A top banker tried to sway Pope
Leo XIV on
rare earth mining 1 of 5 | The President of the
Inter-American Development Bank Ilan Goldfajn speaks to the Associated Press during an interview in
Rome, Thursday, June 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Domenico Stinellis) 2 of 5 | Pope
Leo XIV celebrates the funeral service for late Cardinal Camillo Ruini, in St.Peter’s Basilica at the
Vatican, Thursday, June 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) 3 of 5 | The President of the
Inter-American Development Bank Ilan Goldfajn speaks to the Associated Press during an interview in
Rome, Thursday, June 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Domenico Stinellis) 4 of 5 | A front-end loader transports phosphogypsum in Phalaborwa,
South Africa, Monday, Sept. 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe, File) 5 of 5 | A mine operated by Serra Verde Mining in Minacu, Goias state,
Brazil, Monday, July 28, 2025, produces rare earth elements, including
neodymium,
praseodymium, terbium and dysprosium which are essential for the production of
permanent magnets. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres, File) By DAVID BILLER and NICOLE WINFIELD Updated 1:51 PM MESZ, June 20, 2026 Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit
Rome (AP) — The head of Latin America’s top development bank made a pitch to Pope
Leo XIV this week in the face of the
Vatican’s call to divest from the
mining industry: that the mistakes of the past can be avoided in extracting rare earth minerals to supply a global tech boom.
Ilan Goldfajn, head of the
Inter-American Development Bank, met privately with the pope on Friday and asserted the potential of
rare earth mining, saying it could be a boon to Latin America provided there are safeguards and value is added locally. It’s probably not an easy sell. The
Vatican for years has taken a firm stand against multinational mining corporations, especially in Latin America and in favor of the Indigenous peoples, whose lands and livelihoods are often ravaged when mining projects come to town. Goldfajn’s visit, which followed one earlier this year by mining executives, suggests that he recognizes the weight of the pope’s words in the majority-Catholic region, and a desire to sensitize him to the possibility of a better way of doing business. Whether Leo can be swayed is another matter, given his own experience in the region and criticism of the often corrupt deals mining companies ink with governments in the developing world. Pope
Leo XIV celebrates the funeral service for late Cardinal Camillo Ruini, in St.Peter’s Basilica at the
Vatican, Thursday, June 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Countries have identified dozens of minerals, including copper, cobalt, lithium and nickel, as critical because they are essential for new technologies. The 17 rare earth elements are a subset of them. They’re used in a wide range of products, including smartphones, semiconductors, electric vehicles and jet engines. Protesters block copper exports to China from Rio Tinto mine in Mongolia 1 MIN READ Carney calls for new partnership with US as Trump mulls whether to renew free trade agreement 3 MIN READ 15 In Sudan’s war economy, gold keeps flowing as miners risk mercury and collapse 3 MIN READ “It’s a unique opportunity for the region, but you need to do it in the right way with the standards, the labor conditions, with the environmental conditions, the governance,” Goldfajn said in an interview in
Rome on June 18, one day before his meeting. “We have exactly the tools to do that,” he added, noting the IADB has a roughly $4 billion pipeline of critical mineral projects in the region, mostly in Chile, Argentina and
Brazil, and three-quarters of that amount with private companies. He had just delivered a presentation on rare earth minerals at a finance conference, with an eye on potential European investors. Mining has a checkered, centuries-long history in Latin America, from forced labor and displacement of Indigenous peoples to deforestation, poisoning of waterways and deadly dam collapses. Foreign companies withdrew much of the wealth from the earth without enriching local populations. In colonial times, silver and gold made its way across the ocean to adorn Catholic churches. Leo, who spent two decades working as a missionary in Peru, would be intimately familiar with the plight of Indigenous peoples in mining areas and the environmental impact of extraction industries on the land. He ministered in Chulucanas, in the archdiocese of Piura, which has huge copper mining projects, and in Trujillo, known for its gold deposits. His final Peruvian posting, Chiclayo, is a big logistical hub for northern Peru’s extraction industries. “He must have seen both sides: the promise, the future, but also the challenges,” Goldfajn said of Leo’s time in Peru. He noted that Leo held a private audience with a group of top mining executives in January, which he heard from them had been “very constructive.” The President of the
Inter-American Development Bank Ilan Goldfajn speaks to the Associated Press during an interview in
Rome, Thursday, June 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Domenico Stinellis) But two months later, the
Vatican launched a campaign to encourage divestment from mining companies. At a
Vatican news conference, top officials held up an ecumenical Christian network, known as the Church and Mining Network, that is active in particular in Latin America. The campaign seeks to encourage local churches to review their investment strategies and divest where needed, and to share information especially with Indigenous groups about the types of extraction occurring on their lands. Leo is expected to visit Peru in November, including places where he ministered. In each of the three sub-Saharan countries he visited during his April trip to Africa — Cameroon, Angola and Equatorial Guinea — he blasted the “colonization” of Africa’s minerals by mining companies. It makes sense for people like Goldfajn to try to engage Leo, even if the pope alone won’t move investment decisions, Bryan Harris, managing partner at Sabio, a Latin America-focused strategic advisory firm, wrote in an email. “The decades he spent in Peru give him personal credibility and his messaging on mining sets the tone for how dioceses and parishes across the continent will engage with mining companies and projects,” said Harris, who consults for international mining companies in the region. “These groups are often the basis of local opposition movements to mining, so the Pope has considerable sway on whether relations are confrontational or conciliatory.” A mine operated by Serra Verde Mining in Minacu, Goias state,
Brazil, Monday, July 28, 2025, produces rare earth elements, including
neodymium,
praseodymium, terbium and dysprosium which are essential for the production of
permanent magnets. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres, File) Harris noted that processing of rare earths can be extremely dirty, involving heavy chemical use that can contaminate water resources without close monitoring of companies’ sustainability commitments and enforcement by federal regulators. Leo’s predecessor, Pope Francis, a native of Argentina, singled out the toll of mining in his 2015 environmental encyclical “Praised Be,” noting the pollution of underground water systems as a result of runoff, the mercury pollution in gold mining or sulfur dioxide pollution in copper mining. Francis said it was “essential” for Indigenous communities to be the principal dialogue partners when large projects affecting their land are being considered. The
Vatican didn’t provide any readout of Leo’s private audience with Goldfajn. In a separate audience Friday, Leo met with participants in a conference at the
Vatican’s environmental educational center named for Francis’ 2015 encyclical. He denounced the profit-at-all cost mentality of those who seek to plunder the earth “at the expense of the most vulnerable and enhances the risk of dehumanization.” There are 75 million tons (82.7 million U.S. tons) of rare earth oxides around the world, more than half in China, and with
Brazil home to the second-largest reserves, according to the U.S. Geological Survey’s most recent estimate. A front-end loader transports phosphogypsum in Phalaborwa,
South Africa, Monday, Sept. 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe, File) DAVID BILLER Biller has been AP’s Southern Europe news director since 2025, based in
Rome. He was previously
Brazil news director in Rio de Janeiro, where he lived for 12 years, and before that was reporting in Mexico and Chile. twitter mailto NICOLE WINFIELD Winfield has been on the
Vatican beat since 2001, covering the papacies of St. John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI and the Francis pontificate and traveling the world with them.