logo
Everest-US Defence partnership opens funding for WA rubidium play

Everest-US Defence partnership opens funding for WA rubidium play

West Australian11 hours ago

Everest Metals has secured a seat at a high-level table after being accepted onto the United States Department of Defence's (DoD) Defence Industrial Base Consortium, thanks to its Mt Edon rubidium project in Western Australia's Mid West region.
Consortium membership will support Everest's research to advance its high-grade Mt Edon rubidium processing technology as the company bids to become Australia's first rubidium supplier.
The consortium is managed by US-based Advanced Technology International. Membership opens the door to prototyping opportunities, streamlined contracts and direct collaboration with US defence initiatives.
Management is confident Everest will gain access to non-dilutive DoD funding through its membership, which would allow it to capitalise on a red-hot critical minerals market and future strategic US alliances.
The company says the development will supercharge Mt Edon, where a maiden inferred resource of 3.6 million tonnes at 0.22 per cent rubidium oxide holds more than 7900t of the scarce critical mineral.
The real kicker for Everest is not the resource, but its patented direct rubidium extraction (DRE) technology, which has a staggering 97 per cent recovery rate. The company believes it can refine its technology with partners Edith Cowan University and the CSIRO, through a commercial pilot plant planned for next year.
Everest has grant applications in with the Minerals Research Institute of Western Australia, which, added to consortium funding, gives management the confidence to scale up its pilot plant vision while reducing any reliance on shareholder capital.
Rubidium is fetching a hefty US$1170 (A$1810) per kilogram for carbonate and is a linchpin for defence, aerospace and high-tech applications, including in night vision imaging, atomic clocks and medical sedatives.
With global demand projected to soar from US$4.46 billion (A$6.9B) in 2023 to US$7.2B by 2032 and China's grip on supply tightening, Everest's Mt Edon project could be perfectly timed to meet US calls for a secure, Western-aligned rubidium source.
The project's granted mining lease in the Paynes Find Greenstone Belt, 420 kilometres northeast of Perth, means the company has cleared another operational hurdle. Everest says shallow pegmatites start from surface at Mt Edon and are primed for an open-pit mining scenario.
With a high-grade resource, proven extraction technology and a direct line to US defence priority spending, Everest is shaping up as a critical minerals frontrunner. The company will now gear up for its pilot plant development and further testwork, as it sorts through an array of non-dilutive funding opportunities in the global critical minerals landscape.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:
matt.birney@wanews.com.au

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mystery at the heart of $20m in PointsBet shares
Mystery at the heart of $20m in PointsBet shares

AU Financial Review

timean hour ago

  • AU Financial Review

Mystery at the heart of $20m in PointsBet shares

For earning a tidy income in board fees from an ASX-listed bookmaker, PointsBet's executives really don't seem to be the gambling type when it comes to their own money. At least, if their decision to back a $402 million takeover bid from Japanese entertainment giant Mixi is anything to go by. Should the deal go ahead, it will bring an end to a five-month fight between Mixi and Matthew Tripp's Betr for the local operations of PointsBet.

The CEO of this $7b company is doubling his workforce
The CEO of this $7b company is doubling his workforce

AU Financial Review

timean hour ago

  • AU Financial Review

The CEO of this $7b company is doubling his workforce

Chris Ashton, the chief executive of the $7 billion, ASX-listed global engineering group Worley, recently took an example of an artificial intelligence calculation to the board to explain how his 45,000 staff could do the work of 90,000 employees. 'We showed this to our board, an engineer doing a calculation to understand what thickness a wall should be if it's carrying a product of a particular pressure,' Ashton tells BOSS from the business centre at Melbourne's Grand Hyatt during a visit from his US home in Houston.

It's a Paradox. Trump Tower developer rebrands Sydney's Radisson
It's a Paradox. Trump Tower developer rebrands Sydney's Radisson

The Age

timean hour ago

  • The Age

It's a Paradox. Trump Tower developer rebrands Sydney's Radisson

Capital gain Sydney's historic Radisson Blu Plaza hotel, which was the original home of publisher John Fairfax & Sons, is being rebranded under the Paradox chain. It will be the first Paradox hotel in the country. The brand is run by Macquarie University graduate and Canada's Trump Tower developer, Tiah Joo Kim. The sandstone building at 27 O'Connell Street which covers the block to Pitt Street was built in 1856. After the Fairfax business vacated, it served as the Bank of New South Wales, then as a Westpac Bank before beginning its life in hospitality as the five-star Radisson Blu Plaza Hotel in 2000. Malaysian-based TA Global has owned the property since 1997 and plans to expand the Paradox brand around the world. The group is run by one of Malaysia's richest families and has a global portfolio of hotels in five countries including Canada, Singapore, China and Thailand. Joo Kim was appointed chief executive at just 36, overseeing the company's portfolio, including the development of Canada's then Trump International Hotel and Tower in Vancouver. The rebrand will start on July 1 under the guardianship of the hotel's long-standing general manager Peter Tudehope, who is the former chairman of Tourism Accommodation Australia NSW. Farm sale

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