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Critical Minerals and Great Power Competition: An Overview

With global politics increasingly fractured, states are rushing to secure critical and strategic mineral supply chains. Each state conceptualizes mineral security differently, driven by a mix of imperatives that range from national development and industrial policy to technological and military dominance. Great power competition pervades all of these issue areas, and that competition may also pose risks at the global level: risks for the pace of green transition, risks of geoeconomic escalation and risks of conflict.

This report provides an insightful overview of the mineral security policies of four key powers: China, the European Union, Russia and the United States. It describes the distinct ways in which they conceptualize mineral security, comparing their priority lists of critical and strategic minerals. It considers the wider imperatives that motivate their policies and assesses the implications for developing countries. The report concludes by reflecting on the need to mitigate the worst of the resultant risks through expanded dialogue with a wider set of stakeholders. The goal is a form of mineral security that can serve more broad-based, global developmental interests.

Table of contents

1.Introduction                  

2. Mineral security: What is critical and for whom?

3. National policy

4. Beyond minerals: Cross-cutting policy drivers          

5. Global risks and implications             

6. Conclusions

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)/EDITORS

Dr Jiayi Zhou is a Researcher in the SIPRI Conflict, Peace and Security Programme.
Dr André Månberger is Senior Lecturer in Energy and Environmental Systems Studies, Lund University.