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American Resources Policy Network
Promoting the development of American mineral resources.
  • Happy zinc month! – Zinc a driving force in China’s strategy in Latin America

    Continuing our informational campaign to highlight the breadth of our nation’s metals and minerals needs, we’re going to drill down into the utilities of and challenges associated with zinc this month.

    In its ongoing efforts to satiate its growing appetite for mineral resources, China – long having enlarged its footprint in Africa – has recently expanded its focus to other parts of the world.  Latin America is beginning to play a larger role in this context, and while the immediate concern of its Latin American “loans-for-access” strategy appeared to be oil, it is once again the geological distribution of non-fuel mineral resources that has, at least in part, triggered China’s quest in Latin America.

    According to a recent piece on SeekingAlpha.com, one of the main drivers in this context is – you guessed it – zinc.  Despite having a large landmass, and, according to the most recent USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries, significant deposits of zinc, these deposits appears insufficient to meet China’s growing demand. While the country’s copper shortage is reportedly most severe, zinc supply worries, according to Seeking Alpha’s interviews with Chinese mining investors, may be a close second:

    The general conclusion is that many of the world’s largest zinc mines in Australia, Canada and Africa are reaching the end of their useful lives. This fact, coupled with increased demand for zinc emanating from China, and relatively few new zinc mines being developed, has led Chinese investors to seek high-quality junior zinc miners in Peru and in other parts of Latin America.

    Meanwhile, zinc production in the U.S., which also has significant zinc reserves, is on the decline.  If the world’s largest zinc mines in Australia, Canada and Africa are indeed at the end of their cycle, this spells trouble for U.S. manufacturers, who currently import 77 percent of the zinc they use.
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  • Unlikely allies? China and India ink copper development deals

    In 2011, we saw a lot of countries enter into cooperative agreements to develop critical minerals.  This trend will likely continue this year, as nations that do not possess or develop some of the most sough-after metals and minerals are looking to secure future access and alleviate or stave off supply shortages. The last few days of 2011, however, have brought about some deals that are particularly interesting from an American Resources perspective.

    According to an AFP news story, in a move that is expected to increase production at India’s only copper mining company four-fold by 2017, three Chinese firms have signed mine development contracts with Kolkata-based Hindustan Copper.

    The move turns global competitors – with India probably being the most resource-hungry nation aside from China, and both nations eying each other suspiciously as they look to secure access to the world’s mineral riches, Africa being a case in point – into partners.

    It’s not just politics that makes strange bedfellows.  As the global race for resources continues to heat up, the geology of the world’s natural resources will likely bring more interesting and perhaps unexpected partnerships.  We look forward to keeping up with these and other developments on this blog, as well as on Facebook and Twitter throughout 2012.  Happy New Year!

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  • With China taking the lead, global resource race heats up in Africa

    A lengthy piece in the Asia Times online edition discusses China’s ever-increasing footprint in Africa, arguing that this manifestation of China replacing the West as the “dominant economic and political force in Africa epitomizes the most dramatic shift in geopolitics since the collapse of the Soviet Union.” In its global quest for mineral resources, China [...]
  • New study sounds cautionary note on seabed mining prospects

    Much was made of a recent discovery of significant rare earth deposits on the seabed of the Pacific Ocean. Some were even heralding the beginning of the end of China’s rare earth near-total monopoly. Lending credibility to those cautioning against this sentiment, a new Canadian-led study published in the journal Geology concludes that “accessible supplies [...]
  • Copper Month is over but copper’s rise continues

    American Resource’s Copper Month may have ended, but copper demand continues to show strength, in spite of a global economy that is anemic at best.  Reuters reports a rapid depletion of current copper stocks, contrary to the macro-economic news of slowing global growth.  American Resources will leave month-to-month fluctuations in copper and other metals markets [...]
  • China to cut export quotas for antimony, tungsten and other specialty metals

    Bearing testimony to the fact that China’s geopolitical power play stretches beyond rare earths elements, around which its restrictive export policies were centered in recent months, China has announced it is going to cut export quotas for other specialty metals as well.   According to Nasdaq, Beijing’s China Daily News and the Rare Earths industry journal have [...]
  • Antimony re-enters international spotlight

    Happy Antimony Month! (Said like an-tim-oh-nee in case you didn’t already know.) With the release of the British Geological Survey’s Risk List 2011, which ranked antimony as the metal most likely to be in critical supply, our “metal of the month” re-enters the international spotlight.  According to The Australian, the little-known but much-used metal nobody heard about [...]
  • Canada moves forward on promising Strange Lake REE project

    As China continues to hold the world hostage to its restrictive rare earths export policies, Canada is moving forward on a promising REE project discussed on RareMetalBlog.com. The discovery of near-surface mineralization and significant quantities of recoverable rare earth elements (REEs) in 2009 at Quest Rare Minerals’ Strange Lake property on the Quebec-Labrador border has [...]
  • Japan and India agree on joint development of rare earths

    As China continues its geopolitical rare earths power play, Japan and India are the latest countries to partner in an attempt to offset China’s near total supply monopoly.  According to the Asia News Network, the foreign ministers of the two countries agreed in late October to promote the joint development of the critical minerals at [...]
  • U.S. mineral policies – from the frying pan into the fire?

    In a column for Reuters, market analyst Chris Kimmerle argues that U.S. policy makers need to do more to ensure a steady supply of critical non-fuel mineral resources, and in doing so must address geopolitical risks and other supply challenges. A variety of critical metals and minerals are not only essential components of items ranging [...]

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