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Frequently Asked Questions

Questions:

Answers:

What advantages do the facilities at GWTI offer that others may not

How are rare earth elements beneficial to current alloys and those of the future?

We currently use rare earth elements in the manufacture of certain specialty aerospace materials, and these elements add to the structural strength of the final alloy.

Rare earth materials are also used in some of the battery materials, hydrogen storage alloys, and magnetic materials we produce.

Future uses of rare earth materials go way beyond the metals markets, and as we develop and install the equipment and infrastructure needed to support the GWMG mining operations, we will be able to act as supplier to several industries that will use base rare earth (RE) materials in the oxide and fluoride states for their final products.
 

With China currently being the world's largest manufacturer of rare earth products, what locales and opportunities exist for a North American facility?

China is now supplying up to 98% of the world's rare earth (RE) materials. RE materials have a thousand uses, so the greatest opportunity is in having a second source for these materials.

The West is now in a position where, as the Chinese become their own best customer of RE products, the supply of this material is now increasingly diminishing, and we imagine it will only become more rare with time. If users of these materials want an assured supply for the future, a non-Chinese source will become not only wanted but an absolute necessity.
 

Do the expertise and market exist in North America to compete globally in this industry?

The market we are looking at goes well beyond North America. We are receiving inquiries from Europe, India, Japan, and some Asian customers, who are all wondering when and how much we will be able to supply.

In terms of competing with China, the principal reason we are looking to be a vertically integrated company is that we will be in a position to perform additional value-added operations and enter into the market with a more advanced product and thus able to set a more lucrative initial market price.

Most importantly, we are looking at using technologies that are not currently being used in the day-to-day processing of rare earth (RE) materials. Such technologies may act as a labor-saving advantage that will allow us to provide products that are price competitive with any other producer, whether in China or the wider global market.

Great Western Minerals Group Ltd.
Mailing Address:
226 Cardinal Crescent
Saskatoon, SK S7L 6H8
Canada
Phone: 306-659-4500
Fax: 306-659-4501
Email: info@gwmg.ca
Web Site: www.gwmg.ca
 
Less Common Metals Ltd.
Mailing Address:
Valley Road Business Park
Birkenhead, CH41 7ED
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0) 151 652 9747
Fax: +44 (0) 151 652 9748
Email: general@lesscommonmetals.com
Web Site: www.lesscommonmetals.com
 
Great Western Technologies Inc.
Mailing Address:
1826 Northwood Drive
Troy, Michigan  48084
USA
Phone: 248-293-3200
Fax: 248-362-3879
Email: info@greatwesterntech.com
Web Site: www.greatwesterntech.com