Germany Australia Rare Earth Investment Strengthens Arafura’s Nolan Project

Germany and Australia back Arafura’s Nolan rare earth project for NdPr oxide supply.
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Germany Australia Rare Earth Investment Strengthens Arafura’s Nolan Project
KFW

Germany Australia rare earth investment strengthened Arafura Rare Earths’ Nolan Project after German state-owned development bank KfW agreed on 4 April to invest €50 million in the Australian rare earth development. The funding will be made on behalf of the German Raw Materials Fund.

Australia’s Export Finance Australia will also invest $100 million through the country’s $5 billion Critical Minerals Facility. Together, the two government-backed investments give Nolan stronger financial and strategic support.

Germany Australia rare earth investment is important because the project targets an integrated mine and processing operation in Australia’s Northern Territory. Arafura plans to produce 4,440 t/yr of NdPr oxide and 470 t/yr of mixed middle-heavy rare earth oxide.

Nolan Project Targets Integrated Rare Earth Oxide Supply

The Arafura Nolan Project is designed to become Australia’s first fully integrated ore-to-oxide rare earths operation. This matters because rare earth supply security depends on processing and separation capacity, not only mining.

NdPr oxide is a critical input for permanent magnets used in offshore wind turbines, electric motors, robotics, defense systems and advanced industrial equipment. The planned output gives Nolan direct relevance to Europe’s clean energy and manufacturing supply chains.

The project’s mixed middle-heavy rare earth oxide output also adds strategic value. Heavy rare earths remain highly concentrated in China-linked supply chains, making alternative oxide supply increasingly important for industrial buyers.

European Offtake Demand Supports Project Financing

Germany Australia rare earth investment also reflects Europe’s push to secure rare earth materials before downstream shortages intensify. Arafura already has a binding offtake agreement with Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy for NdPr oxide used in permanent magnets for offshore wind turbines.

The company is also seeking European offtake partners for another 500 t/yr of NdPr oxide. This shows that industrial customers are moving earlier into project-backed supply agreements to reduce exposure to concentrated rare earth supply chains.

Government-backed capital from Germany and Australia gives Nolan more credibility as a strategic minerals project. It also shows how public finance is becoming central to the development of non-China rare earth processing capacity.

The Metalnomist Commentary

The Nolan Project shows that rare earth security is moving from policy ambition into project-level financing. Europe’s challenge is no longer identifying critical mineral needs, but turning offtake agreements and public capital into reliable oxide and magnet supply chains.

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