Filed by NioCorp Developments Ltd.
Pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933
and deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: GX Acquisition Corp II
Commission File No.: 001-40226
| https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/02/climate/nebraska-mine-niobium-rare-earths.html
Nebraskans
Are Sitting on Strategic
Metals. Is Mining a Patriotic
Duty?
One county has a wealth of minerals essential
to defense and the green economy. Mining would
transform the community, yet many say they feel
a patriotic obligation to dig.
By Dionne Searcey Photographs
by Arin Yoon
Feb.
2, 2023
ELK CREEK, Neb.
— In this rural
part of Nebraska, county-board
agendas include moratoriums on solar farms and some residents
scowl when they pass the handful of wind farms that have
sprouted. But the idea of a new mine that could help power
the transition to renewable energy has
received broad support.
The tenor of these quiet flatlands, where
deer bounce across gravel roads
and neon sunsets scream across the long horizon, would
change dramatically if mining for metals like
niobium, scandium, titanium
and rare earths begins.
But many
people here think Southeast Nebraska,
dotted with dying downtowns
and aging residents, could play a small part
in helping to solve a full-blown geopolitical
crisis that Doc Evans, a Johnson County
commissioner, summed up like
this: “The trouble with China.”
Mr.
Evans and numerous others welcome the digging
that a company called NioCorp wants to begin
because they feel it’s their patriotic
duty.
For too long, they said, the United States has
depended on other countries for metals and minerals
the nation could find at home, if only someone were willing to spend the money and effort
to retrieve them.
“I think it’s
good for our country,”
said Don Othmer, who lives
in Elk Creek, where the mine would
be. Relying on other countries for raw materials
means “we’re kind of held hostage,”
he said.
Geological
fate meted out hundreds of
millions of years ago left the United
States lacking rich stores of
many of the raw
materials found on the federal list
of minerals critical to the economy
and national security.
The country has relied on
imports of certain minerals and metals
that are abundant
in China and elsewhere and are needed
for America’s fighter jets, building materials and cellphone batteries.
The United
States is determined to no longer be dependent on other countries, particularly now
as these materials, which are also used in making electric- vehicle
batteries and for transmitting energy from
wind turbines and solar panels to the power grid,
are key ingredients for an economy
that relies on renewables. Measures enacted
under the Biden Administration offer major incentives
to mining companies and processing facilities to do their work
domestically.
But the biggest incentive
is the market demand that has increased the
price of metals including rare earths —
a set of elements found together, with names
like terbium and dysprosium
— making it newly economical for mining companies to scour the nation for even
small amounts that can be scraped from
underneath the soil.
Downtown Tecumseh,
Neb., one of the nearby towns that would
feel ripple effects from a new mine.
Coffee at the Harvest
Bowl, a cafe and bowling
alley that’s a gathering place in Tecumseh.
A wind farm in Du Bois, Neb.,
roughly 20 miles south of Elk Creek.
NioCorp wants
to bring in hundreds of workers and heavy
drilling equipment to dig the metals. After decades
of exploration and looking for financing, it soon may
be able to get started, buoyed
by new demand for a domestic supply of critical minerals and metals
that can power
America’s transition to renewable
energy. And the company
has embraced the messaging that plays
well in this conservative area that counts patriotism as a key
value.
“It will help America,”
said Mark Smith, chief executive of NioCorp,
which is based in Colorado.
The federal government
is hoping to find new deposits of minerals and metals
by carrying out projects to digitize information from
100-year-old geological maps and by flying survey
planes all over the country.
The government is also financing programs
to comb through waste piles of old mines, including coal ash, for materials once deemed worthless.
One program tests ways to sift minerals
and metals from Superfund sites.
“Can the U.S.
meet its own mineral supply needs? It’s
a big, complicated question,”
said Graham Lederer,
researcher at the United States Geological Survey’s
Geology, Energy
& Minerals Science Center.
“Anything could be a resource. You
just need to develop the technology and bring the cost down.”
Just
outside Elk Creek, pronounced by some locally
as “Elk Crick,” workers from
NioCorp are clearing trees to prep
the land for digging, should it succeed in getting
more financing. The company,
now listed on the Toronto
Stock Exchange, said it has lined up German buyers for some of its niobium.
Hundreds
of people and a new governor-elect turned up for a series of town
halls in November
held by NioCorp. The meetings drew investors
from Kansas City
who snapped photos as they wandered Elk Creek’s
tiny downtown
past a bank, a post office, small grocery store and the Village
Tavern, which is known for its signature
drink, the Elk Creek Water
(Mountain
Dew, Squirt, 7 UP,
vodka and gin) as well as an annual event where
beef testicles are served (the “Nut
Feed”).
“We’ve
had a harder time keeping the younger
generation here,”
said Don Gottula,
who owns a propane
shop on Main Street.
“We
need a booster shot, I guess you could say.”
As the hunt for more
materials used in batteries continues, energy
officials predict more scenes across America
like the one in Nebraska,
a state with abundant cornfields and cattle
but no operating mines. In
Utah, a mine has begun producing
tellurium. A new cobalt mine in Idaho is expected to be operational
this year. New
lithium mining is planned for North Carolina,
and in California companies are trying out new technology to extract
lithium from
geothermal brines.
The world
may need more than 300 new mines in the next decade
to meet demand for electric-vehicle and energy-storage
batteries, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.
Don Gottula
at his propane shop in Elk Creek.
“We’ve
had a harder time keeping the younger
generation here,”
he said.
Elk Creek’s
tallest building, at the Midwest Farmers Co-Op.
The mine would bring, among other things, a 10-story
processing facility
to the area.
Coffee at Harvest
Bowl on a recent morning included conversation
about the mine.
In
Nebraska, metals that were
a distant memory from
high school chemistry class have become part of regular
conversation. Like most people in the Elk Creek area, any of the dozen or so farmers
who gather for morning coffee several days a
week before the lanes light up at Harvest
Bowl in nearby Tecumseh can
speak fluently about niobium.
“Didn’t
they put that in Superman’s underwear?”
one joked on a recent
morning.
Niobium might help batteries
hold a charge longer,
another said, and that’s a good thing out here
where miles separate even gas stations. But did anyone
ever consider what happens to the wind turbines and solar panels years from
now when they no longer function?
“When they wear
out there’s no place to go with them,”
said Milton Buchholz, a retired farmer and former county
roads department worker.
The conversation turned
to the prairie fires
and dust storms that swept across parts of Nebraska
last summer. The crop-withering
drought just won’t
let up.
“I’m
not convinced whether this is all man-made or God-made,”
said Mr. Evans,
the county commissioner who sat at a table near
farmers in hats advertising pesticides and fertilizer
and one that read “cow whisperer.”
“I know
that we may be contributing but who did it 100,000 years
ago when we had an Ice Age?” he added.
To
build the mine here, workers would burrow
nearly 2,500 feet into the earth, creating an underground
mini city to operate machinery.
Construction would take
almost three years, requiring 400 workers and
convoys
of heavy trucks rumbling across the plains
surrounding Elk Creek, population 98.
“If we want
to give our kids a chance, we’ve got to
use the resources we have,”
said Harold
Richardson, a farmer and retired
teacher from Elk Creek.
China is the world’s
main producer and processor of scandium
and rare earths. America has only one rare
earth mine, in Mountain
Pass, Calif.
It sends its ore to China for processing.
(Mr. Smith of NioCorp is the former chief executive
of MolyCorp, which used to own
the Mountain
Pass mine.)
Brazil
is by far the world’s
biggest producer of niobium, which is used to strengthen
steel. China Molybdenum, a state-backed
company, bought a key
niobium mine in Brazil in 2016.
Mr.
Honan, NioCorp’s
chief operating officer,
on Beverly Beethe’s farm. “The
rocks are different
here,”
he said.
Mr.
Honan held a core sample.
Core
samples for testing were stacked in sheds on Ms.
Beethe’s farm.
The importance
of having a domestic stash of metals
was highlighted in 2010 when China blocked exports
of rare earths to Japan
during a dispute over a fishing trawler
incident, sending prices soaring. Since then, tensions between the United
States and China only have escalated, prompting fears about politically
and economically motivated
supply-chain disruptions.
NioCorp executives
say the amount of metals they could recover
at Elk Creek would be scant
compared to the Chinese supply; they are still determining whether they can
economically retrieve the rare earths. The company
plans to dig titanium, too (China, Japan
and Russia are among the world’s
biggest titanium producers), but niobium is the
most abundant metal at the site, and if operations
go forward, Elk Creek
would be the only niobium mine in America.
Company executives say
they expect demand for the metal to increase
for use in new versions of lithium ion electric vehicle
batteries under development.
NioCorp has obtained
all the necessary permits to start digging.
But if it digs the rare earths, NioCorp may need
to look overseas for processing.
A new processing facility that is in the works
in Texas could take years to become operational.
“I’d
really want to see these activities done in
the United States or an allied country” such as Japan
or Britain, said Mr.
Smith of NioCorp.
New demand
for greener sources of energy is fueling interest
from Wall
Street in the Elk Creek mine. But the messaging
from NioCorp tends to focus on the metals’
traditional uses — in oil pipelines and guided missiles, residents said.
“NioCorp is being very
thoughtful in how they’re
communicating with Southeast Nebraskans,”
said State Senator Julie
Slama, who represents constituents in Johnson
County,
which has voted Republican in every presidential
election since the 1960s. “In Nebraska,
we have a sense of patriotism and desire to
serve our country.”
People have
been talking about a mine in Elk Creek since
the early 1970s when, according to local lore, pilots
reported their instruments went haywire while
flying over southeast Nebraska.
The real story: University
researchers received a federal grant to fly over
the state with instrumentation that identified
changes in the earth’s magnetic field, indicating
the possible presence of certain minerals and
metals.
“The rocks
are different here,”
said Scott Honan, NioCorp’s chief operating
officer.
Back then local
workers were hired to carry
out exploratory drilling, digging up hundreds
of core samples, tubes of earth, for testing. Stacks
of them are stored in metal
sheds on Beverly Beethe’s farm, where
the mine would be located.
Residents signed land leases with the company,
which eventually bought 226 acres. Some landowners
netted lucrative deals and could receive royalty
payouts of as much as $10 million a year.
Ms.
Beethe said she and a few others wondered
whether they’d received
a fair deal.
Lavon
Heidemann, a NioCorp spokesman, pointed out Ms.
Beethe’s farm on a map at the town’s
Frontier Cooperative.
Mr.
Heidemann checked on feed prices at the Frontier Cooperative.
But the deals created
bad blood. Some residents who were left out were
miffed. Others like
Ms. Beethe question whether they got a fair deal, especially in an area where the
price of farmland has recently skyrocketed.
“The way
I got treated, I hope that they don’t
treat the community that way,”
she said.
Many
residents also are worried
about damage from the toxic chemicals
used in mining and processing.
They wonder
about cancer cases near the mine site. Rare earth
metals are found alongside radioactive
elements. Mr. Smith said that at Elk Creek
the amounts are so small they don’t
require state licensing, but he said as a precaution
NioCorp plans to seek licensing anyway and will carry
out required monitoring.
Higher paying
jobs would be welcome
in the area, residents said, but still they wondered,
how will the mine ever be able to find
400 workers? The nearby state prison has tried
to fill vacancies by nearly doubling starting pay,
to $28 an hour. Staff
shortages are so severe
at the local school district that the superintendent is pondering a four-day
week for the next academic year.
He already
doubles as a bus driver because he can’t
fill the job.
And what if the workers
do come? “Where the hell are 400 more
people going to eat in this town?” said
Tim Weber,
who opposes the mine.
Residents like
Lavon Heidemann, a former lieutenant governor
from Elk Creek, have benefited from
the mine already. He
was paid to help drill exploratory hole No.
7 back in the 1970s and now works as a local
representative for NioCorp, fielding questions from
his neighbors.
Mr.
Heidemann sometimes stares
out from his hilltop farm at the blinking
lights on the wind turbines several miles away.
They bug him a little. He
worries the nation might be transitioning too
quickly to renewables. But, he said, the Elk Creek
mine would be good for America.
“I wish it wasn’t
in my backyard, but it is. Other people sacrificed,
and we need to sacrifice too,”
Mr. Heidemann
said. “I love this country to no
end. We have
challenges today and if we can help make
it a better place in an environmentally safe
way then, hot dog, I want to be a part of that.”
Additional Information about the Proposed Transaction and Where
to Find It
In connection with the proposed business combination between NioCorp Developments Ltd. ("NioCorp") and GX Acquisition Corp. II ("GXII") pursuant to the Business Combination
Agreement, dated September 25, 2022 (the "Business Combination Agreement"), among NioCorp, GXII and Big Red Merger Sub Ltd. (the transactions
contemplated by the Business Combination Agreement, collectively, the "Transaction"), NioCorp has filed a
registration statement on Form S-4 (the “registration statement”) with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”),
which includes a document that serves as a prospectus and proxy circular of NioCorp and a proxy statement of GXII, referred to as a “joint
proxy statement/prospectus.” The definitive joint proxy statement/prospectus will be filed with the SEC as part of the registration
statement and, in the case of NioCorp, with the applicable Canadian securities regulatory authorities, and will be sent to all NioCorp
shareholders and GXII stockholders as of the applicable record date to be established. Each of NioCorp and GXII may also file other relevant
documents regarding the proposed Transaction with the SEC and, in the case of NioCorp, with the applicable Canadian securities regulatory
authorities. Before making any voting or investment decision, investors and security holders of
NioCorp and GXII are urged to read the registration statement, the definitive joint proxy statement/prospectus and all other relevant
documents filed or that will be filed with the SEC and, in the case of niocorp, with the applicable canadian securities regulatory authorities
in connection with the proposed Transaction, including any amendments or supplements to these documents, carefully and in their entirety
because they will contain important information about the proposed Transaction.
Investors and security holders will be able to obtain free copies
of the registration statement and the joint proxy statement/prospectus (if and when available) and all other relevant documents that are
filed or that will be filed with the SEC by NioCorp or GXII through the website maintained by the SEC at www.sec.gov. Investors and security
holders will be able to obtain free copies of the joint proxy statement/prospectus (if and when available) and all other relevant documents
that are filed or that will be filed with the applicable Canadian securities regulatory authorities by NioCorp through the website maintained
by the Canadian Securities Administrators at www.sedar.com. The documents filed by NioCorp and GXII with the SEC and, in the case of NioCorp,
with the applicable Canadian securities regulatory authorities also may be obtained by contacting NioCorp at 7000 South Yosemite, Suite
115, Centennial CO 80112, or by calling (720) 639-4650; or GXII at 1325 Avenue of the Americas, 28th Floor, New York, NY 10019, or by
calling (212) 616-3700.
Participants in the Solicitation
NioCorp, GXII and certain of their respective directors, executive
officers and other members of management and employees may, under SEC rules, be deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies
from NioCorp’s shareholders and GXII’s stockholders in connection with the proposed Transaction. Information regarding the
executive officers and directors of NioCorp is included in its management information and proxy circular for its 2022 annual general meeting
of shareholders filed with the SEC and the applicable Canadian securities regulatory authorities on October 28, 2022. Information regarding
the executive officers and directors of GXII is included in its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021, filed
with the SEC on March 25, 2022. Additional information regarding the persons who may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation,
including information regarding their interests in the proposed Transaction, are contained in the registration statement and the joint
proxy statement/prospectus. NioCorp’s shareholders and GXII’s stockholders and other interested parties may obtain free copies
of these documents free of charge by directing a written request to NioCorp or GXII.
No Offer or Solicitation
This communication and the information contained herein do not constitute
(i) (a) a solicitation of a proxy, consent or authorization with respect to any securities or in respect of the proposed Transaction or
(b) an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any security, commodity or instrument or related derivative, nor shall there
be any sale of securities in any jurisdiction in which the offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to the registration or
qualification under the securities laws of any such jurisdiction or (ii) an offer or commitment to lend, syndicate or arrange a financing,
underwrite or purchase or act as an agent or advisor or in any other capacity with respect to any transaction, or commit capital, or to
participate in any trading strategies. No offer of securities in the United States or to or for the account or benefit of U.S. persons
(as defined in Regulation S under the U.S. Securities Act) shall be made except by means of a prospectus meeting the requirements of Section
10 of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), or an exemption therefrom. Investors should consult with
their counsel as to the applicable requirements for a purchaser to avail itself of any exemption under the Securities Act. In Canada,
no offering of securities shall be made except by means of a prospectus in accordance with the requirements of applicable Canadian securities
laws or an exemption therefrom. This communication is not, and under no circumstances is it to be construed as, a prospectus, offering memorandum, an advertisement or a public offering
in any province or territory of Canada. In Canada, no prospectus has been filed with any securities commission or similar regulatory authority
in respect of any of the securities referred to herein.
Forward-Looking Statements
This communication contains forward-looking statements within the
meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and forward-looking information within the meaning of applicable
Canadian securities laws. Forward-looking statements may include, but are not limited to, statements about the parties’ ability
to close the proposed Transaction, including NioCorp and GXII being able to receive all required regulatory, third-party and shareholder
approvals for the proposed Transaction; the anticipated benefits of the proposed Transaction, including the potential amount of cash that
may be available to the combined company upon consummation of the proposed Transaction and the use of the net proceeds following the redemptions
by GXII public shareholders; NioCorp’s expectation that its common shares will be accepted for listing on the Nasdaq Stock Market
following the closing of the proposed Transaction; the consummation of the convertible debenture transaction and the stand-by equity purchase
facility contemplated by the definitive agreements with YA II PN, Ltd., an investment fund managed by Yorkville Advisors Global, LP (together
with YA II PN, Ltd., “Yorkville”); the financial and business performance of NioCorp; NioCorp’s anticipated results
and developments in the operations of NioCorp in future periods; NioCorp’s planned exploration activities; the adequacy of NioCorp’s
financial resources; NioCorp’s ability to secure sufficient project financing to complete construction and commence operation of
the Elk Creek Project; NioCorp’s expectation and ability to produce niobium, scandium and titanium at the Elk Creek Project; the
outcome of current recovery process improvement testing, and NioCorp’s expectation that such process improvements could lead to
greater efficiencies and cost savings in the Elk Creek Project; the Elk Creek Project’s ability to produce multiple critical metals;
the Elk Creek Project’s projected ore production and mining operations over its expected mine life; the completion of the demonstration
plant and technical and economic analyses on the potential addition of magnetic rare earth oxides to NioCorp’s planned product suite;
the exercise of options to purchase additional land parcels; the execution of contracts with engineering, procurement and construction companies; NioCorp’s ongoing evaluation of the impact of inflation, supply chain issues and geopolitical unrest on the Elk Creek Project’s
economic model; the impact of health epidemics, including the COVID-19 pandemic, on NioCorp’s business and the actions NioCorp may
take in response thereto; and the creation of full time and contract construction jobs over the construction period of the Elk Creek Project.
Forward-looking statements are typically identified by words such as “plan,” “believe,” “expect,”
“anticipate,” “intend,” “outlook,” “estimate,” “forecast,” “project,”
“continue,” “could,” “may,” “might,” “possible,” “potential,”
“predict,” “should,” “would” and other similar words and expressions, but the absence of these words
does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking.
The forward-looking statements are based on the current expectations
of the management of NioCorp and GXII, as applicable, and are inherently subject to uncertainties and changes in circumstances and their
potential effects and speak only as of the date of such statement. There can be no assurance that future developments will be those that
have been anticipated. Forward-looking statements reflect material expectations and assumptions, including, without limitation, expectations
and assumptions relating to: the future price of metals; the stability of the financial and capital markets; NioCorp and GXII being able
to receive all required regulatory, third-party and shareholder approvals for the proposed Transaction; the amount of redemptions by GXII
public shareholders; the consummation of the convertible debenture transaction and the stand-by equity purchase facility contemplated
by the definitive agreements with Yorkville; and other current estimates and assumptions regarding the proposed Transaction and its benefits.
Such expectations and assumptions are inherently subject to uncertainties and contingencies regarding future events and, as such, are
subject to change. Forward-looking statements involve a number of risks, uncertainties or other factors that may cause actual results
or performance to be materially different from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties
include, but are not limited to, those discussed and identified in public filings made by NioCorp and GXII with the SEC and, in the case
of NioCorp, with the applicable Canadian securities regulatory authorities and the following: the amount of any redemptions by existing
holders of GXII Class A Shares being greater than expected, which may reduce the cash in trust available to NioCorp upon the consummation
of the Transaction; the occurrence of any event, change or other circumstances that could give rise to the termination of the Business
Combination Agreement and/or payment of the termination fees; the outcome of any legal proceedings that may be instituted against NioCorp
or GXII following announcement of the Business Combination Agreement and the Transaction; the inability to complete the proposed Transaction
due to, among other things, the failure to obtain NioCorp shareholder approval or GXII shareholder approval or the consummation of the
convertible debenture transaction and the stand-by equity purchase facility contemplated by the definitive agreements with Yorkville;
the inability to complete the convertible debenture transaction and the stand-by equity purchase facility contemplated by the definitive
agreements with Yorkville due to, among other things, the failure to obtain shareholder approval or regulatory approval; the risk that
the announcement and consummation of the proposed Transaction disrupts NioCorp’s current plans; the ability to recognize the anticipated
benefits of the proposed Transaction; unexpected costs related to the proposed Transaction; the risks that the consummation of the proposed
Transaction is substantially delayed or does not occur, including prior to the date on which GXII is required to liquidate under the terms
of its charter documents; NioCorp’s ability to operate as a going concern; NioCorp’s requirement of significant additional
capital; NioCorp’s limited operating history; NioCorp’s history of losses; cost increases for NioCorp’s exploration
and, if warranted, development projects; a disruption in, or failure of, NioCorp’s information technology systems, including those
related to cybersecurity; equipment and supply shortages; current and future offtake agreements, joint ventures, and partnerships; NioCorp’s
ability to attract qualified management; the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic or other global health crises on NioCorp’s business
plans, financial condition and liquidity; estimates of mineral resources and reserves; mineral exploration and production activities;
feasibility study results; changes in demand for and price of commodities (such as fuel and electricity) and currencies; changes or disruptions
in the securities markets; legislative, political or economic developments; the need to obtain permits and comply with laws and regulations
and other regulatory requirements; the possibility that actual results of work may differ from projections/expectations or may not realize
the perceived potential of NioCorp’s projects; risks of accidents, equipment breakdowns, and labor disputes or other unanticipated
difficulties or interruptions; the possibility of cost overruns or unanticipated expenses in development programs; operating or technical
difficulties in connection with exploration, mining, or development activities; the speculative nature of mineral exploration and development,
including the risks of diminishing quantities of grades of reserves and resources; claims on the title to NioCorp’s properties;
potential future litigation; and NioCorp’s lack of insurance covering all of NioCorp’s operations.
Should one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize or
should any of the assumptions made by the management of NioCorp and GXII prove incorrect, actual results may vary in material respects
from those projected in these forward-looking statements.
All subsequent written and oral forward-looking statements concerning
the proposed Transaction or other matters addressed in this communication and attributable to NioCorp, GXII or any person acting on their
behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by the cautionary statements contained or referred to in this communication . Except
to the extent required by applicable law or regulation, NioCorp and GXII undertake no obligation to update these forward-looking statements
to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this communication to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events.
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