USTR Greer urges US allies to pay more for critical minerals, FT reports

U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer urged allies to pay a "national security premium" for critical minerals sourced outside China. He argued that a focus on cost efficiency has led to Western reliance on China for these vital resources. Greer...

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US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer has told American allies they must pay more for critical minerals sourced from outside China, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday.

U.S. allies must ‌be ready ⁠to ⁠pay a "national security premium" for the minerals, which would be sourced from within a proposed group of trading partners including Europe, Greer told the FT in an interview.

"There is a premium we pay, and I call it the national security premium, and ⁠we will ‌all pay a national security premium to have a secure supply chain," Greer said ⁠in the interview.


Greer, who has been drawing up a draft of specific details to share with partners, said he blamed countries' fixation on business costs for Western reliance on China for key minerals.

"When trading partners express concerns about the economic cost of price floors or ‌mechanisms, I just say: what you're talking about, which is cost efficiency, this is why we are in the ⁠situation we're in," Greer said.

Greer has earlier said that there needs to be some kind of price mechanism on rare earth minerals.
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The U.S. has been trying to get access to critical mineral reserves, especially rare earth supply chains currently dominated by Chinese players.

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