Highlights
- Jake Klein, Evolution Mining founder and former Lynas board member, criticized Australia for squandering its rare earths leadership through political complacency and lack of long-term industrial vision.
- While Malaysia offered tax holidays and infrastructure that attracted Lynas processing offshore, Australia now struggles with basic infrastructure gaps and has lost critical IP and processing capabilities.
- Klein challenged Australia to embrace AI, productivity, and multi-decade strategic thinking rather than resource nationalism.
- He warned that without bold reform, the country will continue losing its competitive edge to China and other nations.
Australia, once a global mining trailblazer, is now โrelying on luck over strategyโ in the rare earths race, according to industry heavyweight Jake Klein.
In a blistering address (opens in a new tab) at the Melbourne Mining Club (opens in a new tab) on December 4, Kleinโfounder of Evolution Mining and former Lynas Rare Earths board memberโwarned that Australia had squandered a once-in-a-generation opportunity to lead in critical minerals. โWeโre part of the crowd now,โ he said. โWe could have been a leader.โ
Kleinโs remarks, reported (opens in a new tab) by Mining.comโs Kristie Batten, hit hard at the political complacency and lack of industrial vision that let the rare earths opportunity slip offshore.
In the early 2000s, Lynas founder Nic Curtis recognized rare earths as strategicโbut, Klein noted, struggled for years to gain support from Australiaโs capital markets or government. โMalaysia offered a 10-year tax holiday, gas to site, and real infrastructure,โ he said. โThatโs why the plant went there.โ
Today, all the core intellectual property sits offshore, and Australiaโdespite having the oreโis playing catch-up on processing, talent, and tech. Klein pointed to the Kalgoorlie cracking facilityโs power failures as proof that even when projects finally break ground, basic infrastructure gaps persist.
He didnโt stop at industry critique. Klein took aim at Australiaโs political system, especially its three-year election cycle, for strangling long-term reform. โThe mining industry needs multi-decade thinking,โ he warned. โDoing the same thing and expecting the same results is a recipe for failure.โ
In contrast, Chinaโs multi-decade strategy has yielded global dominance in rare earths. The U.S., meanwhile, is accelerating critical mineral partnershipsโincluding a deal with Australia. But Klein suggested many of these are more PR than plan: โItโs a good political soundbite. But building a rare earth industry? Thatโs much more complicated.โ
He also challenged Australia to embrace AI and productivity, not nostalgia. โWeโre not getting lower energy costs. Laborโs expensive. So letโs compete on efficiency.โ
Kleinโs bottom line: resource nationalism wonโt be enough. Without bold reform, technical capability, and real investment in education and innovation, Australia will keep watching its competitive edge erodeโone missed mineral at a time.
Source: Kristie Batten, The Northern Miner, Dec. 4, 2025.
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