Trump administration works to break China’s rare earth mineral stranglehold on Africa

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The State Department has told Fox News Digital it is working to reduce the “national security” threat to the U.S. from China’s domination of the rare earth minerals market, with new signs that Africa can assist Washington in breaking Beijing’s stranglehold on this vital sector. 

The 17 rare earth elements (REE) are metals “critical for both human and national security,” the Brookings Institution wrote in 2022, adding, “They are used in electronics (computers, televisions and smartphones), in renewable energy technology (wind turbines, solar panels and electric vehicle batteries), and in national defense (jet engines, missile guidance and defense systems, satellites, GPS equipment and more).”

China is reported by Brookings to be responsible for 60% of global extraction of rare earth minerals and 85% of processing capacity.

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But although Beijing has secured contracts in African countries such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to ship minerals, including cobalt east to China, the continent has vast untapped resources. And the African Union’s Minerals Development Center stated recently that new huge specialist rare earth mines are due to come online by 2029 in Tanzania, Angola, Malawi and South Africa, and potentially yield almost 10% of the world’s supply.

This is leading the Trump administration to step forward with new attempts to expand the U.S. presence in Africa’s mining trade. Just this week, a State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital, “The administration’s approach prioritizes partnerships with African nations to ensure their minerals flow west, not east to China.”

In Africa, China is on Washington’s threat radar, with the spokesperson continuing, “China’s dominance in global mineral supply chains — specifically in processing and refining — is a threat to both U.S. and African interests. Beijing’s state-directed strategies exploit Africa’s natural resources, consolidate control over upstream mining assets, perpetuate opaque governance structures, degrade local environments and create economic dependencies that undermine regional stability.”

Various sources say that the U.S. currently imports some 70% of all the rare earth elements it needs from China.

Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, told Fox News Digital that Beijing poses a threat on this issue: “Relying on China for critical minerals needed for a modern economy is a top national security risk that President Biden left unaddressed for four years. Under President Trump’s leadership, we can secure new sources in Africa, strengthen our partnerships there, and ensure America’s defense is never dependent on our adversaries.”

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The administration is trying to move more into Africa, with the State Department spokesperson adding, “The United States is committed to making targeted investments in infrastructure to facilitate the export of minerals from Africa to global markets. A prime example is the Lobito Corridor, which provides an alternative to Chinese-controlled transportation routes for minerals from Africa’s Copperbelt to the Atlantic Ocean.”

The administration recently said they would continue to pledge a $550 million loan to the development of the Lobito Corridor, an 800-mile-long rail and infrastructure link to the mineral-rich regions of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Zambia with Angola’s Atlantic coast and easy shipping access to the U.S.

The State Department spokesperson went on to say that one of the main benefits of the peace deal to end a 30-year-long war signed between the DRC and Rwanda in the Oval Office in June is better access to minerals, adding, “The bilateral agreement between the U.S. and DRC is designed to open the door for new U.S. and U.S.-aligned investments in strategic mining projects across the DRC.”

It is a new dawn of opportunity for the U.S. in Africa, analysts including Dr. Gracelin Baskaran says. Baskaran, director of the Critical Minerals Security Program at Washington’s Center for Strategic and International Studies, told Fox News Digital, “Africa is the last great frontier of mineral discovery. It has long been undervalued in global mineral exploration, even though it delivers some of the highest returns per dollar invested.”

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“The [African] continent’s share of worldwide exploration spending has steadily dropped — from 16% in 2004 to only 10.4% in 2024,” added Baskaran. “This decline is particularly striking, given that Sub-Saharan Africa is the world’s most cost-efficient region for mineral exploration, with a mineral-value-to-exploration-spending ratio of 0.8 — well ahead of Australia (0.5), Canada (0.6) and Latin America (0.3).”

“Despite its immense geological promise and a landmass triple the size of Australia and Canada combined, those two countries captured 15.9% and 19.8% of global exploration spending in 2024 — far exceeding Africa’s total share.”

Baskaran says the U.S. can exploit another area in Africa as well, “China rarely engages in mapping or exploration. The Chinese model generally acquires projects once they are under development and/or nearing production. This offers a real opportunity for the United States and its allies. Even countries with long mining legacies — Zambia and the DRC — have barely scratched the surface, with less than half their land mapped. With targeted investments in geological mapping and early-stage project development, the United States and its allies could establish a much stronger presence across the continent.”

Where to drop U.S. miners’ boots on the ground? “In terms of heavy rare earth minerals in Africa, Namibia is a country that presents an alternative to China in terms of supply,” analyst C. Géraud Neema from the independent China-Global South Project (CGSP) told Fox News Digital, adding, “Namibia’s Lofdal project is a major one.”

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