Highlights
- Brazil is drafting a national policy to block foreign acquisitions of strategic mineral assets and mandate domestic processing of rare earths and critical minerals to protect sovereignty and capture more value.
- The policy correctly targets downstream value through domestic refining and separationโwhere profits actually existโrather than just raw material extraction.
- Major execution risks remain: Brazil needs billions in capital, industrial-scale separation facilities, chemical supply chains, and decades of process engineering expertise to compete with China's established advantage.
Brazil is drafting a new national policy to block or tightly control sales of strategic mineral assets and push more domestic processing of rare earths and critical minerals. The move aims to protect sovereignty and move up the value chainโbut execution risks and supply chain gaps remain.

The Door ClosesโAt Least Partway
Brazil is making a decisive move. In plain language: the government wants more control over who buys its critical mineral assets and is drafting a policy to ensure rare earths and other strategic resources are processed domesticallyโnot just exported. A new council of ministers would oversee deals, potentially blocking foreign acquisitions and forcing greater scrutiny.
Itโs about sovereignty. And leverage.
The Part They Got RightโValue Lives Downstream
This is the clearest signal yet that Brazil understands the rare earth game:
mining is not enough.
The push for:
- Domestic processing
- Technology transfer
- Industrial capacity
โฆaligns with how value is actually captured in rare earth supply chains. Countries that refine and separateโnot just extractโwin.
The Hard Part They Didnโt Say Out Loud
Policy is easy. Chemistry is not.
Missing from the coverage:
- Industrial-scale separation capacity timelines
- Access to reagents and processing chemicals
- Technical expertise for solvent extraction
- Capital intensity (billions, not millions)
Chinaโs advantage is not just resourcesโitโs decades of process engineering and chemical optimization.
Narrative Drift: Control โ Capability
The framing leans toward national control as a solution. Itโs not.
Blocking asset sales may prevent foreign dominanceโbut it does not create:
- Refineries
- Magnet plants
- Chemical supply chains
Without those, Brazil risks locking value in policy rather than unlocking it in production.
Why This Matters Now
This is a structural shift. Brazil is signaling it wants to become more than a supplierโit wants to be a processor. Thatโs the right ambition. But unless execution followsโplants, chemistry, partnershipsโthis becomes another case of resource nationalism without industrialization.
Bottom Line
Brazil is closing the gate. Now it has to build whatโs inside.
Because in rare earths, control of the ground means little without control of the process.
Rare Earth Exchangesโข is tracking the train, not the ticker.
Source: ANI News / Brasil 247, April 22, 2026
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