US holds fire on tariffs for critical minerals for now


US President Donald Trump. — Reuters

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump says he has opted for now against imposing tariffs on rare earths, lithium and other critical minerals, and instead ordered his administration to ‌seek supplies from international trading partners.

The move defers a decision on duties that could further roil the US economy, especially while the Supreme Court is deliberating the legality of Trump’s tariffs.

By acknowledging the country is far from being self-reliant for its critical minerals needs, though, it may rankle the domestic mining sector.

Trump ordered US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to “enter into negotiations with trading partners to adjust the imports of critical minerals so that such imports will not threaten to impair the national security of the United States.”

The negotiations, Trump said, should promote the use of price floors for critical minerals, a step long sought by Western miners and ‍policymakers.

G7 finance ministers and those from other ‍major economies like Australia met in Washington this week to discuss such a step, for example.

If Greer and Lutnick’s negotiations are not successful, Trump said he would consider setting minimum import prices for critical minerals or “may take other measures”, without elaborating.

Trump is essentially agreeing to a recommendation by Lutnick, who last April launched a ‍national security review under Section 232 ‍of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 and in October submitted his findings to the president.

Lutnick’s report found ‌that the US is “too reliant on foreign sources” of critical minerals, lacks access to a secure supply chain, and is experiencing “unsustainable price volatility” for the materials, with all those factors fuelling a “significant national security vulnerability that could be exploited by foreign actors.”

It was not immediately clear why Trump waited until this month to act on Lutnick’s report.

China is a top global producer of more than half of the 54 minerals considered critical by the US Geological Survey, for example, and has been curtailing exports in the past year amid its trade dispute with Washington.

The country is also a major refiner of critical minerals. — Reuters

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