
The speed of critical-minerals policy evolution has been unmistakable. In the past year alone, governments across the Indo-Pacific have tightened export controls, expanded sovereign investment vehicles, announced new agreements, and redirected defence industrial policy toward supply-chain resilience.
Yet Australia and its partners remain heavily exposed to concentrated processing and refining capacity, volatile markets and rising geopolitical risk. The task now isn’t more unilateral announcements, but disciplined coordination.
When ASPI first began trying to convene the Darwin Dialogue in 2021, critical minerals were still too often treated as a subset of resources policy rather than as a pillar of economic security. It took two years to build the trust and strategic alignment necessary to establish a serious forum linking senior government officials, investors and industry leaders from Australia, Japan, the United States, India and South Korea. That timeline reflected the policy tempo of the moment: deliberate, cautious and exploratory.
By 2023, the conversation had shifted decisively to diagnosis. Strategic reviews across like-minded countries acknowledged that concentration in rare-earth separation and magnet manufacturing was a structural vulnerability. China’s dominance in processing and refining has persisted even as demand for energy-transition minerals accelerates. Exposure was measurable in refined output shares, downstream manufacturing dependency, and the narrow geography of midstream capability.
In 2024, policy responses accelerated. Governments expanded export credit mandates, activated defence production tools and pursued new bilateral and plurilateral arrangements. Australia sharpened its Critical Minerals Strategy. The US strengthened its industrial policy settings. Japan and South Korea deepened financing and offtake engagement. But acceleration has also produced fragmentation.
Instead of a coherent market-shaping architecture, we’re seeing a proliferation of unilateral initiatives, overlapping agreements and differing eligibility criteria. For the private sector—particularly institutional investors navigating long development cycles—this creates complexity rather than clarity. Price volatility, global competition and uncertain policy settings have already made commercial sanctioning difficult for new projects. Layered regulatory regimes and shifting incentives compound that risk.
At the same time, demand dynamics are intensifying. Global demand for key energy-transition minerals is projected to rise sharply through 2035, yet supply remains geographically concentrated. The paradox is stark: rising long-term demand alongside short-term price volatility and oversupply cycles that deter investment. In such an environment, capital becomes more selective. Investors need predictable frameworks, aligned procurement signals and confidence that diversification efforts will endure beyond electoral cycles.
China’s 2025 export restrictions on rare earths and related materials sharpened the strategic stakes. They weren’t a surprise; they were a stress test. They demonstrated how licensing regimes and processing concentration can translate into leverage. But the appropriate response isn’t to decouple or escalate a trade war. Bifurcation would further fragment already thin markets and increase costs across defence and clean-energy systems. The objective must be to restore competitive balance, not to replace one distortion with another.
This is the strategic frame for the 2026 Darwin Dialogue: From Exposure to Endurance: Building a Secure Critical Minerals Value Chain by 2030. The Dialogue’s purpose is to align on implementation.
Minilateralism is central to that effort. Broad multilateral forums remain essential for norm-setting, but industrial execution requires tighter coordination. Bilateral deals, while useful, risk duplication and policy divergence. A focused grouping of trusted partners—Australia, Japan, the US, India and South Korea—combines resource endowment, advanced manufacturing, capital markets and aligned security interests. Acting in concert, they can shape market structure rather than chase it.
A practical Indo-Pacific critical minerals compact should rest on three reinforcing pillars.
First, finance alignment. Memorandums of understanding don’t build separation plants. Capital-intensive midstream projects require coordinated sovereign de-risking, export credit, equity guarantees, concessional finance and offtake-backed mechanisms, structured in ways that crowd in private investment rather than substitute for it. Templates and interoperability matter more than one-off announcements.
Second, assured demand. Defence primes, electric-vehicle manufacturers and renewable energy firms must provide multi-year procurement signals that reduce revenue volatility. Harmonised standards and coordinated strategic reserves can transform strategic ambition into credible demand. This reduces the cost of capital and mitigates price swings that otherwise stall projects.
Third, speed with integrity. Streamlined project approvals, infrastructure investment and workforce capability to sustain Australia’s mineral competitiveness are needed. Predictable permitting timelines, early Indigenous partnership and interoperable regulatory systems are strategic assets.
Darwin isn’t incidental to this discussion. Northern Australia sits proximate to deposits, energy infrastructure, defence posture and Indo-Pacific sea lanes. It’s a logical node for midstream processing and value-adding activities that anchor resilience in physical geography.
By 2030, progress must be measurable: diversified heavy-rare-earth separation capacity, expanded magnet production outside China, aligned strategic reserves, and reduced regulatory friction for investors. The pace of policy response since 2021 has increased markedly. The next phase demands coherence. The 2026 Darwin Dialogue is designed to help make the shift from reactive policy accumulation to aligned industrial strategy.