Current News

/

ArcaMax

US moves to deepen minerals supply chain in AI race with China

Eric Martin, Bloomberg News on

Published in News & Features

The U.S. will seek agreements with eight allied nations as part of a fresh effort to strengthen supply chains for the computer chips and critical minerals needed for AI technology, according to the top State Department official for economic affairs.

The initiative, which builds on efforts dating back to the first Trump administration, unfolds as the U.S. looks to cut dependence on China. It will begin with a meeting at the White House on Dec. 12 between the U.S. and counterparts from Japan, South Korea, Singapore, the Netherlands, the UK, Israel, the United Arab Emirates and Australia, Jacob Helberg, the undersecretary of state for economic affairs, said in an interview.

Helberg, a former adviser at Palantir Technologies Inc., said the summit will focus on reaching agreements across the areas of energy, critical minerals, advanced manufacturing semiconductors, AI infrastructure, and transportation logistics.

Helberg said the countries were chosen for reasons that range from being home to some of the most important semiconductor companies to their critical minerals resources.

“It’s clear that right now in AI, it’s a two-horse race — it’s the U.S. and China,” Helberg said. “We want to have a positive, stable relationship with China, but we’re also ready to compete, and we want to make sure that our companies can continue building transformative technologies without being subject to coercive dependencies.”

Helberg’s initiative builds upon years of efforts on critical minerals supply chains by prior administrations largely aimed at helping reduce Western dependence on China. The State Department in the first Trump administration launched the U.S. Energy Resource Governance Initiative with the aim of securing supply chains for critical minerals like lithium and cobalt. The Biden administration launched a Minerals Security Partnership that aimed to funnel foreign investment and Western expertise to the mining sectors of developing nations.

Even so, the U.S. and other countries have been unable to break China’s stranglehold over rare earths supplies. China is home to more than 90% of global rare earths and permanent magnets refining capacity, compared with just 4% for second-place Malaysia, according to the International Energy Agency, a Paris-based intergovernmental organization.

 

China announced tighter rare earths export controls in early October, only to agree to a one-year suspension after a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Helberg said that unlike the Biden-era initiative, which had more than a dozen core countries, his focus is on producer countries. While the first Trump administration initiative focused on critical minerals, it came before the public release of AI platforms like ChatGPT, and the new plan focuses across all layers of the technology involved in AI, not just one, Helberg said.

Helberg, 36, was previously senior adviser to Palantir Chief Executive Officer Alex Karp and also co-founded the Hill and Valley Forum, a gathering of tech leaders and U.S. lawmakers focused on national security challenges, especially those related to competition with China and the advancement of AI and other technologies.

He framed the work with trusted allies for his AI initiative as an “America-centric” strategy, rather than one that’s reactive to China.

“Countries who are participating understand the transformative impact of AI, both for the size of a country’s economy, as well as the strengths of a country’s military,” he said. “They want to be a part of the AI boom.”

_____


©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus