
Lindian readies Kangankunde rare earths juggernaut with build, funding and offtake wheels turning
Two standout diamond drill holes — one going a crazy 920m at 2.6 per cent TREO and another stretching 910m at 2.9 per cent TREO — underscore the deposit's extraordinary vertical consistency and underline its almost non-existent stripping ratio of just 0.2.The company has already locked in a US$50 million offtake and funding term sheet with global commodities house Gerald Group, giving Gerald rights over all Stage 1 production and a partial look at Stage 2. And while that agreement remains in play, the board is also fielding multiple alternative offers — including a US$30 million senior secured loan from pan-African lender Ecobank and a Nordic-style bond package from a European investment bank. Several offtake prepayment proposals are also under review.Lindian says it will shortlist the preferred funding option in the coming weeks as it finalises its mining development agreement with the Malawian Government and heads towards a final investment decision. Stage 1 is scheduled for first production in 2026, with the aim of capturing early cashflow while the global NdPr magnet supply chain looks for diversification outside China.And the numbers stack up.Pre-production capex for the 45-year project – and that's just stage 1 - is estimated to be a miserly US$40 million, with opex of US$2.92/kg REO putting it in the lowest cost quartile globally. In fact, Lindian says it will still wash its face with about US$11m in EBITDA a year even at today's depressed rare earths prices, which are generally expected to head north as the market tightens.
Notably, independent market research group Project Blue says it expects rare earths pricing to range between US$50kg and US$115kg.
When using a scaled range of this pricing forecast, Lindian says the project will earn its pants off with a pre-tax NPV of US$794 million and an IRR of 99 per cent. The company has modeled an annual EBITDA in the first five years of US$57m a year and an average over the entire life of mine of US$83m a year – not bad for a project expected to cost around US$40m to build.
And with drill intersections mineralised all the way down to about 1km it is perhaps no surprise that Lindian says the project has an intergenerational 45-year mine life.
It's a textbook case of mining made simple too. The flowsheet is gravity and magnetic only — no flotation, no reagents, no waste dams. Ore is trucked just 2km from pit to ROM pad and processed into a saleable monazite concentrate — making for fast permitting, low environmental impact and minimal technical risk.
One reason for the super low cost to produce is the almost non-existent stripping ratio at the project, which clocks in at just 0.2.And that simplicity has already started to show on the ground.Construction began in February with Portuguese infrastructure heavyweight Mota-Engil winning a US$1.3m contract to build the 5km site access road. That work is now ahead of schedule and under budget. Lindian has since completed clearing for the processing plant, product storage areas, ROM pad and security fencing. It's also refurbished the onsite admin centre and built a new community police outpost.More than 70 per cent of site-based roles are already filled by local Malawians, with the company rolling out training programs to deepen workforce capacity ahead of production. New site leadership and technical appointments — including project director Daniel Britz and finance chief Teck Lim — have strengthened the execution bench.Perhaps most significantly, testwork is already underway with ANSTO — Australia's national nuclear and critical minerals laboratory — to produce a mixed rare earth carbonate (MREC) product from Kangankunde concentrate using both acid bake and caustic cracking flowsheets. The goal is to lock in product specifications, enable certificates of analysis, and unlock binding offtake contracts.The MREC route would allow Lindian to push further downstream and claim more value, while the concentrate's ultra-low Actinium-227 levels would avoid the radioactive penalty pricing or outright rejection that dogs many Chinese and African monazite feeds.It's an edge few other REE juniors can boast.Internally, Lindian has now completed an optimised feasibility study — incorporating updated plant design, equipment quotes, mine scheduling and tailings options — and is finalising negotiations with three shortlisted EPC contractors. A D&C contract award is expected as soon as funding is locked in.The company has also begun converting exploration tenements surrounding the main mining lease into full mining licences — paving the way for a Stage 2 expansion, which could triple output using the same gravity flowsheet.While several clay-hosted rare earths hopefuls on the ASX chase lower-grade ionic mineralisation, Lindian's Kangankunde stands alone for its combination of grade, thickness and simplicity — and in a hard rock setting, no less.Lindian's executive chairman Robert Martin says the interest from financiers and offtakers is a sign the market sees the difference Kangankunde brings.
'We're seeing the calibre of groups approaching us go up dramatically — not just in terms of financing offers, but also potential downstream partners. The project's purity, simplicity and economics are hard to ignore.'
There's still work to do before Lindian joins the rare earths producers' club — but few juniors in recent years have made it to this point with the funding, construction, product and political wheels all moving in unison - Kangankunde just might.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: matt.birney@wanews.com.au
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