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American Resources Policy Network
Promoting the development of American mineral resources.
  • U.S. Senators to President Biden: With Stakes Raised, Time to Invoke the Defense Production Act to Secure Critical Mineral Supply Chains

    Already severely strained by the coronavirus pandemic, global critical mineral resource supply chains have taken another hit with Russia’s full-fledged invasion of Ukraine.  With no de-escalation of hostilities in sight, Western nations, including the United States, are stepping up their efforts to bolster domestic supply chains, not only for oil and gas, but also for non-fuel minerals, and particularly for the materials underpinning the green energy transition.

    While the Biden Administration last month announced several “major investments in domestic production of key critical minerals and materials, ensuring these resources benefit the community, and creating good-paying, union jobs in sustainable production,” President Joe Biden missed an opportunity to convey the urgency of the critical minerals supply challenge with the American people during his first State of the Union Address.

    With the stakes raised significantly since the Biden Administration’s investment announcement in February in light of the war on Ukraine, U.S. Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Joe Manchin (D-WV), James Risch (R-ID), and Bill Cassidy (R-LA), sent a letter to President Biden today urging the him to take congressional and Administration efforts to bolster mineral supply chains one step further and to “invoke the Defense Production Act (DPA) to accelerate domestic production of lithium-ion battery materials, in particular graphite, manganese, cobalt, nickel, and lithium.”

    Write the Senators:

    “China not only leads the world in manufacture of lithium-ion batteries, but also in the processing of the minerals and raw materials required in lithium-ion battery manufacturing. The United States’ import reliance on graphite and manganese, essential to the lithium-ion batteries required for commercial technology sector like electric vehicles and energy storage systems, is also a hindrance for major weapons platforms and defense capabilities, from UAVs and space defense systems to our warfighters in the field.”

    They add:

    “Our dependence on foreign sourced cobalt and lithium is elevated as the processing of both is dominated by China. China is clearly willing to utilize any means at hand – such as exploiting its workforce through harsh labor conditions, using mining processes outside of international practice, espionage, and IP theft – to establish technological dominance over the United States.”

    Arguing that China dominating the processing segment of both the cobalt and lithium supply chains, and is willing to utilize “any means at hand (…)” to “establish technological dominance over the United States,” they conclude:

    “Allowing our foreign mineral dependence to persist is a growing threat to U.S. national security, and we need to take every step to address it. The 100-day report acknowledges the ‘powerful tool’ the DPA has been to expand production of supplies needed to combat COVID-19, as well as the potential the DPA could have to ‘support investment in other critical sectors and enable industry and government to collaborate more effectively.’  The time is now to grow, support, and encourage investment in the domestic production of graphite, manganese, cobalt, lithium, nickel, and other critical minerals to ensure we support our national security, and to fulfill our need for lithium-ion batteries – both for consumers and for the Department of Defense.”

    Read the full letter here.

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  • The Stakes Just Got Higher – The State of U.S. Critical Mineral Resource Security

    Set to deliver his first State of the Union address today (March 1, 2022), U.S. President Joe Biden will likely have to tweak the outline for his speech considering the latest developments in Ukraine, and the resulting implications for the United States, and the world as a whole.

    Against growing tensions, we recently highlighted mounting geopolitical pressures on critical mineral resource supply, but Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to launch a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, has raised the stakes, and infused a new level of urgency into the push to secure supply chains for mineral resources and other critical goods.

    The invasion of Ukraine has serious implications for European energy supply. While some nations may attempt to fill a supply gap through inner European imports, Norway, Europe’s second largest oil supplier, is already operating at maximum capacity and won’t be able to replace any missing supplies from Russia.  Even before Russia launched its attack on February 24, Germany decided to halt the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline certification process.

    In a region that has already shut down old coal-fired power plants and partially phased out nuclear energy, the geopolitical challenges of mineral resource supply, the scope of which reaches far beyond natural gas (even if that is at the center of the current tensions), are becoming increasingly clear and pressing.

    However, the ramifications of Russia’s actions stretch beyond well beyond natural gas, and well beyond Europe.

    Russia is a global supplier of rare earth minerals and heavy metals including titanium, a key metal for the aerospace sector.   With Ukraine supplying more than 90% of U.S. semiconductor-grade neon, and about 35% of palladium, a material used in catalytic converters as well as semiconductors, being sourced from Russia, the current eruption of war in Ukraine could send the global chip industry, which is already seeing its supply chains severely strained, into turmoil.

    The Russian invasion of Ukraine and its ramifications is hardly the only geopolitical challenge placing a strain on critical mineral supply chains.

    As we pointed out earlier, a wave of resource nationalism is sweeping Central and South America, which is home to several key metals and minerals underpinning 21st century technology, and specifically the green energy transition.

    Furthermore, the fact that China, a key player in the resource war theater which has long understood the strategic importance of critical minerals and dominates the supply chains for many metals and minerals, has entered into a “no limits” strategic partnership with Russia places an additional strain on U.S. (and broader Western) mineral resource security. Already, according to Oilprice.com writer Tsvetana Paraskova, “while the U.S. is working in working groups, China and Russia are moving in African countries rich in mineral resources to gain access to their reserves in legislations with low environmental standards, cheap labor, and few regulations.” Closer relations between the two global powers may intensify their activities in Africa, further complicating the resource challenge for the West.

    Meanwhile, material pressures on critical mineral supply will continue to soar against the backdrop of the global push towards net zero carbon, which will require massive amounts of the metals and minerals underpinning the technology supporting the shift to renewables.

    The stakes were already high before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, but they just got higher.

    Against this backdrop, it is encouraging that the Biden Administration reaffirmed its commitment to securing U.S. critical mineral supply chains last week.

    During a virtual event held on Tuesday, February 22, 2022 with Administration and state partners, industry executives, community representatives and California Governor Gavin Newsom, the Biden Administration and participating stakeholders announced several “major investments in domestic production of key critical minerals and materials, ensuring these resources benefit the community, and creating good-paying, union jobs in sustainable production.” 

    These investments include:

    -       A $35 million award by the Department of Defense’s Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment program to MP Materials to “separate and process heavy rare earth elements at its facility in Mountain Pass, California, establishing a full end-to-end domestic permanent magnet supply chain.” To complement this award, MP Materials plans to invest an additional $700 million into the project.

    -       Plans by Berkshire Hathaway Energy Renewables (BHE Renewables) to break ground on a demonstration facility in California “to test the commercial viability of their sustainable lithium extraction process from geothermal brine.” 

    -       A pilot program by Redwood Materials in partnership with automakers Ford and Volvo for “collection and recycling of end-of-life lithium-ion batteries at its Nevada based facilities to extract lithium, cobalt, nickel, and graphite.” 

    -       A $140 million DOE demonstration project, funded by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) to “recover rare earth elements and critical minerals from coal ash and other mine waste.”

    -       A $3 billion investment, also funded by this year’s congressional infrastructure package, into “refining battery materials such as lithium, cobalt, nickel, and graphite, and battery recycling facilities.”

    In conjunction with the event, the Department of Interior released its updated Federal list of critical minerals, which includes 15 more minerals than the first critical minerals list released in 2018, including nickel and zinc (see our coverage on the draft updated list here). Subsequently, the Administration will direct agencies to prioritize the production and processing of minerals necessary to produce key products like batteries, semiconductors, and permanent magnets, consistent with our strong environmental, social and labor principles.” 

    The Department of Interior (DOI) also announced the establishment of an Interagency Working Group (IWG) to lead an Administration effort on legislative and regulatory reform of mine permitting and oversight and submit recommendations to this effect by November of this year. The IWG has released a “list of Biden-Harris Administration fundamental principles for mining reform to promote responsible mining under strong social, environmental, and labor standards,” (which we will review in a separate post).

    [See the Administration’s Fact Sheet for the Supply Chain Strategy Announcements here]

    With the release of its 100-Day Supply Chain Report last summer, the Biden Administration had initially embraced the “all-of-the-above” approach to critical mineral resource security we and many others had called for.

    This approach was set to encompass both investing in “sustainable production, refining, and recycling capacity domestically,” AND working to “diversify supply chains away from adversarial nations and sources with unacceptable environmental and labor standards” by cooperating closely with allies and partners.

    However, since then, the overall plan to date appeared more geared towards “rely[ing] on ally countries to supply the bulk of the metals needed to build electric vehicles and focus[ing] on processing them domestically into battery parts, [as] part of a strategy designed to placate environmentalists.”

    Last week’s announcements are encouraging, as they point to a broader realization that while “friend-shoring” and recycling are important components of a comprehensive critical mineral resource policy, as ARPN has long argued, a true “all-of-the-above” approach for a competitive United States of America warrants a stronger emphasis on domestic sourcing and production as part of the overall strategy.

    The events unfolding in Ukraine underscore the urgency to act swiftly and comprehensively to secure our critical minerals supply chains.  The mining industry, as we have outlined on several occasions, is ready to meet the challenge and is leveraging the materials science revolution to sustainable develop and process the materials underpinning 21st century technology.

    President Biden’s State of the Union Address should reflect these new realities, and policy makers and other stakeholders must take comprehensive action to ensure that supply chain security can move from rhetoric to reality.

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  • Another Look at Geopolitical Pressures on Mineral Resource Policy: China’s and Russia’s “No Limits” Partnership Spells More Trouble

    Earlier this month, during a meeting in Beijing hours before the kickoff of the Winter Olympics and against the backdrop of Russia amassing troops at its border with Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping issued a joint statement calling out what they see as “interference in the internal affairs” of other states by “some forces [...]
  • Geopolitical Pressures on Mineral Resource Policy: A Look at Central and South America and the Rise of Resource Nationalism

    Against the backdrop of the global push to net carbon zero, supply chains for the critical metals and minerals underpinning this shift are facing immense pressures. As followers of ARPN well know, China, which not only holds the pole position when it comes to sourcing critical minerals, but has also cornered the downstream supply chain, [...]
  • Critical Minerals Challenge Could Delay E-Mobility, Automaker Says

    As the global push for net carbon zero accelerates in the wake of last year’s UN Global Climate Summit in Glasgow, another leading automaker draws attention to the critical raw materials challenge: In a recent interview with German paper Die Zeit, Mercedes-Benz Group (previously Daimler AG) Chief Executive Ola Kaellenius warned that EV battery raw material scarcity [...]
  • Time for a Reckoning at “Ferrari Supercar Speeds” – It’s Not Just Battery Materials: A Look at Aluminum

    In recent months, industry news has been dominated by headlines like “carmakers face raw material bottleneck.” And while, rightfully, against the backdrop of the accelerating green energy transition and EV revolution, much of the coverage focuses primarily on supply chain challenges arising for the battery criticals Lithium, Cobalt, Nickel, Graphite and Manganese, it’s not just the [...]
  • USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries 2022 — Amidst Greater Focus on Supply Chain Security, Mineral Resource Dependence Persists

    We’ve named it the year of the Supply Chain, noting that others said “2021 is the year ‘supply chain’ went from jargon to meme.” While an increased focus on the supply chain was undoubtedly a critical development in the mineral resource realm, and several steps to increase supply chain security for critical minerals were taken in [...]
  • It’s the Processing, Stupid? The Critical Mineral Supply Chain Challenge Visualized

    They say a picture is worth a thousand words. This Visual Capitalist graphic may not exactly qualify as a picture – but is certainly reveals a lot about the complexity and urgency of the West’s critical mineral woes, and underscores how China has managed to corner the strategic and clean energy materials supply chain especially when [...]
  • China’s Play for Lithium in Canada — A Stronger Focus on National Security in Critical Mineral Resource Policy Warranted

    As the United States continues to look for ways to shore up and secure its critical mineral supply chains, a business deal involving China is raising eyebrows for some of our neighbors to the North. An October 2021 announcement by Chinese state-owned enterprise Zijin Mining Group Co. Ltd that it would purchase Canadian lithium miner [...]
  • A Theme for 2022: Strengthening Tech Metal Supply Chains — from Rhetoric to Reality?

     Happy New Year — and “shoutout to everyone who said they would start eating healthy in the new year and already decided to wait until Monday,” (i.e. today) as one Instagram influencer put it this weekend. Here’s the thing with New Year’s resolutions – while the new year seems like the perfect time to proclaim ambitious intentions [...]

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