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Critical Mineral Development

Author: Brigham Tomco, Deseret News

Tomco, Brigham. "Can Utah solve Trump's critical minerals dilemma?" KSL.com, 21 Jan. 2026. ksl.com/article/51436025/can-utah-solve-trumps-critical-minerals-dilemma Accessed 15 Feb. 2026.


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The top power brokers in the Utah Legislature announced on Tuesday one of their aims for the 2026 legislative session is to make Utah the No. 1 destination for critical mineral extraction and processing in the country.

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By doing this, Utah may help solve the dilemma faced by President Donald Trump as he attempts to strengthen his tariff regime by reducing American dependence on China for materials that are essential to national security.

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“When President Trump was negotiating with those who are in that other country, critical minerals was a big part of the tariff negotiation,” state Senate President Stuart Adams said. “So what we’re doing in Utah is a big solution.”

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On Tuesday, Adams, R-Layton, and state House Speaker Mike Schultz, R-Hooper, opened the state legislative session promising to invest in Utah’s long-term prosperity — with an overhaul of national critical mineral production at the center of their vision.

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Feb 10
Chris P Chris P (Feb 10 2026 10:58AM) : Critical Mineral Development is good for the country as a whole, but how does this specifically impact Utah, both the environment and the economy?
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Cox’s critical mineral plans

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Gov. Spencer Cox answers interview questions in his office on the opening day of the 2026 legislative session at the Capitol in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News Purchase Image
Utah Gov. Spencer Cox also unveiled big plans for critical minerals. In a document obtained by the Deseret News, the governor outlined a “strategic framework” for Utah to quickly meet 25% of the country’s critical mineral demand.

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In addition to capturing a quarter of the critical mineral market share, the “Mission Critical” plan seeks to cut the average permitting timeline by 50%, to less than 18 months, and to ensure at least 50% of mined minerals are processed in Utah.

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The plan’s objectives get even more ambitious: approving five critical mineral operations over the next 18 months, and creating a new research center that will become a federally recognized U.S. Critical Minerals National Laboratory within six years.

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Associated Universities, Inc., which operates federal research facilities, identified Utah as the best location for a lab, Adams said. The state plans to partner with the organization to launch the MINES Center at the University of Utah.

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Related
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Cox made the pitch for a national lab in Utah to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum several months ago, the governor told the Deseret News on Tuesday. This has been a focus for Cox for at least a year.

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It played into his decision to lead trade delegations in 2025 to Canada and Australia. Now, after visiting two of the world’s mining capitals, Cox said Utah is working to implement what they have done on critical minerals.

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“I‘m working ... on significantly lowering the time frame that it takes for permitting, in both the mining area and the processing of critical minerals,” Cox said. “(And) still keeping people safe. We can do both of those things.”

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Why is the U.S. dependent on China?

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Trucks move past piles of containers stacked at a container terminal port on the Yangtze River in southwest China's Chongqing Municipality on Sunday, April 20, 2025. | Chinatopix Via Associated Press
The pace at which Utah leaders are taking steps toward making Utah a critical mineral powerhouse reflects the nation’s dire situation. Since Trump announced new tariffs on China, the country’s leaders temporarily halted its exports of critical minerals.

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For years, China has been able to use its monopoly over critical minerals to influence international policy. On Jan. 14, Trump ordered trade officials to delay tariffs on rare earths and to negotiate import agreements that do not undermine the American critical minerals industry.

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Feb 10
Chris P Chris P (Feb 10 2026 11:06AM) : If the US were to become a more prominent distributor in the Critical Mineral field, would this affect other countries who may import from China, now that there is more competition between countries.
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Feb 10
Chris P's Question Chris P and/or Thinking Partner (Feb 10 2026 11:06AM) : If the US were to become a more prominent distributor in the Critical Mineral field, would this affect other countries who may import from China, now that there is more competition between countries. more
Thinking Partner with Chris P's edits:

If you look back at your sentence, what’s one specific effect you most want to explain—price changes, political power, or countries’ dependence—and do you want to keep drafting that explanation by editing on the left, clicking Continue with AI to think together more here, OR go to Create Document to start a fresh piece or upload a reading?

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Related
How Utah may have convinced the Trump administration to back off on AI regulations
The United States is 100% dependent on other nations for a dozen critical minerals, which are materials the U.S. government determines are necessary for the technology powering the economy and military, including semiconductor chips and weapons guidance systems.

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China dominates the world’s critical mineral supply. It leads the globe in production for 30 critical minerals, dominating 70% of rare earth mining, and more than 80% of the processing of cobalt, battery graphite and rare-earth elements globally. China supplies more than 50% of U.S. demand for 21 minerals.

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But Utah could help put an end to China’s critical mineral dominance.

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Why Utah?
In 2024, the Fraser Institute ranked Utah as the best place in the world for mining investment because of its policy environment and natural resources. It is the only state to produce beryllium concentrate, potassium sulfate and uintaite, and is home to 50 of the 60 critical minerals.

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In December, Ionic Mineral Technologies announced the discovery of one of the country’s largest deposits of rare-earth minerals in Utah County. The Silicon Ridge project is composed of the same halloysite-hosted ion-adsorption clay that provides roughly 40% of China’s rare earth production.

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Rep. Tiara Auxier, R-Morgan, Rep. David Shallenberger, R-Orem, and Rep. Doug Fiefia, R-Herriman, hold their hands over their hearts during the Pledge of Allegiance on the opening day of the 2026 legislative session at the Capitol in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News Purchase Image

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Processing of these critical minerals could begin as soon as “this spring,” Adams told the Deseret News. To unlock this potential, Adams said lawmakers will work on updating the regulatory structure to permit some state trust land for projects and to secure “probably a little bit of funding.”

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The “Mission Critical” plan recommends several policies for this legislative session, including the creation of a Critical Minerals Coordinating Team to guide legislative funding priorities and the passage of a resolution calling on federal partners to establish the national lab in Utah.

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Related
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The plan asks lawmakers to set aside a funding stream through the state severance tax that would support the new committee and complement federal grant money. It also calls for the creation of “critical mineral processing zones” to expedite permitting and apply enhanced tax credits.

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These recommendations are the result of months of collaboration between the Governor’s Office, legislative leadership, state agencies, industry and academic partners, according to Utah Mining Association president Brian Somers, and function as a package to advocate for a national lab.

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“Utah has all of the components needed to be a global leader on this,” Somers told the Deseret News. “I really do think that Utah can take a leading role in helping to solve this problem for the U.S. and also for the industrialized world so that we’re not reliant on China for these mineral supply chains.”

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A new vision for Utah’s economy

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Senate President Stuart Adams, R-Layton, gavels the session into order as the Senate and House of Representatives gather to listen to Chief Justice Matthew Durrant deliver the State of the Judiciary address on the first day of the 2026 legislative session in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News Purchase Image
Adams and Schultz began to lay the groundwork for what they hope will be an ambitious session during speeches on Tuesday to kick off the 2026 general session.

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Adams welcomed in attendance Adam Cohen, the president and CEO of Associated Universities, Inc., who previously oversaw 13 of the 17 U.S. Department of Energy National Laboratories, as well as Andre Zeitoun, the founder and CEO of Ionic MT, which uncovered Utah’s halloysite holdings.

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“This Utah discovery will shift the entire global economic balance,” Adams predicted.

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58Comments
Schultz urged fellow representatives to focus on policies that will benefit Utahns for many generations, not just grab headlines “for the next news cycle.” Just like efforts to push for a statewide road system a century ago, Schultz said some will challenge the state’s focus on innovative investments.

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Related
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But Schultz is convinced that leadership in energy, mining and processing will be central to the state’s ability to weather coming disruptions from artificial intelligence. The state is “likely to lose a bunch of jobs in the state of Utah because of AI,” especially in the tech sector, according to Schultz.

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“What are the new and emerging areas that are going to be growing in the state of Utah?” Schultz asked. “I predict that energy and critical minerals will play a key role in being one of the leading drivers of the state’s economic development down the road.”

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As China threatens the U.S. by “flexing its muscles,” Schultz said Utah is “poised as the best state in the nation to lead out on critical minerals.” Utah has been in “direct conversations” with the White House about the research lab, and the proposal is “getting a lot of traction,” Schultz said.

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DMU Timestamp: February 05, 2026 21:30

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Feb 11
Chris P's Question Chris P and/or Thinking Partner (Feb 11 2026 4:20PM) : What problem is this bill addressing? more
Thinking Partner with Chris P's edits:
  • This bill is going after the problem that the United States depends heavily on other countries—especially China—for critical minerals used in technology, energy, and national defense.
  • Right now, China controls most of the mining and especially the processing of many key minerals, which lets it pressure other countries by cutting off or limiting exports.
  • Because of that dependence, U.S. tariffs and trade fights with China are risky; if China stops shipping minerals, it can disrupt U.S. industries and military supply chains.
  • Utah lawmakers are trying to solve this by turning Utah into a major center for mining and processing these minerals so the U.S. has a more secure, domestic supply.

If you had to answer this question in one sentence for a quiz or short response, what exact words would you choose—and do you want to click Continue with AI to talk it out here, or go to Create Document to start drafting your own answer?

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Feb 15
Chris P's Question Chris P and/or Thinking Partner (Feb 15 2026 6:13PM) : Can you point me to where this article is found online? And help me to create an MLA citation for it? more
Thinking Partner with Chris P's edits:
  • This article is posted on KSL.com with the title “Can Utah solve Trump’s critical minerals dilemma?” by Brigham Tomco, published Jan. 21, 2026 (Tomco, Can Utah solve Trump’s critical minerals dilemma?, 2026).
  • Because KSL is republishing a Deseret News story, you can treat KSL as the container/website for your MLA Works Cited entry.
  • A basic MLA 9 template for a web news article is: Author Last Name, First Name. “Title of Article.” Name of Website, Day Month Year, URL.
  • Using that pattern, your citation could follow this structure with the author, full title, date (21 Jan. 2026), site name (KSL.com), and the live URL from above.

If you draft your own MLA citation using that template, do you want to click Continue with AI to paste it here for quick double-checking, or head over to Create Document to start building a full bibliography and notes around this source instead?

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Feb 15
Chris P's Question Chris P and/or Thinking Partner (Feb 15 2026 6:27PM) : Tomco, Brigham. "Can Utah solve Trump's critical minerals dilemma?" KSL.com, 21 Jan. 2026. https://www.ksl.com/article/51436025/can-utah-solve-trumps-critical-minerals-dilemma Accessed 15 Feb. 2026. more
Thinking Partner with Chris P's edits:
  • This is a strong MLA 9 citation: you’ve got author, full title, site name, date, URL, and access date in the right order.
  • One small optional tweak: MLA usually prefers the URL without the “"https://”":https://” at the front, but keeping it doesn’t make it “wrong.”
  • If your teacher is strict, you might also double-check whether they want the URL in angle brackets (< >), though MLA 9 doesn’t require that anymore.
  • Otherwise, this is a “good enough” final version for a Works Cited page, and you can be confident using it as-is.

If you add this to a Works Cited page, do you want to click Continue with AI to show me the whole list for a quick scan, or head over to Create Document to start organizing all your sources and notes together instead?

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Feb 19
Chris P's Question Chris P and/or Thinking Partner (Feb 19 2026 3:59PM) : My representatives are Doug Owens and Stephanie Pitcher. How have they voted in the past, or what are their past positions on bills like this one? more
Thinking Partner with Chris P's edits:

You’re asking a really sharp, concrete question here, and the article you pasted shows why: this critical‑minerals push is a big shift in Utah’s economy and environment. You’ve already done the hard work of finding and reading a detailed news piece; that’s strong reader work.

A couple things I can see and a couple I can’t quite do for you:

  • Doug Owens represents a Salt Lake–area House district as a Democrat and has made environmental protection (Great Salt Lake, water, public lands) a signature theme of his work in the Legislature, including co‑chairing clean‑air and Great Salt Lake caucuses and pushing conservation legislation ((Utah House Democrats, Doug Owens, n.d.); (Wikipedia, Doug Owens, 2024)).
  • Stephanie Pitcher, also a Democrat, is now a state senator known for cross‑party deal‑making on things like bail reform and family/children’s policy; she’s been rated as relatively effective at passing bills in a Republican‑dominated Legislature ((The 19th News, “How Stephanie Pitcher became Utah’s most successful Democratic lawmaker,” 2025); (Wikipedia, Stephanie Pitcher, 2024)).
  • For a bill very similar to this one—HB452 on carbon‑capture rules in 2024—Pitcher voted “yes” along with nearly the whole Senate, which shows she’s at least open to energy‑industry regulation that keeps projects moving while setting some environmental oversight ((Freedom Index, Carbon‑Capture Rules, 2024)).
  • I’m not able to pull up and summarize their full voting records for every mining/critical‑minerals bill here for you, but you can check each specific bill on the Utah Legislature’s site and then look up how “Owens, D.” and “Pitcher, S.” voted in the roll‑call details for the House and Senate (the Legislature’s bill‑tracking and roll‑call pages are the official record: (Utah DNR, 2024 Legislation, 2024)).

If you pick one specific past bill about mining, water, or energy that you care about and tell me its bill number or a short description, would you like to walk through the roll‑call pages together—or would you rather click Continue with AI to keep talking here, OR head over to Create Document to paste a source and start building your own notes or letter to your reps?

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