US launches critical minerals initiative to counter China

The US State Department hosted the first Critical Minerals Ministerial on Wednesday, attended by representatives from over 50 countries and organizations, aiming to break China's dominance in critical minerals vital for smartphones, weapons, and electric vehicle batteries. Vice President JD Vance called on allies to join the initiative to ensure fair market pricing and supply chain stability.

The US government is pushing to form a trade zone for critical minerals to challenge China's dominance in mining and processing rare earths and other key materials. The first Critical Minerals Ministerial, held in Washington on Wednesday, drew participants from the UK, European Union, Japan, India, South Korea, Australia, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, focusing on the availability and access to minerals essential for computer chips and electric vehicle batteries.

In remarks, Vice President JD Vance avoided naming China directly, instead addressing how foreign supplies flood global markets, hindering financing for other mineral-rich countries. He said the US plans to use tariffs to prevent critical mineral prices from dropping too low, deterring investment. Vance described the plan as the "Forum on Resource Geostrategic Engagement," or Forge, which would set "reference prices" at each production stage to ensure pricing that "reflects real-world fair market value." He urged hesitant participants: "To those of you still on the fence, I say … let’s move together."

David Copley, special assistant to President Donald Trump, stated the US intends to "deploy hundreds of billions of capital into the mining sector," with investments already in MP Materials, a rare earth magnets maker, and Lithium Americas, producer of battery-key materials. US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer noted that the US, Japan, and the European Commission are developing "coordinated trade policies and mechanisms" to avoid access issues.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson ahead of the meeting said countries should "follow the principles of market economy and international economic and trade rules, step up communication and dialogue." The event forms part of broader US efforts to counter China's leverage in trade talks via its industry control. On Monday, Trump announced "Project Vault," a nearly $12 billion critical mineral reserve. Industry figures welcomed it; Wade Senti, president of Advanced Magnet Lab, said: "It's critical to see the United States take decisive steps to shore up our supply of all kinds of minerals and rare earths."

The meeting coincided with a Trump-Xi Jinping phone call, which the US president called "very positive." China has tightened rare earth export approvals recently but eased them, with analysts viewing Beijing's dominance as a bargaining chip in Washington talks.

関連記事

JD Vance announces Trump administration's critical minerals trade alliance with 50+ countries to counter China's dominance in rare earths.
AIによって生成された画像

ヴァンス氏、トランプ政権が中国の支配を抑える動きの中で提案中の重要鉱物貿易ブロックを宣伝

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副大統領JDヴァンス氏は水曜日、トランプ政権が50カ国以上の代表者との重要鉱物貿易同盟を追求しており、執行可能な最低価格と優先貿易圏を提案し、レアアース供給チェーンにおける中国依存を減らす方法として売り込んでいる、と述べた。

米国は4日、日本と欧州諸国と協力して重要鉱物の供給を確保するためのアクションプランを策定すると発表した。中国の希少金属輸出制限への懸念が高まる中、供給チェーンの安定化を目指す。貿易代表部は、多国間貿易イニシアチブの検討も示唆した。

AIによるレポート

US Vice President JD Vance urged allies to join a critical minerals trading bloc at a meeting in Washington. The inaugural Critical Minerals Ministerial launched the FORGE initiative as a successor to the MSP, with South Korea chairing it through June. The effort aims to counter China's dominance in key resources through diversified supply chains.

日本は、中国のレアアース支配に対する懸念が高まる中、G7諸国や米国との連携を強化する取り組みを加速させている。財務相の片山さつき氏は日曜から始まる米国訪問で重要鉱物について議論し、防衛相の小泉進次郎氏も木曜に米国側と会談する予定だ。また、首相の高市早苗氏は来週、韓国の李在明大統領と首脳会談を開き、同盟を再確認する。

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US-based rare earth firm REalloys has announced a partnership with Canada's Saskatchewan Research Council, investing US$21 million in a heavy rare earths processing plant. The initiative seeks to build a North American supply chain for critical minerals that bypasses China, backed by Washington. The firm says achieving a fully self-sufficient supply chain will take time.

Amid ongoing China-Japan tensions sparked by Sanae Takaichi's prior Taiwan remarks, Japan is bolstering ties with South Korea while facing Beijing's new export curbs on rare earths and dual-use items, prompting stockpiling and G7 coordination.

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Following China's January 6 ban on dual-use exports to Japan—retaliation for Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's Taiwan remarks—South Korea's industries face risks from interconnected supply chains. The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources held an emergency meeting on January 8 to evaluate impacts and pledged safeguards against shortages.

 

 

 

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