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US Critical Mineral Mining Takes 29 Years: Policy Push Aims to Speed Energy Transition Supply Chain

3 min · 20 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio US Critical Mineral Mining Takes 29 Years: Policy Push Aims to Speed Energy Transition Supply Chain

Descripción

In the United States, new data and policy moves over the past week highlight both the promise and the friction in energy and mineral development. A new analysis released by S and P Global and summarized by PR Newswire reports that the United States now has the second longest development time in the world for new mines that supply critical minerals needed for the energy transition. From initial discovery to production, a typical U S critical mineral mine takes nearly twenty nine years to come online, longer than in almost every other major mining nation. Zambia is the only country with a longer average timeline at about thirty four years. The S and P Global report, titled Mine Development Times, The U S in Perspective, points to complex permitting, overlapping federal and state reviews, and frequent litigation as key reasons for the slow pace, even as demand for lithium, nickel, cobalt, copper, and rare earth elements accelerates. At the same time, U S agencies are trying to speed up domestic capacity. The Department of Energy recently announced it is preparing nearly one billion dollars in new funding opportunities to support mining, processing, and manufacturing technologies across the critical mineral and materials supply chain. According to the Department of Energy, these planned funds will back projects that can reduce environmental impacts, improve recycling and reuse, and cut dependence on overseas suppliers, especially in regions where supply disruptions or geopolitical tension are rising. Federal researchers are also tracking the broader mineral landscape. The United States Geological Survey notes in its latest mineral production updates that the value of U S mineral output reached another high in the most recent year, driven by strong prices for copper, gold, and construction aggregates that are essential for both traditional infrastructure and new clean energy projects. The agency continues to emphasize the vulnerability of U S industry to imports for many critical minerals, even as domestic production value rises. Industry activity is responding unevenly. Companies such as Energy Fuels Incorporated report expanding low cost uranium production and advancing pilot scale heavy rare earth processing at facilities in the western United States, signaling a potential domestic foothold in markets long dominated by producers in China, Kazakhstan, and Russia. Globally, energy market news compiled by S and P Global and the U S Energy Information Administration shows that world demand for copper, lithium, and rare earths is being pushed higher by electric vehicles, grid scale batteries, and renewable power installations. The emerging pattern is clear, the United States is trying to build secure, lower impact mineral supply chains, but long mine development timelines and persistent reliance on foreign sources remain the central challenge in meeting energy transition goals. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

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episode Solar Power Surpasses Coal for First Time as US Energy Shift Accelerates artwork

Solar Power Surpasses Coal for First Time as US Energy Shift Accelerates

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, solar power reached a new milestone in May, supplying 12.8 percent of United States electricity and briefly overtaking coal for the first time, while coal fell to 12.2 percent and posted one of its lowest monthly shares on record. The same reporting from Ember, the Solar Energy Industries Association, and Wood Mackenzie says solar and battery storage accounted for 91 percent of new generating capacity in the first quarter, showing that new power development in the United States remains heavily tilted toward cleaner technologies even as federal policy shifts toward coal. In the Permian Basin, the Energy Information Administration also reports that marketed natural gas production rose from 17.2 billion cubic feet per day in 2021 to 27.6 billion cubic feet per day in 2025, a 60 percent increase, underscoring how the Texas and New Mexico oil and gas region continues to anchor national energy supply. In minerals news, S and P Global says the United States still faces some of the longest timelines in the world for developing new mines that produce critical minerals for the energy transition. Its report says a new mine in the United States takes nearly 29 years on average from discovery to production, placing the country second to last globally, ahead of only Zambia. That long lead time is a major constraint as Washington pushes to secure domestic supplies of lithium, rare earths, copper, and other minerals needed for batteries, electric vehicles, and grid equipment. The broader pattern is clear. United States energy output is growing in both extremes, with record or near record gains in solar and natural gas, while coal continues to lose ground. At the same time, the minerals side of the energy system remains a bottleneck, because new domestic mines are slow to permit, finance, and build. Outside the United States, the strongest global signal in recent news is still the accelerating expansion of solar power and battery storage, which is reshaping electricity markets and putting added pressure on mineral supply chains needed for the clean energy buildout. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

20 de jun de 20262 min
episode U.S. Energy and Critical Minerals Strategy Accelerates Amid Supply Chain Competition and Summer Demand Surge artwork

U.S. Energy and Critical Minerals Strategy Accelerates Amid Supply Chain Competition and Summer Demand Surge

Across the United States, energy and mineral developments this week are being shaped by both market pressures and policy moves aimed at securing critical supplies for the energy transition. The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports that natural gas prices and storage levels remain closely watched as summer heat drives power demand, with pipeline constraints and regional weather increasingly influencing spot prices in hubs like Henry Hub on the Gulf Coast and key markets in the Northeast. According to the Energy Information Administration, storage injections remain strong, reinforcing short term reliability even as planners look toward winter. On the minerals side, the U.S. Geological Survey and the Department of Energy are emphasizing the strategic importance of domestic production of lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite, and rare earth elements that are essential for batteries, wind turbines, and electric vehicles. The Department of Energy’s Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation in Washington D.C. continues to highlight projects that can move new technologies from research to deployment, particularly in Western states such as Nevada, Arizona, and Wyoming where exploration and permitting for new mines and processing facilities are under way. Business groups are reinforcing this focus. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, in its recent discussions on mineral and energy security, has stressed that long permitting timelines are undermining U.S. competitiveness compared with countries that can bring new mines online faster, prompting calls for streamlined federal and state review processes, especially on federal lands in the West. Industry analysis from S and P Global and other market observers is feeding into these debates, underlining how delays in new mine development threaten the supply of critical inputs for solar panels, grid scale batteries, and advanced manufacturing. Globally, energy markets are being jolted by shifting liquefied natural gas flows into Europe and Asia, as tracked by international benchmarks such as the Title Transfer Facility in the Netherlands, with price swings reflecting concerns about geopolitics and supply disruptions. At the same time, countries including Canada, Australia, and several in Africa and South America are pushing ahead with critical mineral projects, often supported by strategic partnerships with U.S. and European firms seeking to diversify away from dominant Chinese processing. Together, these developments point to an emerging pattern in which secure, diversified supplies of energy and critical minerals are treated as central pillars of economic and national security, and the United States is racing to adapt its policies and infrastructure to keep pace. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

17 de jun de 20262 min
episode US Launches Critical Minerals Initiative to Boost Domestic Lithium, Rare Earth Production and Compete Globally on Clean Energy Supply Chains artwork

US Launches Critical Minerals Initiative to Boost Domestic Lithium, Rare Earth Production and Compete Globally on Clean Energy Supply Chains

According to the United States Department of Energy, the Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation this week launched new regional consortia aimed at bolstering domestic supplies of lithium, nickel, cobalt, and rare earth elements, with a focus on projects in Nevada, Wyoming, Minnesota, and West Texas. The department says these partnerships are designed to speed up pilot mines, advance recycling technologies, and connect national labs with private firms, responding to growing demand from electric vehicles, grid storage, and defense applications. The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports that total United States energy production reached a new record in 2025, led by natural gas from the Permian Basin in Texas and New Mexico, oil output in North Dakota and the Gulf of Mexico, and steady growth in wind and solar across Texas, Iowa, Oklahoma, and California. At the same time, coal production continues a gradual decline, while renewable power and nuclear energy gain a larger share of electricity generation. S and P Global and other commodity analysts note that global oil markets remain tight as producers in the Middle East and North Africa maintain cautious output levels, while natural gas prices in Europe have been volatile due to lingering supply concerns and strong summer cooling demand. In mining, Australia, Canada, and Chile continue to announce new investments in lithium, copper, and nickel, often framed as direct competition with the United States for clean energy supply chains. Industry briefings highlight that American firms are moving to secure uranium and rare earth supplies, with new projects and processing initiatives in Utah, Wyoming, and Texas, and increased engagement with allied producers in Canada and Australia. Meanwhile, environmental and community groups in states such as Arizona and Minnesota are pressing for stricter review of copper, nickel, and lithium proposals, pointing to water use, tailings risks, and tribal land rights. Across these developments, several patterns are emerging. The United States is trying to pair record fossil fuel output with a rapid build out of renewables and a push for domestic critical minerals, aiming to reduce dependence on China and Russia for key materials. Globally, countries are racing to control not only energy production, but also the minerals that underpin batteries, wind turbines, solar panels, and advanced electronics, making energy and mineral policy increasingly intertwined with national security and industrial strategy. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

13 de jun de 20262 min
episode U.S. Critical Minerals Investment Surge as Energy Security Becomes National Priority artwork

U.S. Critical Minerals Investment Surge as Energy Security Becomes National Priority

In the United States, energy and mineral policy is rapidly evolving as Washington moves to secure supplies critical to both national security and the clean energy transition. The U.S. Department of Energy announced in early June that it intends to issue nearly one billion dollars in funding opportunities to advance mining, processing, and manufacturing technologies for key critical minerals and materials supply chains, including lithium, cobalt, nickel, and rare earth elements, with projects expected across states such as Nevada, Texas, and Wyoming, according to the U.S. Department of Energy. The department emphasized that these funds will support both traditional mines and innovative sources, such as extracting lithium from geothermal brines and recovering rare earth elements from coal waste streams. At the same time, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reports that American oil and natural gas production remains near record highs, even as utilities continue to add large amounts of solar and wind capacity, especially in Texas, California, and the Midwest wind belt. Recent data from the administration indicates strong growth in U.S. liquefied natural gas exports from Gulf Coast terminals, while coal’s share of power generation continues its long term decline. In corporate news, Energy Fuels Incorporated, a leading U.S. uranium producer, reported continued ramp up of domestic uranium output combined with pilot scale production of heavy rare earth elements at its White Mesa Mill in Utah, according to recent company press releases. This dual focus on nuclear fuel and rare earths illustrates a broader pattern of energy companies repositioning as integrated energy and minerals suppliers rather than single commodity producers. Globally, S and P Global reports that Middle East tensions and disruptions near the Strait of Hormuz have pushed oil market participants to reassess supply risk, with knock on effects for U.S. strategic petroleum planning and domestic drilling activity. In the liquefied natural gas market, labor actions in Australia are again drawing attention to the vulnerability of seaborne gas supply, indirectly supporting demand for U.S. exports from Louisiana and Texas. An emerging pattern is clear. The United States is simultaneously expanding fossil fuel output, accelerating investment in domestic critical minerals, and leaning on nuclear and renewables to meet climate and reliability goals. International instability in oil and gas trade, along with rising competition for minerals from China and other producers, is reinforcing a bipartisan view in Washington that energy and mineral security are now tightly linked and must be managed together. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

10 de jun de 20262 min
episode U.S. Critical Minerals Supply Chain Under Pressure as Clean Energy Transition Accelerates artwork

U.S. Critical Minerals Supply Chain Under Pressure as Clean Energy Transition Accelerates

In the United States, energy and minerals policy is moving quickly as the government and industry try to secure supplies for the energy transition. The U.S. Geological Survey recently reported that the value of U.S. mineral production edged up in 2024, driven in part by record prices for gold and silver, even as production of several critical minerals such as rare earth elements and lithium remained constrained. According to the Survey, this imbalance underscores how dependent clean energy technologies still are on a narrow set of mines and processing facilities concentrated in a few states, including Nevada, Arizona, and Texas. At the federal level, the Department of Energy through its Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation has intensified work on new supply chains for battery materials, permanent magnet elements, and uranium used in nuclear power. The office reports that it is backing pilot projects to recover critical minerals from coal waste in Appalachia and from mine tailings in the American West, reflecting a broader pattern of looking to unconventional sources rather than only opening new greenfield mines. In parallel, the Energy Information Administration notes that U.S. energy consumption remains dominated by petroleum and natural gas, but growth is fastest in renewables, which in turn increases demand for copper, nickel, and rare earth elements used in wind turbines, solar inverters, and grid equipment. Industry news outlets such as S and P Global and Energy Now report that U.S. oil and gas drilling has stabilized after earlier slowdown, with rig counts ticking up in major shale basins like the Permian in Texas and New Mexico. At the same time, several U.S. utilities and project developers have delayed large offshore wind projects because of higher financing and equipment costs, revealing a tension between clean energy targets and the mineral intensive hardware required to meet them. Globally, Enerdata highlights strong investment in mineral rich regions such as Australia and parts of Africa, as countries compete to supply lithium, cobalt, and graphite to the world market. Australian and U.S. officials have recently emphasized joint financing to support critical mineral projects that can supply American manufacturers, signaling a shift from reliance on China for processing. Across these developments, a clear pattern emerges. Energy systems are changing faster than the underlying mineral supply chains, and both U.S. policymakers and international partners are racing to close that gap while balancing environmental concerns, community impacts, and the urgency of climate goals. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

6 de jun de 20262 min