logo
Heavy Rare Earths out to turn SA uranium projects into next big prize

Heavy Rare Earths out to turn SA uranium projects into next big prize

News.com.au06-07-2025
HRE doubles down on uranium with South Australian trio
Exploration manager Joseph Ogierman highlights the quality of the projects as a key attraction
The company believes it is well positioned to draw serious interest from companies such as Heathgate and Boss Energy if a discovery is made
Since pivoting towards uranium last year with the acquisition of three uranium projects in South Australia near established mining operators, Heavy Rare Earths has been positioning for potential acquisition interest if a major find emerges.
Until that point, the company was focused on its Cowalinya rare earths project near Esperance, WA, a deposit comparable in style to the massive ion-adsorption clay types found in southern China and Myanmar, where most of the world's heavy rare earths are sourced.
Despite strong progress at the project, which contains an inferred resource of 159Mt at 870ppm total rare earth oxides (TREO) and an exploration target ranging from 280 to 1390Mt at 330-1330ppm TREO, the board was finding it increasingly difficult to secure sufficient funding to move forward with the next phase of exploration and development.
With an eye on the long-term value of critical minerals, Heavy Rare Earths (ASX:HRE) viewed the opportunity to acquire three assets from Havilah Resources (ASX:HAV) – in one of the world's premier uranium producing jurisdictions – as highly compelling.
HRE exploration manager Joseph Ogierman told Stockhead a major selling point was the opportunity to explore quality projects, in a region with significant resource endowment and host to several active low-cost, long-life uranium operations.
SA's uranium heritage powers next exploration phase
Australia leads globally in uranium reserves and ranks fourth in production, with South Australia standing out as the core of the nation's uranium sector, housing 80% of its economic demonstrated resources and close to a quarter of the world's uranium supply.
'South Australia's rich history in uranium mining not only highlights its potential for future exploration but also underscores the strategic advantages it offers to companies like HRE,' Ogierman said.
All three projects – Radium Hill, Lake Namba-Billeroo and Prospect Hill – sit in prospective geological settings within the Proterozoic Curnamona Province in northern South Australia.
Proterozoic basement provinces in the state have been the focus of major milestones in Australia's uranium industry.
Among the milestones are the initial uranium production at Radium Hill –the nation's first major uranium-only operation in the 1950s – and the subsequent development of Olympic Dam, the world's largest uranium deposit.
It is also the location of two of Australia's uranium producing mines including Beverly/Four Mile, owned and operated by Heathgate Resources, and Boss Energy (ASX:BOE)'s Honeymoon project, which recently met its FY25 production target having produced 328,102 pounds of yellowcake in the June quarter.
'Lake Namba-Billeroo and Prospect Hill are sediment-hosted uranium targets within known paleochannels and about 30km of the Billeroo palaeochannel – only 13km downstream from Boss Energy's Gould's Dam uranium resource – which has not been tested by a single drill hole,' Ogierman added.
HRE has rights to about 50km of strike length of the paleochannel, both upstream and downstream of Gould's Dam.
Brownfield and greenfield opportunities
The pipeline of projects spans brownfields at Radium Hill and greenfields at Lake Namba-Billeroo and Prospect Hill, with the latter featuring a geological analogue to the Beverley Group and in particular Four Mile-style sedimentary hosted uranium deposits with no historical drill testing.
Over at Radium Hill, Ogierman believes there is considerable potential to discover high-grade extensions along the main lode system northeast of the Radium Hill Mine, which produced 2.6Mlbs of U308 at 1200ppm during 1954-1961.
'Radium Hill has the additional bonus of significant upside as a greenfield target for scandium and rare earths,' he said.
'Although these elements were identified in the early 1900s, they were largely ignored during uranium mining in the 1950s.
'There hasn't been any systematic sampling for either scandium or rare earths since the identification of both these minerals.'
Recent reconnaissance sampling by HRE at the site returned high-grade values for scandium and rare earths in March up to 16,273ppm US08, 1,081ppm Sc203 and 36,371ppm TREO, potentially expanding the search profile for the project.
Plans for remainder of the year
While there is no clear prospect priority at this early stage of development, due to the paucity of drilling data along HRE's portion of the Billeroo palaeochannel and lack of any drilling data at Prospect Hill, Ogierman said the company aimed to gain a better understanding of the prospectivity of potential host sequences.
'At Radium Hill the focus is on understanding possible structural controls of mineralisation at the historical Radium Hill Mine and whether these controls can be identified along strike,' he said.
'Coincidently, it is important to understand the distribution of scandium and rare earths and their relationship with uranium mineralisation.
'We have undertaken first-pass geophysical surveys since acquiring the projects including passive seismic surveys at Billeroo and Prospect Hill and an airborne geophysical (magnetic and radiometric) survey at Radium Hill,' he added.
'Data for each project has been processed and is currently being integrated with all available geological and open file geophysical information to construct mineral system models.
'The immediate goal is for this process to deliver a pipeline of targets at Billeroo, Prospect Hill and Radium Hill in the next couple of months which will be ranked for drill testing in the second half of this year.'
In preparation, HRE has begun engaging with local landowners and is in the process of preparing drilling approval applications for submission to the state government.
HRE is also working closely with the relevant Native Title groups to undertake Aboriginal cultural heritage clearances in accordance with established protocols.
'We anticipate this to be a straightforward process as Havilah Resources, the tenement holder for all HRE projects, has developed relationships with landowners and traditional custodians over nearly three decades of successful exploration work,' Ogierman said.
A likely target for M&A activity
With its projects in the same uranium-rich province and targeting the same deposit style as major ISR operations like Beverly/Four Mile and Honeymoon, HRE reckons it is well positioned to draw serious interest from companies such as Heathgate and Boss Energy should a discovery be made.
'We anticipate intense interest by at least those companies, perhaps others, in any uranium discoveries made by HRE,' he said.
'Our Prospect Hill asset is surrounded on three sides by US-based Heathgate Resources, with other uranium focused explorers in the area including Orpheus Uranium, Koba Resources and another US-based company Tristar.
'We believe HRE represents a potential low-cost entry into the uranium supply chain should we be fortunate enough that discovery success comes our way,' he added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Pursuit of financial gain': Aussie grape company hit with $1m fraud fine
‘Pursuit of financial gain': Aussie grape company hit with $1m fraud fine

News.com.au

time10 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘Pursuit of financial gain': Aussie grape company hit with $1m fraud fine

EXCLUSIVE One of Australia's largest grape exporters has been fined more than $1 million after running a 'sophisticated fraud' scheme which risked introducing a new pest to New Zealand. The Grape House, which is Australia's largest exporter of table grapes, was sentenced in the NSW District Court last week after it was found to have breached the biosecurity arrangements between Australia and New Zealand. The court heard how the Department of Agriculture found The Grape House (TGH) had 'deliberately misled government officials' while importing 145 tonnes of grapes to New Zealand across the 2017 and 2018 export seasons. The company declared the grapes were from South Australia and were grown in a 'fruit fly pest-free area'. However, the department found the grapes were grown in various 'non-fruit fly pest-free areas' with the company doing so to avoid the required 16-day cold storage disinfection requirement. There are no fruit flies in New Zealand, unlike Australia. They are considered one of the world's most destructive horticultural pests and pose harm to most commercial crops. District Court Judge Robert Newlinds SC found the company wanted to speed up its 'cash flow'. 'The offending involved a deliberate and sustained manipulation of the system of export, in pursuit of financial gain,' Judge Newlinds said in his sentencing. 'The offending was not spontaneous, rather, it was premeditated, occurred over a long period of time, and involved a significant degree of sophistication and planning.' The court heard how at the time of the offending Charlie Costa was the sole director of TGH and Colin Egan was the Warehouse and Logistics Manager. Mr Costa remains director of the company, however, Mr Egan has moved on from the role due to poor health. The court heard how Mr Egan had signed 'deliberately false' transfer certificates to the department about the grape's origins. Judge Newlinds said there was 'no suggestion' Mr Costa didn't know about Mr Egan's actions and said the director had given 'no evidence that he is remorseful'. 'TGH is a significant participant in the Australian table grape export industry,' Judge Newlinds said. 'Both TGH as a corporation, its sole Director Mr Costa, and Mr Egan had considerable experience in the industry during the offending period and there is no suggestion that what they did was some sort of mistake or momentary slip.' The NSW-based company has been in operation since 1989. Judge Newlinds fined The Grape House a total $1,050,000 and said the offending had put Australia's biosecurity reputation at risk. He said the fact that fruit flies did not make their way into New Zealand as a result of the offending was 'good fortune'. 'The offending risked New Zealand's biosecurity as well as Australia's reputation, which could have, but luckily did not, cause significant financial harm to both the New Zealand and Australian economies and also individual farmers within both countries,' Judge Newlinds said.

Suspension of giant Chinese mine another lift for lithium revival
Suspension of giant Chinese mine another lift for lithium revival

News.com.au

time11 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Suspension of giant Chinese mine another lift for lithium revival

CATL's giant Jianxiawo lepidolite mine suspended for at least three months over permits Lithium prices have gained on supply concerns amidst speculation suspension could last up to 12 months Australian spodumene producers have marked big gains today on the news Lithium tailwinds are looking increasingly stronger with news that China's largest lithium battery producer CATL has been forced by Chinese regulators to suspend operations at the giant Jianxiawo lepidolite mine in Jiangxi province. The suspension – the second time the mine was shut in less than a year – will reportedly last for at least three months and is due to non-compliance with permitting requirements. Interesting that @catl_official is learning they aren’t more powerful than regulators. China will retain controlling influence over #lithium price for at least a few more years but it is clear the Middle Kingdom knows price has to rise. â€' Joe Lowry (@globallithium) August 10, 2025 Shutting Jianxiawo is expected to have a noticeable impact on lithium supplies with sources flagging that it supplies anywhere from 3% to 6% of the world's refined lithium supply while UBS is estimated it provides feedstock for 8% of China's lithium carbonate production. The suspension could also last longer than three months with MST Financial saying that it was due to CATL not renewing its kaolin mining licence following scrutiny over state control of strategic resources under the updated Mineral Resources Law, which is aimed at countering practices that lead to destructive pricing practices. MST believes this could result in the suspension lasting up to 12 months, which reflects the timeline of a review process of CATL's mining licence renewal. Supply and pricing Capital Markets said it had already factored in some closures of higher cost lepidolite operations into its modelling, noting previously that it expects to see lepidolite supply of ~85,000t lithium carbonate equivalent vs reported capacity of between 120,000t and 150,000t LCE but recovering to 120,000t LCE in 2026. However, should the suspension extend through to 2026, it expects its modelled small surplus to be at risk, which will put continued upward pressure on pricing. Any impact on lepidolite supply will be welcomed by Australian spodumene producers as it would mean greater demand for their product. This is particularly true since global demand for battery electric vehicle have grown this year, which has in turn raised demand for lithium. Lithium prices have already moved with lithium carbonate futures on the Guangzhou Futures Exchange rising 8% by mid-day on Monday to 80,560 yuan ($17,196) per tonne. Spodumene supply from Australian producers is also likely to be welcome by Chinese refiners given that they have a well-deserved reputation for reliable supply. This is important as the refiners need feedstock to maintain their production of lithium-ion batteries to meet growing BEV and energy storage demand. Australian lithium plays rising The news is seen as largely positive for the lithium sector in Australia with shares of the major lithium producers all seeing significant gains. Liontown Resources (ASX:LTR) jumped 17.75% on Monday to close at 99.5c despite having just raised $316m through a two-tranche placement last week while Pilbara Minerals (ASX:PLS) took the skies with a 19.17% gain to $2.30. Mineral Resources (ASX:MIN) had a somewhat more subdued rise of 11.68% to $37.95 while IGO (ASX:IGO) lagged behind its peers with a 8.6% rise to $5.43. Meanwhile, Piedmont Lithium (ASX:PLL), which is in the process of acquiring Sayona Mining (ASX:SYA), rose 15.39% to 15c. Advanced explorers such as Lake Resources (ASX:LKE), Core Lithium (ASX:CXO) and Argosy Minerals (ASX:AGY), which have feasibility studies in place or which are progressing towards an investment decision have also seen big gains. AGY soared 31.03% to 3.8c, CXO gained 12.5% to 11.3c and LKE is up 10.26% to 4.3c.

Long Shortz: Octava Minerals
Long Shortz: Octava Minerals

The Australian

time14 hours ago

  • The Australian

Long Shortz: Octava Minerals

Tylah Tully chats with Octava Minerals (ASX:OCT) managing director and CEO Bevan Wakelam after the company announced plans to acquire the Federation project in Tasmania. Federation was previously drilled in the late 1970s, with results from the Sweeney's prospect recording significant mineral intersections of copper, zinc, silver and tin. In addition to the acquisition, Octava also raised $1.5 million to fund drilling and exploration programs at Federation. Watch the video to learn more. This video was developed in collaboration with Octava Minerals, a Stockhead client at the time of publishing. The interviews and discussions in this video are opinions only and not financial or investment advice. Viewers should obtain independent advice based on their own circumstances before making any financial decisions.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store