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MP Materials to build US magnet factory, seals GM deal

10th December 2021

By: Mariaan Webb

Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor Online

     

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Rare earth materials producer MP Materials on Thursday announced that it would build a rare earth magnetics facility in Fort Worth, Texas, and said it had reached a long-term agreement to supply automotive major General Motors with US-sourced and -manufactured rare earth materials, alloy, and finished magnets for the electric motors in more than a dozen models.

The plant would source materials from the Mountain Pass mine and processing facility, in California, restoring a fully integrated US supply chain.

The initial magnetics facility would have the capacity to produce 1 000 t/y of finished neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) magnets, with the potential to power about 500 000 electric vehicles (EV) every year.

“MP Materials has built an exceptional magnetics team and important commercial relationships that will accelerate our mission to restore the full rare earth supply chain to the United States,” said MP Materials chairperson and CEO James Litinsky.

“This is a momentous occasion for the reshoring of the American supply chain, and we are grateful for GM’s confidence, commitment and leadership.”

NdFeB permanent magnets are critical inputs to the electric motors and generators that enable EVs, robots, wind turbines, drones, defence systems and other technologies to transform electricity into motion and motion into electricity. Although development of permanent magnets originated in the US, the US has virtually no capacity to produce sintered NdFeB magnets today.

Like semiconductors, which became linked to virtually every aspect of life as computers and software proliferated, NdFeB magnets are fundamental building blocks in modern technologies and will increase in importance as the global economy electrifies and decarbonises.

Adamas Intelligence, an independent research firm, expects global NdFeB demand to double by 2030 driven largely by increased production of EVs.

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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