Namibia Critical Metals Inc. Overview
Pro stress-test →Namibia Critical Metals is developing Lofdal, a Tier-1 heavy rare earth project with globally significant deposits of dysprosium and terbium—critical metals used in permanent magnets for electric vehicles, wind turbines, and other electronics. The Lofdal Project is fully permitted with a 25-year mining license and is under a funding agreement with Japan Organization for Metals and Energy Security (JOGMEC).
Strategic Profile
Pro stress-test →Incorporated in 2010 and headquartered in Halifax, Canada, the company is positioned as a critical rare earth metals supplier in a stable mining jurisdiction. JOGMEC has completed Term 2 and earned a 40% interest with total approved project funding of C$19,973,000 of the $23,000,000 earn-in requirement to reach 50% interest. The company is advancing aggressive exploration and infill drilling to expand resources ahead of development.
Competitive Landscape
Pro stress-test →The global heavy rare earths sector is dominated by China's processing capacity, but Namibia Critical Metals competes within the junior mining segment for capital and exploration assets. Direct competitors include other rare earth exploration companies such as Canada Rare Earth Corp. and Quantum Critical Metals Corp., and indirectly against established producers like Lynas Rare Earths and MP Materials Corp. The company's competitive advantage rests on its stable jurisdiction, fully permitted asset, JOGMEC backing, and focus on dysprosium/terbium—among the most supply-constrained heavy rare earths.
Industry Context
Namibia Critical Metals Inc. operates in Heavy rare earth minerals exploration and development.
Key facts
Founded: 2010 · Headquarters: Halifax, Canada · Employees: 4 · Market cap: $67.45M CAD