US Mining Enters Breakout Phase with More Incoming Historic Government-Backed Deals

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📌 Key Takeaways

  • The White House is planning more “historic deals” with US mining companies to secure critical mineral supply chains for defense and high-tech industries
  • Washington already taken equity stakes in MP Materials, Lithium Americas, and Trilogy Metals as part of its strategy to reduce reliance on China. 
  • Major forthcoming investments include the $7.4bn Korea Zinc smelter and refinery project in Tennessee and planned support for copper developments in Alaska and Arizona. 

Historic Deals: What’s Driving the Shift?

The Trump administration plans more “historic deals” with the U.S. mining sector to boost production of critical minerals for the national defense and high-tech sectors, Jarrod Agen, executive director of the White House’s National Energy Dominance Council, has announced.

“What we want to see is the ability for the U.S. to not be reliant on any adversary out there or any other foreign entity, that we control our own destiny when it comes to our supply chain and our critical minerals,” Jarrod Agen, told a critical minerals conference hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

The US government has signalled a clear policy shift: move beyond incentives to direct strategic partnerships and capital commitments in the mining sector. Jarrod Agen, executive director of the White House National Energy Dominance Council, told a critical minerals conference that the administration will pursue “historic deals” throughout its term to strengthen domestic supply chains for minerals essential to defense and high-tech manufacturing. 

This shift is driven by two linked realities: China’s overwhelming grip on refined critical minerals, and the rapid growth of demand for materials like lithium, rare earths, copper, and zinc in both civilian and military technologies. Reducing foreign dependency is now framed as a national security and industrial policy priority rather than a niche environmental or economic objective. 

Recent High-Profile Mining Deals and Moves

The current wave of activity combines government equity stakes, strategic partnerships, and new capital allocations. Recent examples include:

• Korea Zinc $7.4bn Smelter and Refinery (Tennessee)

A transformative project where Korea Zinc will build a new critical minerals smelting and refining complex near Clarksville. Backed by substantial US government loans, grants, and equity, the facility will produce zinc, copper, lead, precious metals, and strategic elements such as antimony, germanium, and gallium — vital to defense and advanced manufacturing. Construction is set to begin soon, with commercial production phased from 2027 to 2029. 

• Equity Stakes in MP Materials

The US government took an equity stake in MP Materials, marking a strategic bid to restore domestic rare earth production capacity. MP Materials has long been central to US rare earth supply efforts, especially its planned magnet facility expansion, underlining Washington’s willingness to co-invest in downstream capacity. 

• Lithium Americas and Thacker Pass Stake

The DOE and broader administration invested in Lithium Americas and its Thacker Pass project, a major domestic lithium source. Thacker Pass is positioned as one of the largest lithium deposits in the US and, with this backing, supports expanded lithium carbonate production for EV batteries and grid storage. 

• Trilogy Metals and Potential Alaska Development

Government support extends to Trilogy Metals’ Upper Kobuk Mineral Projects (UKMP) in Alaska’s Ambler district — rich in copper, zinc, and lead — where direct investment and access road permitting are on the agenda. 

Why These Deals Matter for Investors

The nature of these deals points to a new risk-reward frontier in mining investment:

  • Risk re-pricing: Traditional permitting and environmental uncertainty are still factors, but government co-investment and equity stakes reduce financing risk and signal long-term policy support.
  • Supply chain leverage: By tying federal capital to companies controlling critical materials, the US is effectively securing supply lines against geopolitical shocks, particularly from Chinese export controls.
  • Valuation impact: Strategic government backing can compress risk premia for companies in the critical minerals space, especially those with assets in demand for batteries, semiconductors, and defense.

Historic in intent and scale, these deals could reshape the domestic mining landscape — pushing the US from a net importer to a co-investor in strategic supply chains.

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