US, EU, Japan to Craft Critical Minerals Trade Pact Amid China Tensions

March 13, 2026
US, EU, Japan to Craft Critical Minerals Trade Pact Amid China Tensions
  • The United States, the European Union, and Japan are moving to establish a framework for a critical minerals trade agreement, potentially including a price floor and tariffs to counter distortions from China.

  • Negotiations are led by the U.S. Trade Representative and are set to begin in April after a public industry consultation closes on March 19.

  • The initiative will be a major topic at the upcoming G7 summit as Western governments seek more resilient and diversified critical mineral supply chains.

  • Economic implications include potential market fragmentation and higher input costs for downstream manufacturers, with a possible formation of competing blocs; successful alliances could stabilize pricing and supply chains, while investment flows are favoring Latin America and lithium/rare earth projects.

  • Risks span geopolitical pushback, potential WTO disputes, downstream resistance from higher costs, and exclusion of non-allied nations, underscoring the need for broad diplomatic engagement.

  • Implementation challenges center on coordinating technical pricing references across markets, aligning regulations, managing a smooth transition, and ensuring producer compliance under new pricing rules.

  • Reuters notes that Bloomberg’s information is not independently verified at this time, and relies on unnamed sources familiar with preparations.

  • Phase-one targets include rare earths and lithium processing bottlenecks, with criteria emphasizing disruption vulnerability, processing limits, strategic defense relevance, and production-stage considerations.

  • Key drivers are the shift to a low-carbon economy and surging demand for lithium, cobalt, nickel, rare earths, and graphite for EVs, solar, and wind energy.

  • Framework components may include stockpiling, investment coordination, regulatory cooperation, investment screening, R&D for new minerals technologies, and coordinated price mechanisms to support allied producers.

  • The overarching aim is a more resilient, transparent, and ethically responsible global minerals market that reduces coercion risk and supports long-term economic and technological goals.

  • The initiative seeks common standards for extraction, processing, and trade to address environmental, labor, and transparency concerns, promoting a sustainable and ethical supply chain.

Summary based on 7 sources


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Sources


US, Allies Target China With Critical Minerals Framework


US Critical Minerals Price Floor Talks: 2026 Update

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