Cesium is an “obscure object of desire” in one of the world’s most tightly constrained critical mineral markets, where commercial production has historically come from only a handful of mines.
The push to rebuild America’s defense supply chain has turned this rarest of commercial metals into a strategic priority.
While cesium has occupied a rather quiet corner of the critical metals industry for decades, its scarcity and uncertainty are now drawing increased attention, given its role in American defense technology.
Power Metals (TSXV: PWM; OTC:PWRMF) is one company linked to that shift. Its 100%-owned Case Lake project in Ontario is North America’s only cesium project advancing toward commercial production.
Backed by a long-term cesium offtake agreement with Albemarle, a producer of specialty cesium chemicals, the focus is on supporting a North American supply chain for defense and other industrial uses.
Power Metals enters the next stage of development with Albemarle already committed as its cesium offtake partner. The agreement secures future concentrate sales while providing up to C$5 million in project prepayments to help advance Case Lake toward production.
The World’s 5th Largest Known Cesium Resource
Many mining projects spend years trying to define a commercial resource. Case Lake has already established the world’s fifth-largest known cesium resource from a single mineralized dyke. The current resource represents one piece of a larger geological system, with multiple additional cesium-bearing targets extending across the property.
That resource represents only one mineralized body within a much larger lithium-cesium-tantalum pegmatite system.
The Case Lake property extends across roughly 10 kilometres and includes numerous pegmatite dykes distributed among 14 granitic domes.
To date, Power Metals has identified 17 additional exploration targets beyond the current resource, indicating that a significant portion of the geological system remains outside today’s mineral estimate.
The grades have also drawn attention. Commercial cesium production depends on extremely rare pollucite. Pollucite typically contains up to about 30% cesium oxide (Cs?O), making it the only commercially significant source of cesium.
Drilling at Case Lake has intersected pollucite grading as high as approximately 26% Cs?O, approaching the theoretical composition of pure pollucite and placing those intercepts among the higher-grade cesium mineralization reported by the company.
Successive drilling campaigns continued expanding the known extent of cesium mineralization, and the company has delineated one of the world’s largest known cesium resources.
Case Lake also expanded the opportunity. The focus shifted from developing a cesium deposit to establishing a North American supply chain built around domestic production and downstream processing.
Few mined commodities are defined by so few deposits.
Gold, copper and lithium discoveries span the globe. By contrast, known commercial cesium deposits remain limited. Case Lake has been described by Power Metals (TSXV: PWM; OTC:PWRMF) as one of the largest known.
The Cesium Double-Take
For decades, cesium remained on the sidelines of the critical metals sector, as the United States relied heavily on foreign sources for many critical minerals.
Despite playing an important role in technologies that support modern economies and national defense, the market for cesium was relatively stable. Technological advancements have shifted its profile.
Today, it is used in atomic clocks that define the international standard for time, satellite navigation, secure communications, aerospace technologies, radiation detection and high-pressure drilling fluids used in some of the world’s most technically demanding energy projects. Most of those applications have no practical replacements for cesium.
Commercial supply of cesium remains exceptionally concentrated. Only a handful of mines have historically produced cesium, while downstream processing has remained the purview of a small number of specialist companies.
For decades, global supply has revolved around just three principal hard-rock sources: Tanco in Canada, Bikita in Zimbabwe, and Sinclair in Western Australia. Two are no longer significant producers of high-grade cesium, while the third operates under an increasingly constrained supply picture. New commercial mines have been almost nonexistent.
New sources capable of reaching commercial production have been rare.
The concentration of commercial cesium supply means each credible new source carries strategic weight beyond its production volumes.
With that in mind, North America’s only advanced cesium project has something many critical mineral developers spend years trying to secure: a downstream customer.
“We’ve obviously identified Case Lake. It has a known high-grade cesium resource. We’re advancing into the production phase… we’ve identified and obviously created a lot of interest around the cesium market and understanding that nowhere currently across the planet is in production or operating or extracting high-grade cesium. So it will be the sole cesium operator globally,” Power Metals CEO Haydn Daxter told Oilprice.com.
For years, the cesium market changed very little because the supply chain changed very little. Manufacturers built products around materials they knew they could source reliably. Cesium remained largely confined to specialized applications supplied by a handful of established producers, limiting both competition and broader commercial development.
As potential new supply moves closer to reality, companies are starting to revisit applications that previously struggled to move beyond research or niche deployment.
Power Metals says it is already in discussions with multiple organizations exploring new cesium technologies, including advanced defense systems, energy applications and next-generation materials.
A dependable North American supply could help diversify the market. It could give manufacturers a stable source of material around which they can develop new products, potentially supporting broader commercial adoption across industries that have traditionally worked with a highly constrained supply chain.
Direct Path to Commercial Production
Unlike many critical mineral projects requiring hundreds of millions of dollars, Power Metals believes Case Lake can be brought into production for less than C$8 million. That’s an unusually direct path towards becoming a commercial cesium producer.
The contrast shows up clearly next to a project like Lithium Americas Corp.’s (NYSE: LAC) Thacker Pass project in Nevada, which is being built on a $2.23 billion U.S. Department of Energy loan and equity backing from General Motors. Case Lake’s sub-C$8 million route to production is a reminder that not every North American critical minerals story needs a multibillion-dollar balance sheet behind it.
The Power Metals-Albemarle agreement offers a rare look inside the cesium market itself.
Commercial cesium begins with pollucite, the rare mineral from which the world’s supply is produced. Unlike many industrial metals, economically recoverable pollucite deposits are uncommon, leaving only a handful of commercial sources worldwide.
From there, the supply chain narrows again. Pollucite concentrate is refined into specialized cesium compounds (cesium formate, carbonate, and other high-purity chemicals) used in defense systems, aerospace technologies, medical equipment, advanced communications, and high-pressure drilling.
Only a small number of companies manufacture those products at commercial scale.
Elevra Lithium Limited. (Nasdaq: ELVR) is chasing a similar kind of reshoring logic from a different mineral, working to turn hard-rock pegmatite deposits in North Carolina’s Carolina Tin-Spodumene Belt into a domestic source of lithium hydroxide for the U.S. battery industry. Like Case Lake, the bet is that a North American pegmatite system can be turned into the kind of supply chain independence manufacturers are increasingly willing to pay for.
The Albemarle agreement connects those two ends of the industry. Case Lake supplies one of the world’s largest known undeveloped cesium resources.
Albemarle (NYSE: ALB) holds one of the few established positions in downstream cesium chemicals. By acquiring Case Lake offtake rights and committing up to C$5 million in milestone-based project prepayments, Albemarle secured a potential source of future feedstock before first production, while giving Power Metals (TSXV: PWM; OTC:PWRMF) an established commercial destination for its concentrate.
The Hardest Part Of Rebuilding Cesium Supply
Cesium isn’t a simple reshoring story.
The market has never operated like copper, lithium or gold, where new discoveries can eventually feed established supply chains.
Cesium is built around a much smaller system: scarce pollucite deposits, opaque pricing, specialized processing, recycled brines and long-term commercial relationships between a tiny number of producers and industrial users.
That is why Case Lake is drawing attention for more than its geology.
Rare Earth Exchanges, reviewing Hallgarten & Company’s December 2025 cesium report, described the most viable path outside China-linked supply chains as vertical integration: mining, processing and secured offtake moving together rather than developing in isolation.
That’s the model Power Metals is following, with Case Lake as the resource and Albemarle as the downstream connection. The offtake gives the project a commercial outlet before production begins. Power Metals has described this as a first step toward a North American cesium platform, rather than a one-off mining project.
Cesium may be one of the smallest critical mineral markets in the world, but it is also one of the most concentrated. When supply is controlled by so few producers, even a single new source can alter the competitive landscape.
By. Michael Kern
IMPORTANT NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER
Forward-Looking Information
This article contains forward-looking statements and forward-looking information within the meaning of applicable securities laws. Forward-looking statements include statements regarding Power Metals Corp.’s business plans, the Case Lake project, exploration and development activities, permitting, environmental studies, stakeholder engagement, potential quarry-style operations, potential production, production timing, concentrate shipments, offtake arrangements, prepayments, market demand, critical mineral supply chains, pricing, strategic importance, and future growth or opportunities.
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