Arafura Rare Earths’ shareholders gather on July 2 for an extraordinary general meeting that will determine whether Australia’s first fully integrated rare earths mine gets the green light. The vote is a critical milestone in a race against time: all financing conditions for the Nolans project must be satisfied by December 1, 2026, or the commitments expire. Beyond that deadline, a Pentagon ban on Chinese rare earths in US defense supply chains takes effect in January 2027, creating an urgent need for non-Chinese sources of neodymium-praseodymium (NdPr) oxide.
The stock, however, tells a different story. At €0.16, it sits exactly on its 200-day moving average, having shed nearly 15% over the past month and roughly half its value since the 52-week high of €0.30 hit last October. On a year-on-year basis, the shares are still up about 66%, but the market appears to be ignoring the geopolitical clock, with the stock technically oversold.
Nolans by the numbers
Arafura has reaffirmed the financial assumptions for Nolans, which is located in Australia’s Northern Territory. The after-tax net present value stands at A$1.73 billion against a total capital requirement of A$1.23 billion. The internal rate of return of 17.2% comfortably exceeds typical hurdle rates for project finance of this scale. Operating costs and total cash flows over the mine life have improved from earlier estimates, the company says.
The mine is designed to produce around 4,440 tonnes of NdPr oxide annually over a 38-year life. Offtake agreements already cover 93% of planned output, with buyers including Hyundai, Kia, Siemens Gamesa, and Traxys North America.
Geopolitical tailwinds — and a narrowing window
China processes roughly 90% of the world’s rare earths, and its tight grip has sent shockwaves through supply chains. Export volumes from China collapsed in April and May 2025, forcing automakers in the US and Europe to throttle or temporarily halt production lines. While China suspended the export controls it announced in October 2025 for one year through November 2026, the licensing system introduced in April remains fully in force, with European import licenses approved in fewer than one in four cases.
Outside China, NdPr oxide currently trades between $103 and $106 per kilogram — four to six times the Chinese domestic price. Beijing’s official rare earth price index climbed to 252.8 points on June 15.
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The Pentagon’s rule, which takes effect in January 2027, will prohibit Chinese rare earths in US defense equipment, making Nolans a strategic asset. Australia has positioned itself as a central Western partner, attracting nearly half of global rare earth exploration spending in 2024.
Financing consortium and governance
The financial backing for Nolans is heavily state-backed. Export credit agencies from the US, Canada, Germany, and South Korea are involved, along with the Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility, Hancock Prospecting, and global trading houses. Germany’s KfW, contributing a double-digit million euro amount, will receive a board seat and veto rights over future project milestones if the vote passes.
A positive outcome on July 2 would allow construction to start as early as September 2026. A “no” vote would force the company to try again before the December funding deadline, with no guarantee of success.
An overlooked byproduct with battery potential
A detail that may strengthen the project’s economics further is a byproduct stream of 144,000 tonnes of phosphoric acid per year. The purity already exceeds fertiliser-grade standards but is not yet sufficient for lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries. CEO Darryl Cuzzubbo has said the company will discuss with LFP battery makers whether additional processing is feasible. “That would get us a better price — and we haven’t put that into the project economics yet,” he noted. The current NPV does not include any contribution from this potential upgrade.
What the vote means
For shareholders, the decision is binary. If approved, Nolans will join only a handful of rare earth mines outside China that produce oxide directly rather than concentrate or carbonate — MP Materials in California and Lynas in Western Australia being the others. Fully 90% of Nolans’ capital cost goes into the chemical processing plant, underscoring that the real value lies in separation, not mining.
The stock’s slide since last October suggests investors remain sceptical about execution risk and market timing. But with the Pentagon deadline approaching and China’s export stranglehold showing no sign of loosening, the project’s strategic rationale has rarely been clearer. The July 2 vote is the first domino — and the strongest signal yet that Arafura intends to be ready before the geopolitical clock runs out.
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