Mike Shepard
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
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The 1260H list, as it's known, is seen as a precursor perhaps or a bellwether to further measures that the government has taken against Chinese entities.
Well, what we're looking for is the U.S.
Export-Import Bank to take a vote later today on approving this package.
The private sector will kick in about $1.67 billion as part of this seed money, and the U.S.
Export-Import Bank will kick in another $10 billion, and this would be the biggest such deal in the bank's history by far.
And it really is a sign of just how much the administration is pushing in this area of rare earths and critical minerals and trying to wean the U.S.
from its dependence on China as a key source for these inputs.
They're so essential to the private sector, to autos, to iPhones, to gas turbines even.
And without access to them, we risk bankruptcy.
seeing a manufacturing supply chain disruption akin to what we risked experiencing earlier last year when the Chinese government started to impose some of those export controls on rare earths.
So the U.S.
is trying to diversify around it and ensure both pricing stability and supply stability here, Caro.
Well, the idea is to ensure that U.S.
manufacturers have this access.
And it would create this stockpile akin to the strategic petroleum reserve here that manufacturers here in the U.S.
could access as needed.
They would have to pay into it to be able to eventually make purchases and then promise to replenish it down the road.
But this is just one of several steps in the area of rare earths that the U.S.
government is taking right now.
Later this week, there will be meetings with dozens of foreign ministers here in Washington to agree on trying to find some way to create a mechanism to stabilize prices and supply around the world, not just here in the U.S., but with allies so that collectively they can reduce some of their dependence on China and increase extraction, mining and refining.