REalloys HRE Metallization Plant Targets North American Defense Magnet Supply

REalloys and SRC plan Ohio HRE metallization plant for dysprosium and terbium supply.
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REalloys HRE Metallization Plant Targets North American Defense Magnet Supply
REalloys

REalloys HRE metallization plant development marks another step in North America’s effort to secure heavy rare earth metals for defense supply chains. The US rare earth company plans to build the facility in partnership with Canada’s Saskatchewan Research Council, with equipment first built alongside SRC and later relocated to Ohio.

The REalloys HRE metallization plant is designed to serve downstream US defense industrial-base customers and support the US Defense Logistics Agency’s strategic rare earth stockpiles. Initial operations are scheduled for early to mid-2027, with full commercial-scale operations expected in mid- to late 2027.

The project directly targets dysprosium and terbium, two heavy rare earth elements used in high-performance permanent magnets. These metals are critical for defense systems, advanced motors, aerospace platforms, precision equipment, and high-temperature magnet applications.

Dysprosium and Terbium Metallization Becomes a Strategic Bottleneck

The most important part of the REalloys HRE metallization plant is not only its oxide supply route, but its metallization capability. Rare earth oxides must be converted into metal before they can move deeper into magnet alloy and magnet manufacturing supply chains.

The facility will produce about 30 tonnes per year of dysprosium metal and 15 tonnes per year of terbium metal. These are small volumes compared with bulk industrial metals, but they are strategically significant because heavy rare earth supply chains remain highly concentrated.

Dysprosium and terbium help permanent magnets maintain performance under high temperatures. This makes them essential for defense magnets, electric motors, guidance systems, and other demanding applications where magnet failure is not acceptable.

SRC Partnership Links Canadian Processing With US Defense Demand

The partnership connects SRC’s rare earth processing capability in Saskatoon with REalloys’ planned Ohio-based metallization facility. SRC’s Rare Earth Processing Facility will produce high-purity neodymium-praseodymium metal and dysprosium and terbium oxide, which will then be further processed and metallized at REalloys’ HREMF.

The structure creates a North American processing chain that moves beyond simple mining or separation. It links oxide production, metal conversion, and downstream defense demand into one regional supply pathway.

SRC also has a tolling agreement with a Vietnamese company that enables production of 400 tonnes per year of rare earth metals. That arrangement may provide additional processing flexibility as North America builds rare earth capacity before fully integrated domestic supply becomes available.

The Metalnomist Commentary

This project shows that rare earth security is moving into the metallization stage, where supply chains often remain weakest. For defense magnets, controlling dysprosium and terbium metal supply could matter as much as controlling rare earth deposits.

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