The Trump administration has launched initiatives to secure critical minerals amid efforts to reduce reliance on China, potentially benefiting renewable energy in the future. Project Vault, a $12 billion partnership, aims to stockpile materials essential for both military and clean technologies. Experts note that while focused on national security, these efforts might support a just energy transition under subsequent governments.
The Trump administration has taken several steps against renewable energy policies, including blocking offshore wind projects, imposing regulatory barriers on public lands, and repealing the 2009 endangerment finding that underpinned emissions regulations. It also dismantled key provisions of the Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act, eliminating tax credits for solar, wind, and electric vehicles. Despite this, the administration has prioritized securing critical minerals vital for renewables and military applications to counter China's dominance, from which the United States imports about 80 percent of its rare earths.
On February 2, President Trump and the U.S. Export-Import Bank announced Project Vault, a $12 billion public-private initiative comprising $2 billion in private capital and a $10 billion loan. Participating companies such as Boeing, General Motors, and Alphabet can access the stockpile but must replenish it. "In theory, the project can already be used for clean energy," said Bryan Bille, a policy and geopolitical principal at Benchmark Minerals, adding that it supports U.S. battery capacity amid data center growth.
Shortly after, a Critical Minerals Ministerial in Washington, D.C., convened representatives from over 50 countries. Vice President JD Vance proposed a special trade zone using tariffs to establish price floors for stable access. The administration plans to employ AI for pricing minerals like gallium, 95 percent of which is imported from China. Peter Cook, a climate and energy analyst at the Breakthrough Institute, explained that AI could calculate the true production costs for such essentials in semiconductors.
These moves build on a year of actions, including trade deals, equity stakes in mining firms—criticized by House Democrats—and exploration of deep-sea mining. However, challenges persist: the U.S. lacks processing facilities, and geologic supply limits remain. "The short-term bottleneck is getting these [processing facilities built]," Cook noted, "but the real bottleneck is going to be just overall supply from a geologic perspective."
Experts like Lorah Steichen of the Transition Security Project argue that current policies advance "bellicose nationalism," opposing a just energy transition. Yet, if codified, such as through the pending Securing America’s Critical Minerals Supply Act, these efforts could endure. Raphaël Deberdt of Copenhagen Business School pointed out that China's dominance stems from Western offshoring of polluting industries. A 2024 Nature Computational Science report projects large language models generating 2.5 million tons of e-waste annually by 2030, underscoring recycling needs. Steichen emphasized that effective policy must minimize extraction, uphold standards, and foster global cooperation.