West Virginia University will receive $8 million, through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, to develop a first-of-a-kind facility to extract and separate rare earth elements and critical minerals and materials from mining waste.

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $16 million from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to bring critical mineral supply chains to America and reduce reliance on competitors like China.

The funding will support projects in West Virginia and North Dakota for the development of a first-of-a-kind rare earth element and critical minerals extraction and separation refinery.

Rare earth elements and other critical minerals and materials are key to manufacturing clean energy technologies in America that will help the nation reach the Biden-Harris Administration’s goal of a net-zero emissions economy by 2050.

“Today’s funding will support a first-in-the-nation facility that will convert legacy fossil fuel waste into a domestic source of critical minerals needed to strengthen our clean energy supply chains,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm.

“President Biden’s Investing in America agenda is helping reduce our over-reliance on adversarial nations and positioning the country as a global manufacturing leader, while supporting communities that have helped power our nation for generations.”

The United States imports more than 80 percent of its rare earth elements and critical minerals to produce clean energy technologies and other indispensable products that we rely on every day such as smart phones, computers, and medical equipment.

Across the country, there are billions of tons of coal waste and ash, mine tailings, acid mine drainage, and discharged water. These waste streams from mining, energy production, and related activities contain a wide variety of valuable rare earth elements and other critical minerals that can be produced and used to build clean energy technologies, while helping to create healthier environments for communities across the country.

The projects will study how critical minerals can be extracted from coal mine waste streams as the first of two project phases.

West Virginia University will receive $8 million to complete a study for producing rare earth elements and critical minerals using acid mine drainage and mineral tailings feedstocks with at-source pollution treatment. Intermediate products will be processed to high-purity oxides, salts, or metals depending on specific market needs.

“West Virginia University has provided a mining engineering education to generations of students for more than 150 years, helping to build a strong and innovative mining industry that powered our nation and made us a global energy leader,” said U.S. Senator Joe Manchin, D-W.Va.

“This $8 million award, using funding from my Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, will continue that legacy and help to develop the energy technologies of the future with a first-of-its-kind facility to extract and separate rare earth elements and critical minerals from acid mine drainage and mine waste.

“By deploying this innovative technology to reclaim water from mining waste, we will ensure that we are producing these materials in the cleanest way possible while addressing environmental liabilities. West Virginia and West Virginia University are continuing to lead the way in energy innovation, and I can’t wait to see how the entire nation benefits,” Manchin said.

The funding award will support the development of a first-of-a-kind facility at West Virginia University to separate and refine rare earth elements and critical minerals from mining waste, Manchin noted.

Following completion of phase one, the project will have the opportunity to apply for phase two which will assist with the construction and operation of the demonstration-scale facility.

The award builds on prior work championed by Manchin, including a 2019 funding award to WVU of $5 million, through DOE, that helped establish a pilot facility which is currently extracting rare earth elements from acid mine drainage in West Virginia.

“I’m thrilled that the Department of Energy continues to recognize the value of the critical work WVU is doing in extracting rare earth elements and critical minerals from acid mine drainage,” said U. S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito.

“These elements are essential to modern advanced manufacturing, and this first-of-a-kind facility at WVU will play an important role in this process. I look forward to seeing this project advance with WVU at the helm,” she said.

The University of North Dakota, in Grand Forks, will receive nearly $8 million to complete a study to recover and refine rare earth elements and critical minerals from North Dakota lignite mine wastes.

The project aims to advance technologies that can enable a cost-competitive, environmentally sensitive process to produce rare earth metals and critical minerals from domestic coal waste.

“Along with their industry partners and the U.S. Department of Energy, the University of North Dakota is on the cutting edge of our energy future,” said U.S. Senator Kevin Cramer, R-N.D.

“This award builds on the group’s efforts to research, find, and affordably extract rare earth elements and minerals in North Dakota. The significance of developing this domestic supply chain for national and energy security cannot be overstated.”

The phase one projects will be managed by DOE’s Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management and the National Energy Technology Laboratory in collaboration with the Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains.

Over a period of about 15 months, these detailed engineering and cost studies will identify risks and costs, and will solidify plans for developing economically viable processes to extract, separate, and produce rare earth elements and critical minerals from the nation’s vast quantities of mining wastes that won’t be harmful to the environment.

Following completion of the studies and a period of technical review, these projects will have the opportunity to apply for Phase II funding for construction and operation of the demonstration-scale facility.

The two selected project teams were required as part of their applications to submit Community Benefits Plans to demonstrate meaningful engagement with and tangible benefits to the communities in which these projects will be located. These plans provide details on their commitments to community and labor engagement, quality job creation, diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility, and benefits to disadvantaged communities as part of the Justice40 Initiative.

The selected projects are required to develop and implement strategies to ensure strong community and worker benefits, and report on such activities and outcomes.