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5E to receive $20 million in US Government support for its boron supply chain

5E to receive $20 million in US Government support for its boron supply chain
5E to receive $20 million in US Government support for its boron supply chain

Paul Weibel, CEO of 5E Advanced Materials, said that the company is in discussions with Los Alamos National Laboratory about securing $20 million of federal funding for the Fort Cady Boron Project in California. The project will help the company become one of few domestic suppliers of this newly-designated critical mineral.

Weibel stated that the New Mexico laboratory had made an offer to finance the company's operations. Los Alamos didn't immediately respond to our request for comment.

The U.S. Department of Energy operates the lab, which conducts research on national security, space exploration and nuclear fusion. It also conducts research on medicine, nanotech, supercomputing, and renewable energy.

The U.S. Geological Survey, along with the Interior Department of the U.S., added boron to their list of critical minerals this month, citing concerns about supply risks, the lack substitutes, and the heavy concentration in production outside the U.S.

The U.S. is a major supplier of boron, but it does not have the processing or refinement required by industries, which are primarily done overseas.

China controls almost all downstream boron production, which is a strategic chokepoint flagged by U.S. policymakers.

The global supply is still highly concentrated. Eti Maden, a Turkish state-owned company, is the largest producer followed by Rio Tinto U.S. Borax, based in Boron, California.

Weibel stated that 5E intends to apply for funding under a DOE programme designed to increase the production of minerals in the United States for energy technology and manufacturing, transportation, and national defense.

The Trump administration is prioritizing increasing the domestic mineral output amid increased trade tensions with China, and other major suppliers.

Boron is used as a key ingredient in many industries, including nuclear energy, windmills, specialty ceramics, advanced insulations, fertilizers, and cleaning chemicals. It's also a vital component in the oil and gas industry.

The FINANCING Path Forward

5E is currently reviewing its application for an additional 10 million dollars loan from U.S. Export-Import Bank.

EXIM had sent a letter of intent to the company for a potential funding of up to $285,000,000 for Fort Cady. This is one of only ten advanced-stage boron development projects in the U.S.

The DOE and EXIM both did not respond to requests for comments.

5E's Fort Cady Project hosts a fully-operational pilot plant which has started shipping boric acids for commercial testing. The development of a larger commercial-scale plant is progressing with an investment decision expected in October 2026. (Reporting and editing by Arun Koyyur in Bengaluru, with Pooja Menon reporting from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)