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US and EU Deepen Cooperation on Critical Minerals with an Eye to Broader Agreement

As part of an 'overall Western push to loosen China’s grip on materials vital to advanced manufacturing, the U.S. & European Union deepened their cooperation?on critical mineral?on Friday. U.S. Secretary Marco Rubio signed a Memorandum of Understanding with European Union Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic for a partnership to produce and secure critical minerals.

Rubio didn't mention China, but said that the preliminary agreement reached with Brussels showed that Western allies are becoming more aware of the importance of supply chain and minerals to their economic success.

China has used geo-economic pressure to 'chokehold' the processing of minerals. It has sometimes curtailed exports, lowered prices, and undermined other countries ability to diversify their sources of materials for semiconductors, electric cars, and advanced weapons. "The concentration of these resources in one or two locations is unacceptable. Before signing the memo, Rubio stated that we need diversity in our supply chain. U.S. trade representative Jamieson Greer will meet separately with Sefcovic on Friday. She announced a separate plan to "coordinate" trade policies for critical minerals. This is to address the non-market policies that they call have distorted critical mineral supply chains.

Greer stated that Washington and Brussels will?explore ways to strengthen critical domestic minerals industries and downstream sector critical for industrial competitiveness, by using trade measures such as border-adjusted pricing floors.

Sefcovic, who spoke to reporters at the State Department, said that the agreements will strengthen the transatlantic relationships and accelerate their work towards their shared goals.

"I completely agree with Mr. Rubio that the real test now will be the implementation of this project." How can we turn these agreements that we sign into tangible, concrete projects for our business operators?"

'PERVASIVE -NON-MARKET POLICIES and PRACTICES" Washington and Brussels announced their intention to develop an Action Plan in February, when U.S. vice president JD Vance revealed plans to create a preferred trade bloc for essential minerals with coordinated price floors.

Washington has already signed similar plans of action with Japan and Mexico.

According to the U.S./EU Action Plan, it was important to?address?pervasive nonmarket policies and practices that have left critical mineral supply chains in market-oriented countries vulnerable to a variety of disruptions including economic coercion.

The plan stated that the longer-range vision was to develop a plurilateral partnership with like-minded partners in order to boost supply chain resilience for critical minerals.

It said that the U.S. will be discussing various mechanisms and measures, including coordinated trade policies, mechanisms based on benchmark prices, and price gap subsidies or offtake agreements.

The parties also agreed to explore other possible measures including standards for mining and processing of critical minerals, trade or recycling in these minerals, technical and regulatory co-operation, investment promotion and screening, and coordinated rapid responses to prevent disruptions or crises. It said that stockpiling is another measure. Reporting by Andrea Shalal, Simon Lewis and Chizu Nomiyama; editing by Paul Simao and Chizu Simao

(source: Reuters)