lynas hat in ihrem antrag geschrieben, dass man systemkritische produkte fuer malaysia herstellen wuerde. diese meinung teilt die regierung nicht!!! man will in den kommenden 5 tagen eine entscheidung mitteilen. der lockdown gilt in malaysia bis 28. april.
UPDATE 2-Malaysia considers rare earths firm Lynas's request to operate in lockdown (Recasts with comments from Malaysian government) April 15 (Reuters) - Malaysia will decide within five days whether to allow rare earths miner Lynas Corp Ltd to operate its processing plant during the country's partial lockdown that runs until April 28, the industry ministry told Reuters on Wednesday. Australian company Lynas , the world's largest rare earths producer outside China, said earlier it had applied to the Malaysian government for "critical industry" status as its products are essential to the supply chains of key industries in the country, including medical devices. Its shares rose on news of the request. [nL3N2C3063] Malaysia's Ministry of International Trade and Industry has not classified rare earths among essential businesses allowed to operate with certain conditions during the restrictions imposed to fight the COVID-19 pandemic. Still, it is considering Lynas's request, the ministry told Reuters. "All applications by companies will be evaluated and results will be given within five days," it added. Lynas's Mt Weld mine in Australia has been running with only essential staff and its Malaysian processing plant shuttered on March 23, days after the government announced restrictions on movement and non-essential business, which have now been extended to April 28. [nL3N2BY1N7][nL3N2AR5YK] Lynas produced 4,465 tonnes of rare earths oxides in the quarter ended March 31, compared with 5,444 tonnes last year. Sales revenue tumbled 10% to A$91.2 million ($58.69 million). However, strong demand from customers in Japan, Europe and the United States helped it reduce reliance on China for sales of the elements used in everything from iPhones to military equipment, Lynas said. Production of Neodymium Praseodymium or NdPr, used to make high-strength permanent magnets found in ventilators, computers and wind turbines, fell 14% to 1,369 tonnes. Demand concerns from the virus crisis have also hit NdPr prices, Lynas said. |