Trump backs US$50 million investment for South Africa rare earths
A US$50 million US government investment is backing the Phalaborwa Rare Earths Project in South Africa, which aims to extract rare earth elements from mining waste at an old chemical processing plant. The project, supported by the US International Development Finance Corporation, is part of a broader US effort to decrease reliance on China for these critical minerals used in electronics, defense, and electric vehicles.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA US$50 million US government investment is backing the Phalaborwa Rare Earths Project in South Africa, which aims to extract rare earth elements from mining waste at an old chemical processing plant. The project, supported by the US International Development Finance Corporation, is part of a broader US effort to decrease reliance on China for these critical minerals used in electronics, defense, and electric vehicles. Rare earth elements are essential for new technologies and the US government has been working to expand access to them. Despite diplomatic tensions between the US and South Africa, the current Trump administration has continued to support the project, which began in 2023 under the Biden administration.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedTrump issued an executive order last February to halt all financial assistance to South Africa.
The Development Finance Corporation (DFC) committed its investment in the Phalaborwa project in 2023.
The investment is part of accelerated US efforts to reduce its reliance on China for critical minerals.
The Phalaborwa Rare Earths Project has US support through a US$50 million equity investment.
US backs US$50 million investment for South Africa rare earths project.