
President Trump is launching a $12 billion strategic mineral stockpile to break China’s stranglehold on critical resources that power everything from smartphones to fighter jets, marking a decisive shift in America’s fight for economic and national security independence.
Story Snapshot
- Project Vault creates America’s first commercial-scale critical minerals reserve with $10 billion EXIM loan and $1.67 billion private investment
- Initiative targets materials like gallium and cobalt essential for EVs, semiconductors, and defense systems where U.S. relies 100% on imports for 12 minerals
- Major corporations including GM, Boeing, Google, and Stellantis committed to fixed-price purchases and replenishment obligations
- Move directly counters China’s 90% control of global critical mineral processing and supply chains
Breaking China’s Mineral Monopoly
The Trump administration unveiled Project Vault on February 2, 2026, as a comprehensive response to Beijing’s decades-long domination of critical mineral markets. China controls approximately 70% of global rare earth mining and commands a staggering 90% of processing capacity, giving the communist regime dangerous leverage over American manufacturers and defense contractors. The U.S. currently imports 100% of its supply for 12 critical minerals and over 50% for 29 others, a vulnerability the Biden administration ignored while depleting military stockpiles to patch energy price failures after Russia invaded Ukraine.
Public-Private Partnership Shields American Industry
The U.S. Export-Import Bank is providing a record $10 billion, 15-year loan to establish the reserve, with more than 12 major companies contributing $1.67 billion in private capital. Participating firms include General Motors, Stellantis, Boeing, Corning, GE Vernova, and Google’s parent company Alphabet. Commodities traders Hartree Partners, Traxys North America, and Mercuria Energy Group will handle stockpile purchases. This structure differs fundamentally from Biden-era approaches by creating fixed-price commitments that stabilize costs while allowing companies to draw materials during supply disruptions with mandatory replenishment obligations, ensuring long-term sustainability.
Whole-of-Government National Security Strategy
Trump’s broader mineral security push extends beyond Project Vault through his “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” which allocates $7.5 billion for critical minerals development. This includes $2 billion for stockpile expansion by 2027, $5 billion for supply-chain investments, and $500 million in Pentagon procurement credits. The administration has already taken equity stakes in domestic producers USA Rare Earth, Lithium Americas, and MP Materials. The Pentagon plans $1 billion in near-term acquisitions to secure defense-critical materials for fighter jets, missiles, and night vision systems. Trump signed an executive order in January 2026 formally addressing import vulnerabilities that left America dependent on adversaries.
Economic and Strategic Independence
Critical minerals underpin technologies essential to American competitiveness and security, from artificial intelligence systems to electric vehicle batteries, semiconductors, jet engines, and smartphones. China weaponized this dependency during 2019 trade negotiations when Trump imposed tariffs, threatening export restrictions that would have crippled U.S. manufacturers. Project Vault mirrors the Strategic Petroleum Reserve concept but addresses a more fundamental vulnerability since mineral supply chains cannot be rapidly replaced like oil sources. The initiative attracted oversubscription from participating companies due to strong credit backing and EXIM guarantees, signaling market confidence in decoupling from China’s manipulation.
Senior administration officials emphasized the civilian focus represents a paradigm shift from military-only reserves, functioning as a “shock absorber” for American industry during geopolitical disruptions. Trump met with GM CEO Mary Barra and mining entrepreneur Robert Friedland on February 2 to coordinate production and consumption needs. Bipartisan lawmakers including Senators Jeanne Shaheen, Todd Young, and Representatives John Moolenaar and Rob Wittman had proposed a smaller $2.5 billion reserve in January, but Trump’s expanded vision reflects the urgency of protecting manufacturing jobs and technological leadership from Beijing’s economic warfare tactics that flourished under globalist policies.
Sources:
Trump administration looks to create $12 billion critical mineral reserve – Washington Examiner
Trump plans $12B minerals vault to cut China reliance – Mining.com
Trump launches $12 billion minerals stockpile to counter China – Investing.com
Trump administration to create strategic reserve for rare earths elements – ABC News



























