MELBOURNE (Reuters) – Top lithium supplier Australia is set to become more selective about who it lets invest in its growing critical minerals industry, Treasurer Jim Chalmers said on Friday.
Australia, a major supplier of minerals key to the energy transition like rare earths, has more to gain by encouraging investment from allies to build up its minerals processing industry, Chalmers said at a conference in Sydney.
“Foreign investment is a good thing when it’s in our national interest,” Chalmers said.
“But as investment interest grows, and as the sources of that investment interest grow, we’ll need to be more assertive about encouraging investment that clearly aligns with our national interest in the longer term.”
The Labor government which took power in May is buttressing Australia’s policy to build out a critical minerals processing supply chain.
Federal investment has already flowed into Iluka Resources’ rare earths processing plant in central Australia. A further A$1 billion ($676 million) is available to “value adding” in resources as part of its National Reconstruction Fund which is also linked to a A$2 billion Critical Minerals Facility.
The strategy will provide friendly nations with an alternative at a time when Russia’s invasion of the Ukraine has underlined the strategic risks of having a dominant supplier, Chalmers said.
“To put it as simply as I can – our international friends need to rely on someone, so let’s have them relying on us,” he said.
Australia is revising its critical minerals strategy and has been positioning itself as a green superpower, backed by its mineral endowments.
It signed a Critical Minerals Partnership with Japan in October and its Southeast Asia Economic Strategy to 2040 will include a focus on resources, energy and the green economy, Chalmers said.
($1 = 1.4799 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Stephen Coates)