Australia and Canada will jointly invest in critical minerals, including processing each other’s resources, in a landmark collaboration designed to wean themselves off China.

Resources Minister Madeleine King said global efforts to diversify supply chains for the vital minerals had concentrated in response to China’s recent restrictions on exports.

Even though China President Xi Jinping put a year-long pause on these restrictions after meeting Donald Trump this week, the volatility had made other countries conscious of their vulnerabilities.

“The arbitrary nature of that export restriction and the equally arbitrary nature of it being taken off – with little detail around the nature of that lift of those restrictions – just shows why it’s important to have an alternative, trusted supply chain,” Ms King, pictured below, told The West from Canada, where she has joined G7 energy ministers shaping the critical minerals action plan leaders agreed to in June.

That plan is about creating an alternative market for critical minerals and rare earths that reflects the price of production in “open-market countries” with high ESG standards, such as Australia and Canada.

  • justOnePersistentKbinPlease@fedia.io
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    5 days ago

    Its sort of amusing how Trump and Carney are coming away from this summit very differently.

    Trump has a gaudy crown, he surrendered to China on his own tariffs, fauned over Japan’s new far right PM and has a meaningless apology(which he should not have been given) from Carney.

    Carney is coming away with initial agreements with over two dozen countries.

  • xploit@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    And then they’ll let Chinese mining companies do the actual mining…better yet American 🤡