
Trump’s Critical-Minerals Obsession Is Leading to Some Weird Places
https://newrepublic.com/article/193170/trump-lithium-gold-critical-minerals-plan
by thenewrepublic

Trump’s Critical-Minerals Obsession Is Leading to Some Weird Places
https://newrepublic.com/article/193170/trump-lithium-gold-critical-minerals-plan
by thenewrepublic
4 comments
>Alongside tariffs, DOGE, and chaos, Trump’s thirst for “critical minerals” has quickly become one of his young administration’s defining features. Even before taking office, Trump floated the idea of invading Greenland, home to the world’s sixth-largest uranium deposits and second-largest deposits of a subset of minerals known as “rare earths.” Vice President JD Vance is set to visit later this week. Over the last several months, federal officials have pursued deals with Ukraine and the Democratic Republic of Congo promising peace and security in exchange for access to those countries’ mineral deposits. Last week, a sprawling executive order outlined a wonky list of efforts to boost domestic production of everything from lithium to gold. “It is imperative for our national security that the United States take immediate action to facilitate domestic mineral production to the maximum possible extent,” the order states, blaming “overbearing Federal regulation” for undermining homegrown extraction.
>Already, two contradictions are clear in the Trump administration’s approach: First, by aggressively intervening in the private sector, Trump’s critical minerals strategy would expand rather than shrink the administrative state, as the White House has pledged to do. Second, it isn’t likely to resolve the considerable problems facing America’s fledgling critical-minerals mining sector—some of which the administration’s other policies are exacerbating.
>“Unlike many of these other efforts coming out of the White House, this executive order includes a lot of really granular administrative state actions. It says we don’t just need deregulation. We also need money and institutions,” says Thea Riofrancos, strategic co-director of the Climate and Community Institute and author of the forthcoming book *Extraction: The Frontiers of Green Capitalism*. “DOGE is currently destroying the administrative state.”
This isn’t as delusional as some would make it out to be. Biden did it much more descretely in Africa and got his ass handed to him by China.
[https://www.npr.org/2024/12/04/nx-s1-5208953/dr-congo-mining-capital-us-china-lobito-corridor-minerals-copper-africa-angola](https://www.npr.org/2024/12/04/nx-s1-5208953/dr-congo-mining-capital-us-china-lobito-corridor-minerals-copper-africa-angola)
Being on the forefront of these efforts, I can tell you they don’t begin to understand what it takes to move these projects through the system.
Will some slip through, especially on federal lands, probably. But you can’t have your cake and eat it too. The power needs from AI/data centers is overwhelming the grid across the nation. You can’t simultaneously expect utilities to dramatically grow their grids to incorporate new nuclear, data centers, and new mining/manufacturing all at once. It’s impossible.
These guys don’t even begin to understand regulations.
The village idiot thinks he’s on to something…
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