Highlights
- Tungsten prices have surged ~900% year-over-year for APT as Western Star Resources submits a proposal to supply domestic tungsten ahead of the January 2027 U.S. defense ban on Chinese, Russian, Iranian, and North Korean sources.
- Despite policy acceleration, the U.S. has had no commercial tungsten production since 2015, while China controls 80% of global supply—exposing a critical gap between reshoring ambitions and physical industrial capacity.
- Western Star's Nevada Rowland project remains early-stage with no current NI 43-101 resource and drilling only planned for 2026, raising questions about whether junior explorers can realistically bridge near-term defense procurement gaps.
A sharp repricing in the tungsten market—up ~900% year-over-year for ammonium paratungstate (APT) (opens in a new tab)—is colliding with U.S. industrial policy deadlines, as Western Star Resources Inc (opens in a new tab). submits a proposal to the Defense Industrial Base Consortium targeting domestic tungsten supply. The move comes ahead of the January 1, 2027 rule barring Chinese, Russian, Iranian, and North Korean tungsten from U.S. defense applications, exposing a widening gap between policy ambition and physical capacity.

As Rare Earth Exchanges™ has reported, China still controls roughly 80% of global tungsten supply and most downstream processing. The U.S., by contrast, has had no commercial tungsten production since 2015. Western Star’s Rowland project in Nevada—while past-producing—has no current NI 43-101resource and remains early-stage, with drilling only planned for 2026.
The announcement raises critical questions. Can junior explorers realistically bridge a near-term defense procurement gap measured in months, not years? How will permitting timelines, processing capacity, and downstream conversion be addressed? And why is there limited discussion of midstream refining—historically the hardest constraint to scale?
The inclusion of an investor relations campaign alongside a modest $500,000 raise may also signal a capital-raising strategy still in its early innings.
Bottom line: policy is accelerating faster than industrial reality. Without rapid build-out of mining and processing, tungsten, an element classified as a critical mineral and not a rare earth element, reshoring risks remaining more of a narrative than a near-term solution.
Profile
Western Star Resources Inc. is a small-cap, early-stage exploration company focused on advancing critical mineral assets in North America, with a strategic emphasis on tungsten and polymetallic deposits tied to defense and industrial supply chains. Its primary asset is the past-producing Rowland Tungsten Project in Nevada, a high-grade historical operation with documented tungsten mineralization but no current compliant resource estimate, alongside a broader portfolio in British Columbia anchored by the district-scale Western Star Project, which hosts gold, silver, copper, and lead mineralization across a 2,700+ hectare land package.
The company’s strategy centers on re-evaluating historical mining districts using modern exploration techniques to target underexplored extensions of known mineralized zones. However, exploration remains largely at an early stage, with limited drilling and reliance on historical data. Financially, the company is tightly held, with a modest market capitalization (~$5M), no debt, and a limited public float, positioning it as a high-risk, high-upside exploration play aligned with U.S. critical mineral reshoring themes but still far from production.
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