pro-crypto policies spark a historic bull run? Could the increasing support for Trump within...

How NASA Is Using Machine Learning to Predict and Fight Wildfires

How NASA Is Using Machine Learning to Predict and Fight Wildfires The space agency is also developing drone tech to...
Advertisement

Must read

Advertisement

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you