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| Orion Resource Partners |
The US UAE critical minerals fund aims to rapidly strengthen non-Chinese supply chains for strategic metals and minerals. The new vehicle, led by the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), Orion Resource Partners and UAE sovereign fund ADQ, starts with $1.8bn in commitments and targets $5bn over time. As a result, the US UAE critical minerals fund immediately positions itself as one of the largest dedicated pools of capital in this space.
US UAE critical minerals fund focuses on producing and near-producing assets
The US UAE critical minerals fund will prioritise existing or near-term producing assets rather than early-stage exploration. This approach reflects government urgency to secure physical flows of rare earths, battery metals and other strategic materials within this decade. Therefore, capital will likely concentrate on brownfield expansions, processing plants and last-mile infrastructure instead of high-risk greenfield drilling campaigns.
Public-private partnerships in critical minerals are becoming a defining feature of the energy transition. Earlier this week, Appian Capital Advisory and the International Finance Corporation launched a $1bn fund for similar purposes. Meanwhile, the US government has repeatedly partnered with private investors as it tries to dilute dependence on Chinese refining and processing capacity.
US security strategy extends from stockpiles to allied supply chains
The new US UAE critical minerals fund complements a broader US security toolkit that includes stockpiles and equity stakes. The US Defense Logistics Agency has been issuing requests for proposals to expand domestic critical mineral inventories beyond current annual production and imports. In parallel, the Pentagon acquired a 15pc stake in MP Materials, the only integrated US rare earths producer, backed by an offtake agreement with a price floor for NdPr products.
However, Washington is also exporting this strategy through alliances. The recent US–Australia agreement will channel at least $1bn from each government into priority critical minerals projects in both countries over the next six months. By aligning funds such as the US UAE critical minerals fund with bilateral deals, the US is stitching together a network of “friendly” mines, refineries and separation plants across multiple jurisdictions.
Over time, these overlapping initiatives could create alternative pricing references and more transparent offtake structures. As a result, investors may gain better visibility on project cash flows in a market still dominated by opaque Chinese contract terms and discretionary export policies.
The Metalnomist Commentary
The US UAE critical minerals fund underscores how geopolitics is now hard-wired into capital allocation for mining and processing. If the consortium executes quickly on producing and near-producing projects, it could materially accelerate non-Chinese supply in rare earths and other key minerals. The real test will be whether these funds can overcome permitting delays, community concerns and price volatility that have historically slowed critical minerals development.

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