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Koryx Copper Inc V.KRY

Alternate Symbol(s):  KRYXF

Koryx Copper Inc. is a Canadian copper development company focused on advancing the 100% owned, PEA-stage Haib Copper Project in Namibia whilst also building a portfolio of copper exploration licenses in Zambia. Haib is a large and advanced copper/molybdenum porphyry deposit in southern Namibia. The Haib Copper project, Exploration and Prospecting License 3140, is held by Haib Minerals (PTY) Ltd, a Namibian corporation fully held by the Company. It holds the option to acquire up to 80% of three large scale exploration licenses in the copper belt in Zambia. The licenses include Luanshya West project (LEL 23247), Chililabombwe project (LEL 23247), and Mpongwe project (LEL 23248). The licenses cover about 752 square kilometers in the Central African Copper belt. LEL 23247 is situated in the center of the Zambian Copper belt, which forms part of the Central African Copper belt. The three licenses sits on the same side of the Copperbelt, which hosts nine large copper mines.


TSXV:KRY - Post by User

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Post by texasbobon Nov 09, 2010 10:36am
133 Views
Post# 17679921

Pending DOD report could boost DSM

Pending DOD report could boost DSM
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TheU.S. Department of Defense is preparing to release a study of rareearth metals and their importance to national security. This studycomes in the wake of findings from the GAOand other sources highlighting the critical role that rare earths andother “technology metals” play in U.S. national security. Media reports indicate that the DOD report will downplay the impact of rare earth shortages on US military applications.

On Oct. 8, 2010, the DLA Strategic Materials section released its implementation planfor the transformation of the National Defense Stockpile (NDS) into theStrategic Material Security Program (SMSP). It discusses process,milestones, and program criteria but does not mention rare earth metals as an acquisition objective. The DLA Strategic and Critical Materials Report for FY 2009 lists the materials stockpiled in DLA’s inventory on page 57. The inventory does not contain any rare earth metals.

Thecoming DOD study apparently contradicts the GAO study from April 2010,which clearly indicated that major defense contractors were canvassingtheir supply chains for assurances of rare earth metal supplies, andthat the Hellfire missile in particular is dependent on a specialchemical available only from China at present. The National DefenseStockpile has been shrinking since the mid-1990s as policymakers haveauthorized the sale of resources no longer deemed critical to nationalsecurity. Washington allowed this to happen without considering howstrategic competitors could affect the availability of resources.America's potential peer competitors are not so short-sighted. China is considering the creation of its own strategic metals reserve.

The private sector is not waiting to seize the opportunity posed by latent demand for rare earth metals. Goldman Sachs helped finance the reactivation of the Mountain Pass mine in California, formerly a leading producer of rare earth metals. It now forms part of Molycorp (MCP). Another company, Rare Earth Elements (REE)has seen a massive increase in its share price this year due toinvestor excitement (panic?). Most other rare earth miners andrefiners, like Great Western Minerals Group(GWG.V), tend to be small and unpublicized. That may change veryquickly if the U.S. government is serious about addressing itspotential rare earth supply problems.

Disclosure: No positions

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