Powermax Minerals Inc. (CSE: PMAX) (OTCQB: PWMXF) Expands North American Rare Earth Footprint to Reduce Dependence on China

Disseminated on behalf of Powermax Minerals Inc. (CSE: PMAX) (OTCQB: PWMXF) and may include paid advertising.

  • Powermax Minerals is expanding its North American rare earth element exploration portfolio across Canada and the United States to address the significant dependence on China for processed rare earth materials supporting key defense and industrial applications.
  • China controls roughly 60% of global rare earth mining and approximately 90% of downstream processing capacity.
  • Growing Pentagon demand for drones, missile systems, and advanced electronics, continues to ratchet up demand for secure non-Chinese rare earth supply chains.
  • Powermax recently moved to acquire the Hopkins Rare Earths Project in northern Ontario, adding to projects in British Columbia, Ontario, and Wyoming.

As the United States accelerates efforts to rebuild domestic supply chains for critical minerals, exploration companies focused on rare earth elements are attracting growing investor attention. Among them is Powermax Minerals (CSE: PMAX) (OTCQB: PWMXF), a Canadian mineral exploration company focused on rare earth projects across North America. The company is assembling a portfolio of important rare earth element (“REE”) projects in North America at a time when geopolitical concerns and defense requirements are reshaping how governments approach strategic mineral supply.

Rare earth elements are essential to a broad range of modern technologies, including electric vehicles, wind turbines, advanced electronics, military guidance systems, jet engines, and permanent magnets. The growing demand must be met with increased mining as well as economical processing and refining.

Industry estimates indicate China controls approximately 60% of global rare earth mining and roughly 90% of downstream processing capacity. Beijing has also imposed export restrictions and licensing requirements on several heavy rare earth elements and related technologies, raising concerns in Washington and among allied governments about long-term supply security.

The issue has become particularly urgent for the U.S. defense sector. A recent report highlighted that the Pentagon has ordered tens of thousands of one-way attack drones, with plans to scale production beyond 300,000 units by early 2028. Each drone depends on rare earth magnets, while roughly 98% of global magnet manufacturing remains centered in China (https://ibn.fm/vi2bb).

According to the same report, more than 80,000 components across approximately 1,900 U.S. weapons systems rely on Chinese rare earth materials or components. These include drone motors, missile guidance systems, sensors and aerospace applications.

The distinction between light and heavy rare earth elements is becoming increasingly important in strategic planning. Light rare earths such as neodymium and praseodymium are commonly used in permanent magnets for electric vehicles and electronics. Heavy rare earths including dysprosium and terbium play a critical role in maintaining magnet performance under high temperatures and harsh operating conditions typical of military systems and aerospace applications.

Western governments are now attempting to reduce that dependency. The U.S. Department of Defense and other federal agencies have directed substantial funding toward rare earth development through government instruments including the Defense Production Act. The Pentagon’s investment activity has included equity participation and financing commitments designed to support domestic and allied supply chains.

At the same time, industry analysts caution that developing alternative processing capacity is a long-term undertaking. Building mines may take several years, but establishing metallurgical expertise, refining capability and qualified downstream manufacturing systems can require considerably longer.

That broader backdrop has helped increase interest in companies such as Powermax Minerals as a potentially critical component in the supply chain. The company’s portfolio includes the Cameron REE property in British Columbia, the Atikokan and Pinard projects in Ontario, and the Ogden Bear Lodge Project in Wyoming. 

Recently, Powermax also announced an option agreement to acquire a 100% interest in the Hopkins Rare Earths Project in northern Ontario. The Hopkins property covers approximately 5,900 hectares within the Clay-Howells Alkalic Rock Complex, a geological setting associated with rare earth exploration activity. Planned exploration work includes airborne geophysics, radiometric surveys, geological mapping and geochemical sampling. Management says the acquisition is intended to strengthen the company’s growing North American REE portfolio and increase exposure to jurisdictions viewed as geopolitically stable.

These developments come as global demand for rare earth elements is projected to rise sharply over the coming decade, driven by electrification, renewable energy deployment, artificial intelligence infrastructure, robotics and military modernization. Industry forecasts cited by the company suggest global REE demand could triple from approximately 59,000 tonnes in 2022 to roughly 176,000 tonnes by 2035.

For more information, visit the company’s website at www.PowermaxMinerals.com.

NOTE TO INVESTORS: The latest news and updates relating to PWMXF are available in the company’s newsroom at https://ibn.fm/PWMXF

Exploration Target Cautionary Statement

The exploration targets discussed are conceptual, and there is currently not enough data to confirm a mineral resource. Further exploration may not yield successful results.

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