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Lynas Rare Earths, Ltd. is an Australian rare-earths mining company with two major operations: a mining and concentration plant at Mount Weld in Western Australia, and the Lynas Advanced Materials Plant (LAMP) in Kuantan, Malaysia. [1] The company was founded in the 1990s and is headquartered in Perth, Western Australia.
Mark Lynas (born 1973) is a British author and journalist whose work is focused on environmentalism and climate change.He has written for the New Statesman, The Ecologist, Granta and Geographical magazines, and The Guardian and The Observer newspapers in the UK, as well as The New York Times and The Washington Post in the United States; he also worked on and appeared in the film The Age of Stupid.
The Mount Weld deposit is owned by ASX-listed Lynas Corporation, [6] which raised A$450 million equity from J. P. Morgan in 2009 [7] to fund the development of a mine and also a processing plant in Kuantan, Malaysia. Once operational, the Mount Weld mine is expected to be the largest source of rare-earth elements outside of China. [citation needed]
Legendary fund manager Li Lu (who Charlie Munger backed) once said, 'The biggest investment risk is not the volatility...
The big shareholder groups in Lynas Rare Earths Limited ( ASX:LYC ) have power over the company. Institutions often own...
The government Tuesday said it allowed Lynas to continue to import and process rare earths at its refinery in central Pahang state, reversing a decision for such activities to halt by Jan. 1. This ...
Lynas describes how the idea for the book came while attending a meeting with the planetary boundaries group in Sweden. The biodiversity boundary. The climate change boundary. The biogeochemical boundary in the original framework has two parts: a) anthropogenic nitrogen removed from the atmosphere and b) anthropogenic phosphorus going into the ...
The first chapter describes the expected effects of climate change with one degree Celsius (1 °C) increase in average global temperature since pre-industrial times.. The second chapter describes the effects of two degrees average temperature and so forth until Chapter 6 which shows the expected effects of an increase of six Celsius degrees (6 °C) average global temperature.