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| Global Advanced Metals |
The US niobium defense stockpile is set for a major expansion under a new $50mn supply contract awarded to Global Advanced Metals (GAM). The five-year, fixed-price agreement with the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) covers up to 380,360lbs of niobium ingots for delivery to the Scotia Depot in New York. This move reinforces the US niobium defense stockpile at a time when Washington is accelerating efforts to secure critical minerals for advanced defense systems, aerospace components and high-performance alloys.
US niobium defense stockpile anchored by domestic production
The contract will see GAM produce niobium ingots at its Boyertown, Pennsylvania facility, anchoring the US niobium defense stockpile in domestic processing capability. This onshore production reduces exposure to geopolitical risk and supply disruptions from foreign sources. It also supports traceable, defense-grade quality standards important for superalloys, jet engines and advanced electronics.
In parallel, GAM has deepened its relationship with the US government through multiple awards. The company previously secured a $26.4mn award to produce niobium oxide and a separate five-year, fixed-price tantalum ingot contract worth up to $100mn. Together, these awards embed GAM at the core of US supply chains for niobium and tantalum, both on the US critical minerals list. As a result, the US niobium defense stockpile is increasingly backed by integrated tantalum and niobium capabilities within a single strategic supplier.
Critical minerals stockpile strategy widens beyond niobium
The DLA’s latest award fits into a broader push to expand US strategic reserves across a basket of critical minerals. Recent tenders and information requests have targeted antimony, cobalt, bismuth, high purity aluminum and scandium flake. This diversified approach recognises that modern defense platforms rely on complex material systems, not single metals. It also signals that niobium will sit alongside other critical inputs in a coordinated national stockpile strategy.
However, building a resilient US niobium defense stockpile will require long-term policy consistency and sustained funding beyond the current contract horizon. Fixed-price deals can stabilise budgeting but may compress margins if raw material costs rise. At the same time, capacity must scale in line with future demand from hypersonics, next-generation aircraft and power electronics. The latest GAM contract therefore looks like an important step, but not the final word, in US niobium security planning.
The Metalnomist Commentary
The GAM award underscores how quickly niobium has moved from a niche alloying element to a strategic pillar in US defense planning. By pairing niobium and tantalum contracts with broader stockpile tenders, Washington is quietly constructing a multi-metal buffer against future supply shocks. The next test will be whether parallel investments in mining, recycling and alloy R&D can keep pace with the Pentagon’s rising appetite for advanced materials.

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