BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  US wants rare earth independence
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Tue, 21 Apr 2026 08:32:28 -0500
-----------------------------------------------------------
"Relying on a single, centralized mine represents a risk": US wants rare 
earth independence from China  but can DARPA actually make it work?

Date:
Mon, 20 Apr 2026 21:20:00 +0000

Description:
US turns to DARPAs Smash program to fix rare earth processing bottlenecks 
instead of opening new mines.

FULL STORY
China is responsible for much of the worlds rare earth refining 
capacity, giving it control over supply chains during trade disputes. That 
advantage was built by handling the costly and messy processing stage at 
scale, often with lower costs and fewer environmental restrictions. 

The United States has spent years trying to rebuild its rare earth supply 
chain, but mining alone hasnt fixed the core problem. Processing remains the 
sticking point, and as Data Centre Dynamics reports, thats where the Defense 
Advanced Research Projects Agency is placing a high-risk bet. Rare earth 
elements arent, as the name suggests, truly rare, and the US already has 
access to large volumes of ore. DARPA's new Smash program moves away from 
finding new deposits and toward solving the processing bottleneck.
 
DARPAs approach centers on what it calls near-zero-waste separation across 
the periodic table. The goal isnt just rare earth elements but up to 80 
stable elements that could be recovered from existing ore and waste streams. 

So the challenge is processing, not mining, said Julian McMorrow, Smash lead 
and program manager at DARPAs Microsystems Technology Office. We want to 
develop technologies to take the industry from wasting over 99 percent of its 
feedstock to making use of the entire feedstock. 

Traditional mining wastes enormous amounts of material during refinement. 
More than two tons of ore and 13 tons of water can produce just one kilogram 
of copper, leaving most of the original material discarded. 

Smash explores a parallel processing model that attempts to extract nearly 
everything from a shovel of dirt at once. That concept borrows ideas from 
industries such as petroleum refining, where multiple outputs are separated 
efficiently from a single input.

The program also reflects concerns about relying on a single major site such 
as the Mountain Pass mine which once dominated global rare earth output but 
struggled when refining costs became uncompetitive. 

DARPA notes that concentrating production in one location creates 
vulnerability if disruptions occur. A distributed model using varied 
feedstocks, including mining waste and recycled materials, could cut that 
exposure. 

Smash will run as a 48-month effort split into two phases. The first will 
focus on proof-of-concept experiments, while the second will move toward 
working prototypes suitable for industrial mining environments. 

Even if the technology succeeds in laboratory settings, scaling it 
economically could be tricky. Achieving profitability while maintaining 
strict environmental and labor standards will be the real test.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/relying-on-a-single-centralized-mine-represents-
a-risk-us-wants-rare-earth-independence-from-china-but-can-darpa-actually-make
-it-work

$$
--- MultiMail/DOS
 * Origin: Capitol City Hub (1:2320/105)

-----------------------------------------------------------
[Voltar]