Close Menu
Metals Weekly
    TRENDING -
    • Sterling’s identity crisis
    • US First Nation holds up project in Canada
    • Trump reverses Minnesota mining ban
    • Securing Critical Minerals at Scale: Multilateral Solutions for Energy, Defense, and Semiconductor Supply Chains
    • DOE Explains…Critical Materials
    • Powering AI with Canadian natural hydrogen
    • Electra sizes up U.S. nickel refinery
    • FAST-41 approval for Wyoming rare earth mine adds pressure on separation tech demonstration plant.
    Metals Weekly
    • Home
    • Critical Materials
    • Environment
    • Global Policy
    • Mining
    Metals Weekly
    Home»Critical Materials»How 2026 will reshape the US critical mineral resilience

    How 2026 will reshape the US critical mineral resilience

    Critical Materials 3 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Heading into year two of the current US administration, the federal government is poised to sharpen its focus on critical minerals as policy, investment, and security priorities converge.

    Policy momentum, new public-private funding tools, and growing concerns over critical mineral dependencies are prompting Washington to think beyond rare earths and toward broader vulnerabilities in the supply chain. That shift is creating new priorities and new opportunities across extraction, processing, and manufacturing.

    A look at emerging federal activity reveals two themes rising to the surface — widening support for high-risk minerals and renewed attention to the technologies that power domestic processing.

    Critical minerals investment will expand beyond rare earths 

    In 2026, federal investment will likely expand beyond rare earth elements to include other high-risk minerals like antimony and tungsten. These materials have so far not attracted the same attention as rare earths, yet they represent some of the US’s most vulnerable supply chains, with the country dependent on China, Tajikistan and Russia for the majority of its antimony sourcing.

    That level of dependence is untenable for sectors tied to defense, energy, semiconductors and industrial manufacturing where antimony is used in alloys, munitions, and flame-retardant applications.

    As with rare earths, the investment focus will shift toward processing capacity for these minerals, since extraction alone does not create supply chain security.

    Federal attention will focus on processing technologies that break from century-old methods like traditional smelting and refining and can sustain production over the long term. The emphasis will sit on approaches with emissions profiles acceptable to nearby communities and cost structures that hold up in a globally competitive market.

    Metals processing will emerge as a major white space for industrial innovation 

    A changing energy and manufacturing landscape is exposing just how outdated U.S. metals processing has become. Aluminum, copper, magnesium and titanium processing still rely on methods that have barely changed in decades, despite enormous electricity requirements.

    With growing competition for power from AI and data centres, the cost of electricity will become a defining pressure point for heavy industry in 2026.

    This shift will create white space for companies that can minimize the cost of production inputs, including electricity, reduce harmful by-products, and lower total production costs.

    Innovation in metals processing will attract interest from federal programs looking for ways to strengthen domestic manufacturing against global competitors.

    What these shifts mean for US miners and manufacturers

    Strengthening domestic mineral capabilities has become a clear priority for the current Presidentia ladministration, with the goal of positioning the US as a global leader in efficient, sustainable, and modern mining practices.

    As priorities expand beyond rare earths, advances in processing and industrial efficiency will reshape how the US strengthens its critical mineral independence and reduces reliance on overseas supply.

    Companies that can demonstrate more reliable and cost-effective processing technologies will be well-positioned for the next wave of federal funding as these shifts take shape in 2026.

    How 2026 will reshape the US critical mineral resilience

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Securing Critical Minerals at Scale: Multilateral Solutions for Energy, Defense, and Semiconductor Supply Chains

    DOE Explains…Critical Materials

    US prepares to auction leases for seabed mining blocks in federal waters

    Don't Miss

    Metals From Copper to Gold Slump as Inflation Fears Roil Markets

    Global Policy 2 Mins Read

    Metals from gold to copper sank in a broad selloff in financial markets amid investor…

    TMC The Metals Moves Toward Commercial Seafloor Production With Allseas Deal

    Prismo Metals Reports Positive Results from Reconnaissance Mapping and Sampling at Silver King Project, Arizona

    TMC scores regulatory win in race to mine Pacific seafloor

    Top Stories

    Electra sizes up U.S. nickel refinery

    Anger grows after China’s deadliest coal mining disaster in years

    Arctic Mine gains FAST-41 permitting status

    Scientists Discover a New Way To Control Metals at the Atomic Scale

    Our Picks

    Zambians pay price amid Copperbelt mining boom

    Zambia says privacy, minerals concerns stall US health aid deal

    Zambia mine regulator lifts suspension of operations at Mopani’s Mufulira mine

    Don't Miss

    America’s Abandoned Coal Mines Could Become Giant Underground Batteries

    Where are The World’s Rare Earth Minerals Located?

    Mintek creates MinBind to unlock value of low-grade ore

    Weekly Newsletter

    Subscribe to our weekly Newsletter to keep up to date on the latest news in the metals, minerals and mining industry

    Copyright © 2025 - Metals Weekly. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.