America's Next Defense Challenge Isn't Mining Rare Earths-It's Proving Where They Came From

Jul 16, 2026

4 minute read.

Highlights

  • DFARS 252.225-7052 requires defense contractors to trace magnets, tantalum, and tungsten through mining, refining, and manufacturing—a standard few supply chains can currently meet.
  • Sagint combines blockchain tokenization, zero-knowledge proofs, and sensor data to create immutable provenance records without exposing proprietary business information.
  • Congress is advancing mineral traceability language in the FY2027 NDAA, signaling that verification is now viewed as a national security issue.
  • China is expanding digital oversight of its own rare earth ecosystem, potentially pairing material dominance with superior verification capabilities.
  • Verified traceability could reduce financing costs and improve insurance underwriting, reframing compliance from a regulatory burden into a capital formation tool.

The United States has spent the past few years financing mines, separation plants, metal production, and magnet manufacturing. Yet a less visible problem is emerging that could determine whether those investments actually satisfy U.S. defense procurement rules. Can anyone prove where the material really came from?

According to Jacob Clayton, CEO (opens in a new tab) and co-founder of Sagint (opens in a new tab) and a former Marine Corps Reserve lieutenant colonel, the answer today is essentially no. During a recent Rare Earth Exchanges® Podcast (opens in a new tab), Clayton argued that paper certificates and PDF documents are inadequate for verifying increasingly complex global supply chains.

Jacob Clayton, CEO, Co-Founder, Sagint

Smiling middle-aged man with short brown hair wearing a charcoal gray suit, white dress shirt, and patterned gray tie in a pr

January 1, 2027 Changes the Rules

Under DFARS 252.225-7052, (opens in a new tab) defense contractors must demonstrate that covered magnets, tantalum, and tungsten used in U.S. defense systems are free from prohibited sourcing involving China, Russia, Iran, or North Korea. That requirement extends beyond identifying an immediate supplier. It demands traceability through mining, refining, processing, and manufacturing—a standard few, if any, current supply chains appear prepared to meet. Clayton suggested that no publicly known supply chain today can fully demonstrate that level of digital provenance.

Verification May Become America's Missing Infrastructure

Rare Earth Exchanges® has consistently argued that rebuilding Western supply chains requires more than opening new mines. Every new refinery, alloy plant, and magnet factory creates another point where provenance can be lost. Sagint's proposed solution treats compliance as an information problem rather than merely a documentation exercise.

Instead of relying on editable PDFs, the company combines ERP systems, sensor data, process measurements, blockchain tokenization, and zero-knowledge proofs to create immutable compliance records while protecting proprietary business information. The system follows material through three stages—feedstock, processing, and finished product—creating a digital chain of custody that can be audited without exposing confidential operational data.

Compliance Could Unlock Capital

One of the podcast's more interesting themes was that traceability may become a financial asset.

If investors, lenders, insurers, and government agencies gain higher confidence in a project's provenance and regulatory compliance, financing costs could decline while insurance products become easier to underwrite. Whether this thesis proves correct remains to be demonstrated commercially, but it reframes traceability from a regulatory burden into potential infrastructure for capital formation.

The Bigger Strategic Question

The House Armed Services Committee recently advanced mineral traceability language within the FY2027 National Defense Authorization Act (opens in a new tab), signaling that Congress increasingly views verification as part of national security rather than administrative paperwork. Meanwhile, China continues expanding digital oversight of its own rare earth ecosystem, including initiatives surrounding the Baotou Rare Earth Products Exchange, as we have chronicled at Rare Earth Exchanges. If Beijing pairs material dominance with superior digital verification, Western supply chains could find themselves disadvantaged even after billions in public investment.

Rare Earth Exchanges View

The West has spent years discussing mines. The next strategic competition may center on trust.

Building domestic processing capacity is necessary, especially with the imminent DFAR compliance requirements. Demonstrating—with cryptographic certainty—that every kilogram meets U.S. procurement requirements becomes equally important.

If January 2027 becomes the enforcement inflection point many expect, digital traceability platforms such as Sagint could evolve from interesting technology vendors into critical pieces of America's emerging defense-industrial infrastructure.

To learn how Jacob Clayton and the Sagint team are building the digital trust infrastructure that could reshape critical mineral supply chains, check out the REEx Podcast (opens in a new tab).

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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Proving rare earth origin may matter more than mining them. Digital traceability could determine whether U.S. defense investments meet DFARS compliance by 2027. (read full article...)

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