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Locksley bags global advisor to boost US critical minerals assault

Locksley bags global advisor to boost US critical minerals assault

Locksley Resources has snagged the strategic backing of corporate advisory heavyweight Tribeca Capital and put away a heavily oversubscribed $5.3 million capital raise, adding serious muscle to the company's ambitions to boost its place in the United States critical minerals revival.
The company says it is now locked and loaded to become a central player in America's push to secure domestic supply chains for rare earth elements and antimony - two metals currently dominated by Chinese supply.
Tribeca will provide strategic advice on commercialising its antimony and rare earth-rich Mojave project in California.
In particular, the global advisory group - with deep ties across the natural resources and technology sectors - has pledged to plug Locksley into a network of strategic collaborators, government bodies and downstream technology groups focused on rare earths, energy transition and advanced materials.
Tribeca's appointment as a strategic advisor to our critical minerals strategy marks an important step.′
Locksley Resources chairman Nathan Lude
Locksley Resources chairman Nathan Lude said: 'Tribeca Capital's appointment as a strategic advisor to our critical minerals strategy marks another important step in positioning Locksley at the forefront of the US and global push for secure, sustainable supply chains.'
Tribeca Capital director Scott Clements added that the collaboration has come at a crucial moment in global critical mineral reshuffling.
Locksley's Mojave tenure sits in the epicentre of America's critical minerals push, lying just a stone's throw from the famed Mountain Pass rare earths mine, which is operated by mining giant MP Minerals and is the only one of its kind in the US.
Spanning 250 claims, the project delivers a double shot of critical mineral firepower. To the north, its historic Desert antimony mine has rock samples grading up to 46 per cent antimony and more than one kilogram per tonne of silver.
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