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Home»Business & Economy»Lindian locks in support facility deals for Malawian rare earths hub
Business & Economy

Lindian locks in support facility deals for Malawian rare earths hub

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auDecember 11, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
Lindian locks in support facility deals for Malawian rare earths hub
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Lindian Resources has shifted its Kangankunde rare earths project into high gear after awarding all major non-process infrastructure (NPI) contracts, clearing the decks ahead of full-scale mine construction in Malawi.

The move comes after the company took full ownership of its giant rare-earth deposit earlier in the week, having paid US$10 million to exercise an option to acquire the remaining 33 per cent of the project from a local vendor.

Lindian Resources’ staff on site at the company’s Kangankunde rare earths project in Malawi.

Lindian Resources’ staff on site at the company’s Kangankunde rare earths project in Malawi.

Kangankunde packs serious geological muscle, carrying a 23.7-million-tonne probable reserve at 2.9 per cent total rare earths oxide (TREO), underpinned by a hefty 61-million-tonne indicated resource grading 2.43 per cent — numbers that cement its status as one of the most significant undeveloped, high-grade rare earths deposits in the world.

With work already underway across multiple packages, contractors mobilised and the mining fleet rolling in, the company says the construction milestone materially boosts execution confidence ahead of first production in late 2026.

The company has now locked up deals covering everything from the mining workshop and administration hub to the fuel farm, explosives magazine, power infrastructure, perimeter security and tailings management. According to Lindian, contract costs landed well within the budget limits set out in last year’s feasibility study.

Management says contractors are now on the ground, with early works already wrapped up. The company’s Komatsu-supplied mining fleet is also rumbling north from South Africa, with the first machines due to roll in this month.

Meanwhile, earthworks for the project’s all-important mobile workshop, which will house full maintenance capacity, servicing bays, CCTV and spares storage, are 60 per cent complete with construction set to kick off next week.

On the power front, the national electricity utility, ESCOM Malawi has been awarded the contract to develop the power line corridor that will energise Kangankunde’s first-stage operations. The scope includes clearing, excavations, foundation construction, pole installation, line stringing and transformer work – all designed to deliver an initial 3MW supply supported by solar and backup generation. Excavation and pole installation are due to begin shortly.

Fuel supply – a critical lifeline during the build and into steady-state mining – is being prepared, with the erection of a new fuel farm housing a pair of 40,000-litre tanks, dispensing systems, fire suppression and security infrastructure. The facility will feed both construction equipment and mining operations as the project ramps up.

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