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Analysis-Trump’s tax-cut bill could hold back US critical minerals projects

By Ernest Shater

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump will make the critical metal companies in the United States difficult for American critical metal companies to compete with China because it abolishes tax credit to enhance the local production of Nickel, rare land and other materials used in advanced electronics and weapons.

With Trump and the Republican legislators aimed at reducing government support for green energy projects, the US House of Representatives approved a copy of the “Beautiful law Law” last month that removes the alleged 45X credit. The Senate is now discussing the bill.

The Climate Change Law was established in former President Joe Biden, a 10 % production of inflation, a decrease in corporate taxes to extract minerals and treatment. The tax exemption also covers solar, battery and wind projects.

The issuance of the draft law that has passed the House of Representatives treats government incentives for wind turbines such as those with mining projects that many see as decisive to national security. Critical metal companies now say that their projects are side effects of the political dispute over renewable energy.

Tax credit is already a law and part of the current federal budget. The non -partisan congress budget office, which records the cost of legislative proposals when asked by Congress, has not studied how much it will be provided by removing the credit.

The Republican majority in Congress seeks to obtain savings to finance other priorities such as tax cuts, defense and budget budget. In this month, the House Freedom Council on the right said it “will not accept” attempts to “irrigate, strip or decline in hard spending discounts and new fraud in this legislation.”

Miners, however, they say they need credit to compete with China. Beijing stopped exports of some critical minerals, used its control on rare lands to distribute a trade agreement with Washington, and the global markets were submerged with cheap supplies of nickel, cobalt and lehium.

The conservative mining industry traditionally finds itself in the extraordinary situation of the need for Washington’s support for growth, and in some cases, survival. The owner of the only American Cobalt mine was bankrupt this year after Chinese miners suffer from the global prices of this mineral.

“If we do not have this tax credit, critical metal producers in the United States are at risk of being closed,” said Kali Long, founder and director of Westwin, Westwin, who builds the only commercial nickel refinery in the country.

2025-06-12 16:21:00

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