Highlights
- Jack Lifton coined the term “technology metals” in the early 2000s and is a foundational voice in critical minerals strategy, emphasizing that refining and processing—not just mining—are the real supply chain chokepoints.
- As Co-Chair of the Critical Minerals Institute and Director of the Industrial Policy Institute, Lifton advises governments on supply chain independence and consistently critiques market hype with industrial realism.
- Lifton’s worldview aligns with the Great Powers Era 2.0 thesis: China’s dominance in processing (90%+) and heavy rare earths (98%) proves that control of processing and fabrication—not resource ownership—defines geopolitical power.
It went through. But see my note—needto correct—there is strikethrough
From: daniel@trialsitenews.com daniel@trialsitenews.com
Sent: Saturday, April 11, 2026 12:58 PM
To: 'Dustin Olsen' dustin@rareearthexchanges.com; 'Cobalt Graphics' dustin@cobalt.graphics
Subject: Can we make sure this publishes thanks: [News] The Architect of “Technology Metals” Thinking
From: daniel@trialsitenews.com <daniel@trialsitenews.com>
Sent: Saturday, April 11, 2026 12:35 PM
To: 'rareearthexchanges@gmail.com' <rareearthexchanges@gmail.com>
Cc: 'Dustin Olsen' <dustin@rareearthexchanges.com>
Subject: [News] The Architect of “Technology Metals” Thinking
In the rare earth and critical minerals world, few voices carry the historical depth and blunt realism of Jack Lifton (opens in a new tab). For decades, Lifton has operated at the intersection of chemistry, industrial policy, and market economics—long before “critical minerals” became a geopolitical buzzword.
The Man Who Named the Game
Lifton is widely credited with coining the term “technology metals” in the early 2000s—a framing that now underpins how investors, governments, and defense planners think about materials like rare earths, lithium, cobalt, and platinum group metals. His core thesis: modern civilization is not powered by energy alone, but by the materials science stack that enables electronics, defense systems, and advanced manufacturing.
Jack Lifton

Source: Global Newswire
And Lifton’s premises align squarely with the Rare Earth Exchanges™ Great Powers Era 2.0 thesis: describing a fundamental shift in global power from traditional military dominance to control over critical supply chains, where economic statecraft, industrial policy, and technological capability define geopolitical strength. In this model, materials equal power, processing provides leverage, standards confer control, and capital combined with policy acts as a strategic weapon.
Unlike the first great power era—driven by territorial expansion and kinetic warfare culminating in Cold War and collapse of Soviet stylecommunism and the two decades USA apex position—today’scompetition is largely economic and technological, centered on supply chain chokepoints such as rare earth processing rather than physical borders.
Yes, nations are now racing to secure full value chains, revive industrial policy, and deploy tools like export controls and financing mechanisms to gain advantage, while advanced technologies increasingly depend on tightly constrained materials. Rare earths exemplify this dynamic, with China’s dominance in refining creating asymmetric leverage over fragmented Western supply chains. The central risk for the West is mistaking resource access for true control, underestimating the complexity of scaling processing, and prioritizing financial narratives over industrial execution.
Ultimately, in this new era, countries that control processing, standards, capital, and demand will shape the global order—while those that do not will remain strategically dependent.
From Chemistry to Supply Chain Realism
Trained in chemistry and mathematics, and later even attending Loyola University of Los Angeles School of Law, Lifton brings a rare multidisciplinary lens. After serving as CEO of an automotive supply company focused on engineered materials, he founded Jack Lifton, LLC in 1999. Since then, he has advised governments, financial institutions, and industrial players on mining, refining, and—critically—the often-ignored midstream bottleneck: separation and processing.
This aligns closely with Rare Earth Exchanges’ core thesis: deposits are not supply chains.
Institutional Influence
As Co-Chair of the Critical Minerals Institute (CMI), founded in 2022, Lifton is actively shaping North American thinking around supply chain independence. He also serves as Director of the Industrial Policy Institute, advising governments on how to design national strategies for critical materials—an area where policy missteps can cost decades. Lifton also collaborates with Tracy Huges (opens in a new tab) at InvestorNews (opens in a new tab).
Importantly, Ms. Hughes was an early and enthusiasticsupporter of Rare Earth Exchanges at launch (late 2024), and wecontinue to actively reference and link to this important network and conference platform, which covers a broad spectrum of critical minerals, mining developments, and investor-focused current events.
A Voice Against Hype
Lifton is known for his sharp critiques of market speculation and techno-optimism. He consistently emphasizes that:
- Refining—not mining—is the real chokepoint
- Demand realism matters more than resource hype
- Western markets often misunderstand cost structures and timelines
His public commentary frequently calls out “technoeconomic nonsense” and flawed assumptions about rapid supply chain localization .
Why He Matters Now
In today’s Great Powers Era 2.0, Lifton’s worldview is increasingly validated. China’s dominance in processing (90%+) and heavy rare earths (98%) reinforces his long-standing argument: control of processing and fabrication defines power—not just resource ownership.
Bottom Line
Jack Lifton is not just an analyst—he is one of the intellectual architects of how the West understands critical minerals. For Rare Earth Exchanges readers, he represents a foundational voice: skeptical of hype, grounded in industrial reality, and relentlessly focused on the hardest problem in the supply chain—the one most others ignore.
See Mr. Lifton’s profile (opens in a new tab) and also visit Ms. Hughes’ InvestorNews platform (opens in a new tab). See the Critical Minerals Institute (opens in a new tab).
0 Comments