New Delhi, May 26, 2026:
The four Quad nations - India, United States, Japan, and Australia - have announced an ambitious new framework to strengthen critical minerals supply chains during the 2026 Quad Foreign Ministers' Meeting held in New Delhi.
The initiative, unveiled under the "Quad Critical Minerals Initiative," aims to secure reliable and diversified supply chains for minerals considered essential for advanced technologies, clean energy systems, semiconductor manufacturing, electric vehicles, defence production, and industrial resilience.
According to the joint framework released by the four governments, the Quad partners intend to mobilize up to $20 billion in combined government and private sector investments to support mining, processing, refining, and recycling of critical minerals across the Indo-Pacific region.
The framework emphasizes the strategic importance of reducing supply chain vulnerabilities and building resilient mineral networks amid growing global competition over rare earths and critical raw materials.
Under the initiative, Quad nations plan to identify and support projects linked to Quad economies, including mining and processing operations located in member countries or operated by companies headquartered within the Quad bloc.
Support mechanisms may include:
The countries also plan to explore new mechanisms to attract additional private sector investment into critical mineral infrastructure and supply chains.
The Quad partners have also agreed to enhance regulatory coordination related to licensing, permitting, and project approvals while respecting domestic laws and national priorities.
The framework includes cooperation in:
Officials indicated that the initiative could eventually support the development of "high-standard marketplaces" and coordinated pricing or regulatory systems for strategic minerals.
A major component of the agreement focuses on recycling and recovery of critical minerals from electronic waste and industrial scrap materials.
The Quad countries intend to:
The initiative is expected to strengthen circular economy practices while reducing dependency on newly mined resources.
Analysts view the announcement as a significant geopolitical and economic move aimed at securing strategic supply chains in the Indo-Pacific region. Critical minerals such as lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite, and rare earth elements are increasingly seen as essential for future economic growth, defence technologies, renewable energy systems, and artificial intelligence infrastructure.
The Quad nations emphasized that the initiative is designed to ensure fair, transparent, diversified, and resilient mineral markets while supporting regional economic security and technological innovation.
The announcement further reinforces the Quad's evolving role beyond security cooperation into economic resilience, advanced manufacturing, clean technology, and strategic industrial partnerships across the Indo-Pacific.
Report by IBG NEWS Bureau

