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| ReElement |
ReElement rare earth processing has gained fresh support from the US Department of Defense through a $2mn award to expand separation capacity in Marion, Indiana. The funding reflects Washington’s continued push to reduce reliance on Chinese-dominated rare earth supply chains and build domestic processing capacity for defense and commercial applications.
The two-year award will support processing of ores, recycled magnets, and manufacturing waste. This is important because the US rare earth supply chain needs more than new mines. It also needs refining, separation, recycling, and oxide production capacity that can feed permanent magnet manufacturing.
ReElement rare earth processing uses chromatography-based refining technology to produce high-purity rare earth oxides. These oxides are used in permanent magnets for defense systems, electric motors, electronics, and other advanced industrial applications.
Rare Earth Separation Remains the Critical Bottleneck
Rare earth separation is one of the most important weaknesses in the Western critical minerals supply chain. Mining projects can produce concentrates, but those materials must still be separated and refined into usable oxides before they can support magnet production.
The Department of Defense award targets that gap. By supporting ReElement rare earth processing in Indiana, the US is trying to expand the domestic industrial base around materials that are essential for missiles, aircraft, radar systems, robotics, electric vehicles, wind power, and precision electronics.
The funding also covers recycled magnets and manufacturing waste, which could strengthen circular supply channels. Recycling cannot replace primary supply entirely, but it can reduce dependence on imported feedstock and improve resilience when geopolitical tensions disrupt traditional flows.
Defense Funding Supports the 2027 Mine-to-Magnet Initiative
The award is part of the Department of Defense’s 2027 mine-to-magnet initiative. That strategy aims to connect raw material sourcing, separation, oxide production, metal making, alloying, and magnet manufacturing inside a more secure domestic and allied supply chain.
The funding comes through the Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment program. Since 2014, the program has invested more than $2.6bn across 207 projects to expand US industrial base capacity. This shows that rare earths are now treated as a defense-industrial issue, not only a mining or technology issue.
The delayed announcement also highlights the importance of continuity in critical minerals policy. Government shutdowns and budget delays can slow execution, but the strategic direction remains clear. The US wants more domestic capacity for rare earth processing, especially for materials tied to permanent magnets and national security.
The Metalnomist Commentary
The ReElement award is small in dollar terms but important in strategic direction. The US rare earth challenge will not be solved by mining alone; the real contest is in separation, refining, recycling, and magnet-ready material production.

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