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Trump, Albanese Sign Critical Minerals Deal to Counter China

In a significant move to bolster Western supply chain resilience and curb China’s dominance in critical minerals, U.S. President Donald Trump and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese signed a wide-ranging critical minerals agreement on October 21, 2025, at their first formal summit in the White House. The agreement establishes a new $8.5 billion mineral supply pipeline, with both nations pledging $1 billion each over the next six months toward mining and processing infrastructure for key minerals like lithium, nickel, and rare earth elements, vital for defence, technology, and clean energy sectors.

Strengthening Strategic Supply Chains

The joint agreement seeks to reduce dependency on Chinese-controlled mineral supply chains, which dominate the market for rare earths, gallium, and other strategic elements. According to Trump, “In about a year from now, we’ll have so much critical mineral and rare earths that you won’t know what to do with them.”

The partnership outlines,

  • Minimum price floors for critical minerals to stabilise the market
  • Permitting reforms to speed up mining and processing projects
  • Joint efforts on geological mapping, mineral recycling, and security-based asset protection
  • Provisions to prevent foreign (especially Chinese) acquisitions of critical mineral assets on national security grounds

Boost from U.S. Export-Import Bank

The U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM) further reinforced the agreement with $2.2 billion in letters of interest to Australian companies advancing rare earth and strategic minerals projects, including,

  • Arafura Rare Earths
  • Northern Minerals
  • Latrobe Magnesium
  • Graphinex
  • Sunrise Energy Metals
  • VHM
  • RZ Resources

These projects aim to support industries such as aerospace, defence systems, communication technology, and next-gen manufacturing, while also helping re-industrialise the U.S. high-tech economy.

New Gallium Refinery to Challenge China’s Export Controls

  • A major highlight of the agreement is the Pentagon’s plan to build a gallium refinery in Western Australia, directly challenging China’s decision last year to block gallium exports to the U.S. Gallium is crucial for semiconductors and satellite communications.
  • The move underscores the rising resource nationalism in critical minerals and the West’s intent to bypass supply chain chokeholds that China has historically dominated.
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