Curtis and Shaheen urge congressional action on critical minerals supply chain legislation

John Curtis, U.S. Senator from Utah
John Curtis, U.S. Senator from Utah
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U.S. Senators John Curtis (R-UT) and Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), the Ranking Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, have issued a joint statement as the United States hosts a Critical Minerals Ministerial. The senators are calling on their colleagues to support legislation that would direct the U.S. government to collaborate with international partners in order to develop secure, reliable, and transparent supply chains for critical minerals. This would be achieved by authorizing U.S. participation in the Minerals Security Partnership.

In their statement, Curtis and Shaheen said: “It is unacceptable for America’s economic well-being and national security to be at the whim of China due to their overwhelming control of critical minerals supply chains. We welcome Secretary Rubio hosting a ministerial meeting to address this challenge and deepen partnerships with like-minded countries. The United States cannot solve the critical minerals challenge alone and we will be unable to counter PRC dominance over critical mineral supply chains without trusted allies and partners.

“That is why we urge Congress to pass our legislation that would codify U.S. participation in the Minerals Security Partnership to better coordinate the mining, processing, and recycling of critical minerals. Our legislation provides a bipartisan signal that the United States Congress wants to work with its allies and partners in securing these strategic assets to protect our collective economic and national security.”

The proposed legislation aims to strengthen cooperation between the U.S. and its allies regarding sourcing, processing, and recycling of key minerals essential for various industries.



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