Biden will announce new investments in mineral production to address supply chain shortages

CNN/Stylemagazine.com Newswire | 2/22/2022, 9:52 a.m.
President Joe Biden will meet Tuesday with California Gov. Gavin Newsom, administration officials and industry representatives to announce new investments …
President Joe Biden in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Friday, February 18, 2022. Mandatory Credit: Oliver Contreras/Sipa USA/AP

Originally Published: 22 FEB 22 05:02 ET

Updated: 22 FEB 22 08:21 ET

By Donald Judd and Kate Sullivan, CNN

(CNN) -- President Joe Biden will meet Tuesday with California Gov. Gavin Newsom, administration officials and industry representatives to announce new investments in the domestic production of minerals and materials crucial to creating a wide array of technological devices, including computers, smartphones, batteries, household appliances and vehicles.

The investments, which are the latest step the administration is taking in unsnarling persistent supply chain challenges that have plagued Biden since he took office, come a year after he signed an executive action ordering a comprehensive review of supply chain vulnerabilities.

The President is expected to announce $35 million in funding awards to the Nevada-based mining company MP Materials from the Department of Defense's Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment program to separate and process materials at a Mountain Pass, California, facility. Per an administration fact sheet shared with CNN, the investment will allow MP Materials to establish a full end-to-end domestic permanent magnet supply chain, creating more than 350 jobs by 2024 and upping the nation's competitive capacity with China, which is currently responsible for 87% of the global permanent magnet market.

In addition, Berkshire Hathaway Energy Renewables and Redwood Materials are expected to announce new investments in facilities to extract and extend, respectively, the life of lithium materials, which are crucial in the production of battery technology.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm will also participate in Tuesday's announcement, where she's expected to tout $140 million in funding from the bipartisan infrastructure law to recover rare minerals from coal ash and other mine waste, a sustainability effort the administration projects will reduce the need for new mining while protecting manufacturing jobs in the coal sector.

The infrastructure law also directs $3 billion in funding for refining lithium, cobalt, nickel and graphite, and battery recycling facilities, per a White House fact sheet.

Tuesday's announcement is one of several the White House is making this week on its efforts to fix supply chain issues, a White House official told CNN, as inflation hits record highs and the prices of consumer goods skyrocket. These announcements include investments to modernize ports, fix transportation and increase domestic manufacturing.

Amid a rapidly unfolding crisis abroad with Russia's escalating actions in Ukraine, officials are trying to also keep the focus on its domestic work to lower prices for American families and fix some of the global supply chain issues sparked by the coronavirus pandemic.

The White House on Thursday will announce new actions it is taking to invest in American manufacturing -- including in the food, energy, transportation and health care sectors -- to strengthen long-term resilience across critical supply chains, the official said.

Thursday marks the first anniversary of President Joe Biden's executive order on fixing American supply chains, and seven federal agencies will publish six individual reports to "emphasize the Administration's whole-of-government approach to strengthening America's supply chains," according to the official.

There will be two other announcements about supply chains related to the bipartisan infrastructure law on Wednesday and Friday, the official said. The official did not provide details about what exactly those announcements would be at this time.

"By making historic investments in our ports and supply chain infrastructure here at home, we can speed up the movement of goods and reduce costs for the American people," the official told CNN.