G7 Draft Plan to Shield Critical Mineral Supply Faces Political and Strategic Gaps

Highlights

  • G7 leaders provisionally endorse a joint strategy to protect critical mineral supply chains, targeting China’s export dominance.
  • The draft proposes coordinated actions to anticipate supply shortages and diversify global mining, refining, and recycling efforts.
  • The proposed plan lacks binding commitments and enforcement mechanisms, potentially rendering it symbolically ineffective.

G7 leaders have provisionally endorsed a joint strategy to protect critical mineral supply chains amid mounting geopolitical pressure from China, according to a draft communique seen by Reuters. But the proposal, which has yet to be approved by U.S. President Donald Trump, raises urgent questions about feasibility, coordination, and credibility.

The draft calls for coordinated action against “non-market policies and practices” in the critical minerals sector. It outlines measures to anticipate supply shortages, counter market disruptions, and diversify global mining, refining, and recycling efforts. The urgency follows China’s April suspension of exports of key rare earths and magnets—crippling global supply lines for electric vehicles, semiconductors, and defense systems.

Yet the document’s impact may be undermined before it’s finalized. President Trump has not signed off, even after announcing that President Xi Jinping agreed to resume rare earth exports to the U.S.—a bilateral deal that could weaken multilateral resolve. Beijing’s use of mineral exports as strategic leverage remains unchallenged.

Critically, the draft offers no binding investment commitments, no shared industrial standards, and no enforcement mechanisms to counteract Beijing’s export dominance or state-subsidized pricing. Without real capital backing, coordinated stockpiles, or shared processing infrastructure, the plan risks being symbolic.

Rare Earth Exchanges Reflection– The G7 may have reached rhetorical consensus, but the minerals war is economic trench warfare, and China still controls the high ground. Until Western democracies match strategic planning with industrial execution, supply chain “resilience” will remain aspirational.

G7 countries: U.S., Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan

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