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US picks Louisiana, Oklahoma rare earth projects for $134 million funding

By Thomson Reuters Jun 2, 2026 | 12:16 PM

June 2 (Reuters) – The U.S. Department of Energy said on Tuesday it has selected projects in Louisiana and ​Oklahoma for $134 million in funding ‌to extract rare earth elements from waste streams.

Washington has been pushing to boost domestic critical minerals output and cut dependence on China, which ‌dominates ​the global rare earths ⁠supply chain.

• The ⁠funding includes about $67 million for a project led by the Colorado School of Mines and ElementUSA to build a ​facility in Louisiana that will extract and refine rare earths from bauxite ⁠waste.

• The plant is ⁠expected to test the process ​at commercial scale and produce 150 to ​1,000 metric tons of rare earths ‌annually from tailings.

• The DOE also selected a project by Phoenix Tailings to build a demonstration plant in Oklahoma, ⁠in partnership with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to convert industrial waste into high-purity rare earth ⁠metals ‌and establish a new domestic ⁠supply route.

• In May, the ​agency ‌had selected rare earth magnet ​maker USA ⁠Rare Earth to receive up to $19.3 million for a pilot rare earth processing project aimed at boosting domestic supply chains.

(Reporting by Varun Sahay in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Sahal Muhammed)