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American Resources Policy Network
Promoting the development of American mineral resources.
  • ARPN’s Daniel McGroarty to Discuss Critical Mineral Policy at Alaska Critical Minerals Conference

    Mere months after widespread lockdowns in China over coronavirus outbreaks, factories in Sichuan province are shutting down again – this time over an intense heatwave and drought across China’s south.  Meanwhile, Russia’s war on Ukraine shows no signs of slowing down, and tensions between the United States and China over Taiwan continue to flare.

    As the stakes for supply chain and mineral resource security continue to rise, ARPN’s Daniel McGroarty will discuss the strategic implications and opportunities to alleviate our over-reliance on supplies from adversary nations during a panel at a  two-day conference hosted by the University of Alaska, in partnership with the Wilson Center and US Arctic Research Commission, held August 22 – August 23.

    The two-day summit for policy makers, agency representatives and industry leadership entitled “Alaska’s Minerals: A Strategic National Imperative” will discuss on Alaska’s vast critical mineral potential, which ARPN has frequently pointed to, and will outline the steps needed to harness that potential.

    Monday’s panels will focus on “national needs for critical minerals, Alaska’s investment climate and an overview of Alaska’s critical minerals resources,” while Tuesday’s discussions will revolve around “current research in Alaska related to critical minerals and industry needs for development, including workforce and infrastructure.”

    ARPN’s McGroarty will share his thoughts with co-panelists from DOE, DoD and an American EV association. Alaska’s U.S. Senators Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, both of whom have been strong advocates on Capitol Hill of a comprehensive approach to mineral resource security for the United States, will speak, as will as Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy, arguably America’s leading state executive on critical mineral development.

    To register for a free livestream provided by the Wilson Center in partnership with the University of Alaska, click here.

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  • A Look North – A Canadian Perspective on China’s “Encroachment” on the Critical Minerals Industry

    In a new piece for Canada’s Globe and Mail, Niall Mcgee discusses China’s quiet but systematic campaign to corner the critical minerals segment in Canada and stakeholder reactions in Ottawa, or more precisely, the lack thereof.

    Citing the 2019 acquisition of the Tanco Mine in Manitoba, known as one of the world’s few sources of cesium as well as highest-grade lithium, by the Chinese Sinomine Resource Group, which earlier this year began shipping lithium produced at Tanco back to China to feed the country’s expansive EV industry, Mcgee laments that there has been little reaction from Ottawa:

    “Although Ottawa has made clear that it does not want to be beholden to a hostile foreign power for critical minerals such as lithium, so far there has been little in the way of action from the federal government to prevent that from happening.”

    Mcgee cites mining investor and activist shareholder Peter Clausi, who goes as far as calling the Canadian federal government, which could have initiated a review of the acquisition on national security grounds, “morons” for failing to do so:

    “It’s [i.e. the Tanco Mine is] known for having the world’s highest grade lithium. The grade is so high that nobody had the technology to process it. And the morons let it go,” Clausi said.

    As ARPN outlined in our discussion of the approval of the sale of Canadian lithium developer Neo Lithium Corp to Chinese state-owned Zijin Mining Group Ltd., in the process of which the Canadian government decided not to review the takeover on national security grounds:

    “Foreign takeovers of Canadian companies are subject to an initial security screening by the government.  If the initial screening concludes that the takeover constituted a threat to Canada’s national security, it would trigger a more formal review under Section 25.3 of the Investment Canada Act, and the deal could be blocked.”

    In the case of Neo Lithium’s project – the 3Q Mine – the Canadian Government argued that “Canada was unlikely to benefit from lithium produced from Neo’s project, because it was located far away, in Argentina.” However, the project could have played an important role in supplying Canada’s lithium needs at a time when the country is not extracting the material within its own borders.

    The same could be said for the Tanco deposit.  As Mcgee elaborates, similar scenarios unfold for other metals and minerals:

    “Canada has similar also-ran status when it comes to cobalt. This country produces only small amounts of the vital battery metal input, while China controls about 70 per cent of the market. China is even more dominant in graphite, with an 80-per-cent lock on the market. 

    And while Canada is a major miner of nickel, another battery metal, it has no refineries that can process it for the battery industry.”

    He cites Jeffrey Kucharski, adjunct professor at Royal Roads University and former assistant deputy minister of Alberta’s Department of Energy, who asked during parliamentary proceedings on the Neo Lithium deal:

    “How can Canada build a lithium supply chain, or any other critical mineral for that matter, when it allows the assets of Canadian companies to be acquired by a country that seeks to cement its dominance in this sector?” 

    As ARPN previously outlined,

    “the development ties into the broader North American context of the United States and Canada having formalized a joint action plan on critical minerals in 2020 which included commitments by both governments to strengthen North American battery material supply chains against the backdrop of China’s ever-tightening grip on global supplies.

    A stronger focus on critical mineral resource security through the prism of national security is certainly warranted, not just for our Canadian friends, but also from a U.S. perspective.

    As Tsvetana Paraskova notes in a piece for Oilprice.com, ‘while the Administration was reviewing supply chain issues and vulnerabilities to its demand for critical minerals, China is moving in on Africa and South America to strike alliances and lend money to mineral resource-rich African countries, while Russia is thought to be providing shadow ‘security services’ in some African nations with a mercenary organization with links to the Kremlin.’

     Followers of ARPN know all too well that as the green energy transition accelerates, we will be facing significant critical mineral resource shortfalls.  For the United States (and for our close allies), the time to act is now. As Paraskova concludes, ‘(…) otherwise, America’s clean energy goals and hi-tech and automotive supply chains could depend on China.’

    The energy provisions in the just passed Inflation Reduction Act, coupled with a prior invocation of the Defense Production Act for the “Battery Criticals” – lithium, cobalt, graphite, nickel and manganese — are indications that the urgency of the situation has begun to resonate with U.S. policymakers.

    Of course, as we cautioned in our latest piece on the Inflation Reduction Act, “any new law this wide-ranging will require federal guidance on the way to implementation – and spark follow-on efforts by resource development opponents to roll-back some elements even as resource development proponents look to build on this new legislative initiative.”

    However, there is good reason to hope that “the bill’s requirements will help jumpstart a more comprehensive push towards domestic sourcing and processing, onshoring, friend-shoring, and harnessing the materials science revolution,” all of which would represent a “critically important leap forward to build the secure, responsible industrial base our economy and national security needs,” in the words of General John Adams, U.S. Army brigadier general (ret.).

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  • Congress “Net-Zeroes” in on Energy Security, Supply Chains for Critical Minerals – A Look at the Inflation Reduction Act

    As countries and corporations continue the global quest towards net zero carbon emissions, the U.S. Congress has passed what some consider landmark legislation to address climate change and bolster our nation’s economic and national security. The clean energy provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act negotiated by Senators Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Joe Manchin (D-WV) — [...]
  • Latest Tesla Deals with Chinese Suppliers Underscore Critical Mineral Supply Chain Challenges

    As pressures continue to mount, U.S. stakeholders are beginning to realize the urgency of building supply chains “that are safer, more secure and not beholden to a country that has multiple human rights violations, predatory lending practices, and vast national security complications.”  For now, however, too often, automakers still have to turn to Chinese suppliers to meet [...]
  • A Look Beyond the United States — Realizing the Extent of Resource Dependencies, Countries Take Steps to Bolster Domestic Supply Chains

    Against the backdrop of mounting geopolitical and ongoing supply chain challenges, countries are left grappling with the the mineral intensity of the sought-after global transition towards a net zero carbon emissions future. In their quest to untangle complex critical mineral supply chains and reduce over-reliance on adversary nations, the extent of which was first brought [...]
  • New “Critical” in the Crosshairs — NGOs Call on Automaker to Terminate Nickel Investment Plans in Indonesia

    Already burdened with increasingly volatile supply chains in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, rising geopolitical tension and Russia’s war on Ukraine, automakers’ drive towards net zero emissions is facing an additional challenge as environmental, social and governance pressures on the industry increase. The latest case in point concerns one of the new materials on [...]
  • New Report Warns: Looming Copper Shortfall Could Delay Global Shift Away From Fossil Fuels

    The mainstream media and parts of the political establishment may just now have begun to realize it — but followers of ARPN have long known that our nation’s critical mineral woes are real, and go beyond the often discussed battery criticals (lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite, and manganese) and include one of the key mainstay metals: [...]
  • Mapping of Domestic Critical Minerals Prioritized in Context of All-of-the-Above Approach to Supply Chain Security

    As the U.S. House of Representatives has passed its version of the FY 2023 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), another piece of legislation enacted earlier is beginning to bear fruit in the context of strengthening our nation’s critical mineral supply chains. Earlier this summer, the U.S. Department of the Interior announced it had set aside [...]
  • Formation of “Metallic NATO” May Signify a “Tectonic Realignment With Far-Reaching Implications”

    With global pressures on supply chains continuing to mount, the United States and allied countries announced the formation of a new initiative to bolster critical mineral supplies during last month’s Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada convention. The Minerals Security Partnership (MSP) comprises the United States, Canada, Australia, Finland, France, Germany, Japan, the Republic of [...]
  • U.S. Secretary of Energy: Critical Mineral Supply Chains Vulnerable to Manipulation or Weaponization

    As critical mineral supply chain challenges deepen against the backdrop of a global pandemic, Russia’s war on Ukraine, and rising resource nationalism in the Southern Hemisphere, U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm sounded the alarm during the beginning of the Sydney Energy Forum, an event co-hosted by the Australian Government and the International Energy Agency, [...]

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