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Bifurcation in the Critical Minerals Market Could Throw off the Global Energy Transition

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Flashpoints | Economy | Environment

Bifurcation in the Critical Minerals Market Could Throw off the Global Energy Transition

The securitization of critical minerals could divide the world, leading to severe consequences for the energy transition and undermining global climate change efforts.

Bifurcation in the Critical Minerals Market Could Throw off the Global Energy Transition
Credit: Depositphotos

While the Australian prime minister is visiting China for the first time in seven years, ABC News emphasized the necessity of Chinese investment if Australia is to meet its lofty energy transition targets. The article urged the Australian Foreign Investment Review Board to cease hindering Chinese contributions to the critical minerals sector. This positive signal comes just one year after observers were hopeful about the meeting between Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2022. 

If Australia reopens its resources sector to Chinese investors, it would mark a significant step away from the existing trend. As The Diplomat previously observed, Australia “has invoked national and economic security imperatives to block legal, and largely market-driven Chinese investments” in critical minerals such as lithium.

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