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Australia will have floor price for critical minerals reserve, minister says

By Thomson Reuters Mar 24, 2026 | 7:13 PM

CANBERRA, March 25 (Reuters) – Australia will “no doubt” have an element of a floor price in its strategic reserve for critical minerals, Resources Minister Madeleine King said ​on Wednesday, as the resources rich nation looks ‌to cement its role as a key supplier to its allies.

“We are developing a strategic reserve. And that will no doubt have an element of a floor price as well,” King told delegates at the ‌Minerals ​Week summit in Canberra, adding the ⁠government would consult the ⁠industry to get the right price.

“It is about a different pricing mechanism to reflect the cost of producing these materials.”

Australia plans to be the leading supplier of critical minerals ​like rare earths, which are key to industries from automotive to defence, partly by developing a strategic reserve ⁠with funding of A$1.2 billion ($793 million).

It ⁠is expected to be up and running by ​the second half of 2026, underscoring the country’s ambitions to ​become a key player in global mineral markets.

Australia is ‌also supporting investments through entities such as the export finance agency, to the tune of an additional A$4 billion and the Northern Australia Infrastructure Fund (NAIF) to crowd in private investment.

To ⁠build Australia’s role as a trusted supplier of critical minerals as global supply chains are rebuilt, Australia must be prepared to ⁠financially back such ‌projects beyond the short term, King said.

“They ⁠are long term investments … I do think we ​will ‌need to keep doing this for some ​time,” King ⁠said.

China produces and refines more than 80% of critical minerals needed by industry and its restrictions on some exports last year roiled the automotive and defence industries, fuelling a drive to diversify global supply.

(Reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Chris Reese ​and Stephen Coates)