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| Greenland Resources |
Greenland Resources grant approval from Natural Resources Canada could advance technical work on the Malmbjerg molybdenum project in east Greenland. The Canadian federal department has conditionally approved C$7mn for the company to evaluate processing options and byproduct recovery potential.
The Greenland Resources grant will support feasibility work for primary molybdenum processing. It will also assess whether magnesium and rare earths can be recovered as byproducts, potentially improving the project’s value and strategic relevance.
The Malmbjerg project already holds a 30-year exploitation permit for molybdenum and magnesium. However, the project has not yet entered commercial production, making technical validation and financing support important steps before development can move forward.
Malmbjerg Could Add Strategic Molybdenum Supply
Malmbjerg is positioned as a primary molybdenum project, which gives it importance beyond normal base metals development. Molybdenum is used in stainless steel, specialty steel, high-performance alloys, energy infrastructure, and industrial equipment that require strength, corrosion resistance, and high-temperature performance.
The Greenland Resources grant therefore supports a project linked directly to advanced manufacturing and steel supply chains. In a market where many molybdenum units come as byproducts from copper operations, primary molybdenum projects can offer a more direct supply source.
Greenland Resources has already signed long-term supply agreements with European industrial customers. These include Outokumpu, Hempel Metallurgical, Cogne Acciai Speciali, and Georgsmarienhütte Holding, showing downstream interest from stainless steel, specialty steel, and metal supply companies.
Byproduct Recovery Could Strengthen Project Economics
The study of magnesium and rare earths byproduct recovery could increase the strategic value of Malmbjerg. If technically and economically viable, these materials could broaden the project’s role within critical minerals supply chains.
Magnesium is important for lightweight alloys, aluminium alloying, steel desulphurisation, and industrial applications. Rare earths are central to permanent magnets, advanced electronics, defence systems, and energy transition technologies.
The Greenland Resources grant also reflects Canada’s interest in supporting critical mineral development beyond its domestic borders when projects can strengthen allied supply chains. Greenland’s location and resource base make it increasingly relevant to North American and European raw materials security.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Malmbjerg’s importance lies in its potential to link Arctic resource development with European alloy and steel demand. The next test is whether processing studies can turn molybdenum, magnesium, and rare earth potential into a bankable supply-chain project.

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