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Putin talks about aluminium and rare earths deals with US

Vladimir Putin, the Russian President, offered to explore rare earth metal deposits with the U.S., and also supply aluminum for the U.S. market. He was laying the foundations of a future deal between the U.S.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, had earlier stated that "major transactions in economic development with Russia" were to take place. Putin convened, within two hours of Trump’s statement, a rare earth metals meeting with his economic advisers and ministers.

After the meeting, Putin told state television that he was ready to offer his American partners, "and by 'partners', I do not mean only administrative and government structures, but also companies," if they were interested in working together.

"We have undoubtedly, and I would like to stress this, a significantly greater amount of resources than Ukraine," Putin continued. He said that Russia is not concerned about a possible U.S. Ukraine deal on rare earth metals.

He said that Russian companies would be able to supply the U.S. with up to 2,000,000 tons of aluminum annually, if the U.S. markets reopened. Before prohibitive duties were introduced, Russia supplied around 15% of U.S. aluminium imports.

"This (Russian aluminum supplies) won't have a significant impact on price formation." "However, I believe it will still have a restraint effect on prices," Putin stated.

Putin said that Russia and the U.S. can work together on hydropower production and aluminum production at the Rusal base in Russia's Krasnoyarsk Region in Siberia.

Putin said that he would like to work with American companies on this project.

Putin stated in a transcript published by the Kremlin that rare earths are a sector of priority for Russia's competitiveness and economic development.

Putin said that the government aimed to "boost potential" of the domestic industrial sector, extending from "extraction to the manufacture of high-tech goods ready to be sold."

He said that based on the results of the project, the output of these goods should be increased several times. (Reporting and writing by Anton Kolodyazhnyy; Maxim Rodionov, Anastasia Lyrchikova. Editing by Cynthia Osterman.

(source: Reuters)