U.S.-Mexico plan explores mineral price floors and stockpiles, affecting Lithium Americas
- U.S.-Mexico price floors and stockpiles could directly affect Lithium Americas' revenues and project bankability.
- Policy may boost incentives for Lithium Americas to expand North American processing and attract development capital.
- U.S. government already holds equity stakes in Lithium Americas, signaling possible state-backed financing involvement.
U.S.-Mexico talks target critical mineral price floors, with Lithium Americas in scope
WASHINGTON — The United States and Mexico unveil an action plan to explore minimum prices and coordinated stockpiling for critical minerals, moves that could directly affect companies such as Lithium Americas, trade officials say. The plan, to be detailed over the next 60 days, covers harmonised mining, processing and trade rules, joint investment measures and rapid disruption responses, initially for a select group of minerals to be named later. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer says the effort aims to shore up North American supply chains now seen as vulnerable to market distortions.
Potential price floors and stockpiles shift the commercial and policy landscape for lithium developers like Lithium Americas, which holds North American assets and an existing U.S. investor relationship. Governments coordinating minimum import prices and strategic reserves create a floor under commodity revenues, improving project bankability and potentially accelerating domestic refining and processing capacity. For Lithium Americas, that could mean stronger incentives to expand local processing and attract capital for development of U.S. and partner-region projects that feed North American supply chains.
At the same time, coordinated regulation and investment measures are likely to change how projects are permitted and financed. The U.S.-Mexico workstream, together with parallel talks with the European Union and Japan, expects to negotiate technical details in the coming months that affect project timelines, contractual offtake terms and the role of state-backed financing. Industry participants see these tools as reducing exposure to coercive export practices by other suppliers, while also introducing new elements of government involvement in pricing and stock management that companies must navigate.
Policy precedents and government stakes
The moves follow a series of U.S. interventions in the critical minerals space: the Pentagon’s previous deal with MP Materials includes a price floor and offtake, and the Commerce Department plans finance-linked support for USA Rare Earth. The administration already takes equity stakes in several firms, including Canada’s Lithium Americas and Trilogy Metals, signalling a willingness to use public capital to secure supply.
Timelines and international outreach
Officials say a USMCA review partnership could be in place by July 1 and that a memorandum of understanding with the EU and Japan on supply chain security is expected within 30 days. The broader effort aims to reduce dependence on single suppliers, strengthen domestic processing, attract investment and improve resilience across critical mineral value chains.