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    Friedland–Trump minerals push: policy and funding takeaways for mine planners

    February 3, 2026|

    Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

    Friedland–Trump minerals push: policy and funding takeaways for mine planners

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    US President Donald Trump has created a US$12 billion federal minerals stockpile and accelerated mine permitting and project funding, moves Ivanhoe Mines founder Robert Friedland says have left “the morale of the miners…sky high”. Friedland credited the US Export-Import Bank’s indication of up to US$825 million in long-term debt for Ivanhoe Electric’s Santa Cruz copper project in Arizona and thanked Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick for backing critical minerals developments. The event, held in the Oval Office with industry leaders including General Motors CEO Mary Barra, signals continued policy support for US copper and rare earths supply chains.

    Technical Brief

    • Friedland framed consumer electronics (cameras, phones) as direct demand drivers for mined components, reinforcing copper intensity.
    • Public White House video record of the exchange creates a policy signal useful for project finance and ESG disclosures.
    • Similar US critical minerals projects may now benchmark Santa Cruz’s EXIM-backed structure when assembling their capital stack.

    Our Take

    The potential US Export-Import backing for Ivanhoe Electric’s Santa Cruz copper project aligns with a broader US policy tilt in our database, where recent critical minerals pieces emphasise state-supported financing tools over trade measures such as the copper tariffs now seen as less likely in the 28 January Section 232 coverage.

    Having both General Motors and US government-linked financiers appear around US copper and lithium-ion supply in Arizona signals that OEMs are increasingly being pulled into upstream risk alongside public lenders, rather than relying purely on offtake contracts or spot markets.

    The US government’s existing US$12 billion minerals stockpile, combined with prospective US$825 million-scale project finance for domestic copper, suggests Washington is moving from passive stockpiling towards actively underwriting specific critical minerals assets onshore, which could narrow financing options for non-US projects competing for similar policy-linked capital.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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