Exclusive: Pentagon races to track U.S. rare earths output amid China
trade dispute
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[July 13, 2019]
By Ernest Scheyder
(Reuters) - The Pentagon is rapidly
assessing the United States' rare earths capability in a race to secure
stable supply of the specialized material amid the country's trade
conflict with China, which controls the rare earths industry, according
to a government document seen by Reuters.
The push comes weeks after China threatened to curb exports to the
United States of rare earths, a group of 17 minerals used to build
fighter jets, tanks and a range of consumer electronics.
The Pentagon wants miners to describe plans to develop U.S. rare earths
mines and processing facilities, and asked manufacturers to detail their
needs for the minerals, according to the document, which is dated June
27.
Responses are required by July 31, a short time frame that underscores
the Pentagon's urgency. The U.S. government's fiscal year ends in
September.
The U.S. Air Force, which is part of the Pentagon and created the
document, confirmed the document's existence. The Pentagon's
headquarters did not respond to a request for comment.
The responses will be reviewed by two government contractors, including
Northrop Grumman Corp, which did not respond to requests for comment.
"The government wants to know how much of these minerals we could
eventually be producing, and how soon," said Anthony Marchese, chairman
of Texas Mineral Resources Corp, which is working to develop the Round
Top rare earth deposit in the state's western edge.
Several miners, though, declined to comment when asked if they will
reply to the Pentagon, a sign of the sensitivity around rare earth mine
development during the ongoing U.S.-China trade dispute.
The document does not directly promise loans, grants or other financial
support to U.S. rare earths projects. But the Pentagon's request is
derived in part from the Defense Production Act (DPA), a 1950s-era U.S.
law that gives the Pentagon wide berth to procure equipment necessary
for the national defense.
Some type of financial assistance is ultimately expected for the
industry after the Pentagon reviews the responses, according to industry
analysts and consultants.
CHINA DOMINATES
Although China contains only a third of the world's rare earth reserves,
it accounts for 80% of U.S. imports of minerals because it controls
nearly all of the facilities to process the material, according to U.S.
Geological Survey data.
It is unclear how much money the U.S. military will spend to boost
America's rare earths industry as the DPA does not set a financial
limit. The June Pentagon letter notes that government investments
usually range from $5 million to $20 million per project.
"The overall goal is to secure and assure a viable, domestic supplier
(of rare earths) for the long-term," according to the nine-page
document.
The Air Force Research Laboratory, which drafted the request, said it
wants information related to U.S. rare earth "shortcomings, risks, and
opportunities which may be addressed by investments" by the military.
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Samples of rare earth minerals from left: Cerium oxide, Bastnaesite,
Neodymium oxide and Lanthanum carbonate at Molycorp's Mountain Pass
Rare Earth facility in Mountain Pass, California June 29, 2015.
REUTERS/David Becker
"There is no guarantee that any submitted topic will" receive
military support, Diana Carlin, the Air Force's executive agent
program manager for the DPA program related to procurement, said in
an emailed statement to Reuters.
James Litinsky, co-chairman of MP Materials, which owns the Mountain
Pass mine in California, said the United States needs "a sustainable
supermajor for the Western supply of these minerals." A supermajor
would be a large producer that dominates the global industry.
MP Materials, the only existing U.S. rare earths facility, ships its
ore to China for processing and has been subject to a 25% tariff
since last month.
Some industry analysts have called for the Pentagon to broaden the
scope of its study and commit to direct government funding of rare
earth magnet and motor manufacturing, much like China's government.
"The U.S. government doesn't have a holistic approach to the entire
rare earths supply chain, even now, and that's a problem," Jack
Lifton, an industry analyst with Technology Metals Research LLC,
said in an interview this week.
BILLS IN U.S. SENATE
The Pentagon's request builds on several executive orders from
President Donald Trump on strategic minerals, which he has said are
critical for national defense.
Several U.S. senators have sponsored legislation in recent weeks
designed to boost domestic production of lithium, rare earths and
other strategic minerals. On Thursday, U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, a
Florida Republican, introduced a bill that would let rare earths
producers form cooperatives, avoiding U.S. antitrust statutes.
None of the bills have passed yet.
The Pentagon has also held talks with rare earths suppliers in
Malawi and Burundi, department officials told Reuters last month.
"There's a heightened sense of urgency on developing a rare earth
supply chain in North America," said Don Lay, chief executive of
Medallion Resources Ltd, which earlier this month said it was
studying potential sites across North America to develop an
extraction plant for rare earths.
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder in Houston; Additional reporting by
Mike Stone in Washington; Editing by Amran Abocar and Matthew Lewis)
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