US turns to DARPA Smash program to solve rare earth processing bottlenecks instead of opening new mines



  • US targets processing bottleneck rather than seeking new rare earth deposits
  • The concept of parallel extraction seeks profitability despite higher labor and environmental costs at the national level
  • Distributed processing model attempts to reduce dependence on single vulnerable mining sites

China is responsible for much of the world’s rare earth refining capacity, giving it control over supply chains during trade disputes. That advantage was built by managing the expensive and complicated processing stage at scale, often with lower costs and fewer environmental restrictions.

The United States has been trying to rebuild its rare earth supply chain for years, but mining alone has not solved the core problem. Processing remains the sticking point and, as Data center dynamics reports, that’s where the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is making a high-risk bet.

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