Avalon Rare Metals not building Geismar plant

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Avalon Rare Metals, which announced plans to build a $300 million rare earth elements separation plant and refinery in Geismar two years ago, has decided against building the Ascension Parish facility.

Company officials say Avalon’s plans to build the rare earths refinery in Geismar were abandoned after the company struck a deal with chemical company Solvay, utilizing its separation plant in La Rochelle, France.

Don Bubar, president and CEO of Avalon, said the company considered building a hydrometallurgical plant in Geismar to obtain metals from its ores. But that deal didn’t work financially.

“The cost of transporting the larger volumes of concentrate all the way from northern Canada made this alternative impractical particularly with increasing rail traffic and rising rail freight costs, forcing us to look at sites in western Canada, closer to the mine,” Bubar said in a statement.

Mike Eades, president and CEO of the Ascension Economic Development Corp., told The Advocate (http://bit.ly/1wFE63v ) parish officials are disappointed with the company’s decision.

“We’re disappointed, obviously,” Eades said. “We put a lot of time and effort into this. But there were a lot of moving parts in this deal.”

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Information from: The Advocate, http://theadvocate.com

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