Critical Metals set to close Greenland supply deals


The company has already pre-sold 75% of planned output, split between the United States and Europe, and aims to keep supply diversified to limit geopolitical risk, Critical Metals CEO Sage said. — Reuters

NEW YORK: Critical Metals expects to finalise the remaining 25% of offtake agreements for its Tanbreez rare earths project in Greenland by early 2026 and will be open to an investment from Washington, ‌its top boss tells Reuters.

Chief executive officer Tony Sage said interest from the Middle East, including potential processing partners in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates, reflects efforts ​by energy-rich states to build rare earths processing capacity, supported by lower power costs and faster permitting than in the United States and Europe.

The company has already pre-sold 75% of planned output, split between the United States and Europe, and aims to keep supply diversified to limit geopolitical risk, Sage said.

The Trump administration has intensified efforts to secure US supply chains for ‍critical minerals, including shifting some federal ‍support from ​grants to direct equity stakes, as Washington seeks to reduce reliance on market leader China.

Trump said last week that the United States needs Greenland for its national security and that a special envoy he had appointed to the island would “lead the charge.”

Trump ‍administration officials have discussed ‍taking a stake in Critical Metals, four people familiar with the matter told Reuters in ‌October.

“Would welcome it, even though we didn’t ask for it. We asked for a grant under the Defence Production Act,” Sage said. Reuters reported that the Trump administration had considered converting that grant, should it be awarded, into equity.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

Critical Metals plans to begin mining in 2027, with first production targeted for mid-2028, Sage said.

Capital costs are expected to total about US$500mil in Greenland, while downstream processing facilities are likely to cost more than US$1bil.

Separately, Sage said the ‍company’s Austrian lithium project remains on hold until prices for the battery metal recover. — Reuters

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