海角大神

Rare earth reserves are in global demand. Can Brazil change the playbook?

A mine operated by Serra Verde Mining in Mina莽u, in Brazil's Goi谩s state, produces rare earth elements, which are essential for the production of permanent magnets.

Eraldo Peres/AP

August 27, 2025

Concealed among the rolling hills that separate the city of Po莽os de Caldas in southeastern Brazil from its smaller neighbor, Caldas, is a defunct uranium mine.

It was opened during the military dictatorship in 1982, but later abandoned as 鈥 a failure that was due, in part, to meddling by the United States.

Now, Brazil鈥檚 history of mining and foreign pressures could be on the brink of repeating itself, this time with rare earth elements.

Why We Wrote This

Brazil has the world鈥檚 second-largest rare earth reserves, deposits of elements essential for 21st-century economies. It鈥檚 trying to rewrite who wins and loses in global extractive industries.

Located on the rim of a 70-million-year-old volcanic crater, Po莽os de Caldas sits on promising deposits of the 17 chemical elements essential for 21st-century economies and warfare. They鈥檝e become a point of focus for world powers, including President Donald Trump鈥檚 foreign policy interests, sparking a modern-day global 鈥済old rush鈥 for these critical minerals.

Brazil is home to the world鈥檚 . It has the potential to become a major producer of these metals 鈥 and to offer the world an alternative to China, which currently dominates the supply chain. But it is keen to do so without repeating the extractive models of the past, which saw Brazil become a big exporter of raw materials and then lose out on the added value of processing them.

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This idea of rewriting the playbook on who wins and who loses in extractive industries is playing out in countries, many low- and middle-income, across the globe, as superpowers home in on critical minerals such as rare earths and lithium. Brazil is one of the best-placed countries to leverage these resources into economic and geopolitical power, potentially reshaping global relationships 鈥 if, experts say, it succeeds in developing its own production chain.

鈥淚f these critical minerals, these rare earths, exist in Brazil, they are ours. We won鈥檛 allow for them to be exploited the way other minerals were,鈥 President Luiz In谩cio Lula da Silva, popularly known as Lula, , shortly after Mr. Trump slapped 50% tariffs on U.S. imports from Brazil. Though the tariffs were ostensibly announced for political reasons, U.S. interest in Brazil鈥檚 rare earths soon emerged as .

鈥淪omething unprecedented鈥

Rare earths are not, as their name suggests, scarce. But they are tricky and costly to extract and separate.

Brazil has an advantage in that part of its reserves, including those around Po莽os de Caldas in the southern part of Minas Gerais state, are located in ionic clay deposits. Those are easier, cheaper, and less environmentally damaging to mine than hard-rock deposits such as those found in the U.S. They also have a higher concentration of coveted heavy rare earths, needed to make super magnets that are resistant to very high temperatures and used in electric motors.

The city of Po莽os de Caldas, in Brazil's Minas Gerais state, sits on promising rare earth reserves.
Constance Malleret

鈥淏razil can be the next hub of rare earths from the West,鈥 says Marcelo De Carvalho, executive director in Brazil of Meteoric Resources, one of two Australian companies that have acquired mining rights around Po莽os de Caldas and hope to start producing large quantities of mixed rare earth carbonate 鈥 the technical term for the minerals extracted from the clay 鈥 within the next two to three years. The other mining company is called Viridis Mining & Minerals. Latin American countries have exported commodities such as copper and soy to China and elsewhere for years without sustainably advancing their economies, subject to the rise and fall of commodity prices. These companies are playing a part in helping Brazil build a production chain on its own turf.

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Both foreign and Brazilian companies are rushing to explore rare earths in Brazil, but the country currently has just one functioning mine, in the central state of Goi谩s. It is telling that the company operating the mine is backed by American and British investors but sells almost all its output .

鈥淩ight now, there is no company in the U.S. that is operational to do the separation stage,鈥 says Fernando Landgraf, an engineering professor at the University of S茫o Paulo.

The U.S. is rushing to change that. Meteoric Resources already has an agreement to sell rare earth carbonate from its Brazil project to .

But Brazil also wants to develop its own downstream industry and the capacity to not just extract these strategic minerals, but also separate them and make them into magnets.

鈥淥ver the last 10 years ... there has been significant support for projects covering the entire rare earths production chain,鈥 says Dr. Landgraf, who coordinated a research network on this topic.

Earlier this year, Brazil launched South America鈥檚 first rare earth magnet plant, called CIT SENAI ITR. In June, the Brazilian development bank BNDES included 10 rare earth projects in a $920 million to develop critical minerals production. Meteoric Resources and Viridis are among the selected firms, both with pilot plans to develop separation technology.

鈥淰ery few countries, very few companies have the technology to refine the carbonate and produce rare earths oxides,鈥 says Viridis鈥 executive director, Jos茅 Marques Braga J煤nior, speaking from the company鈥檚 offices in Po莽os de Caldas. Bringing that technology to Brazil 鈥渨ould be something unprecedented for the Southern Hemisphere,鈥 he says, and allow it to compete with China.

鈥淒eveloping countries should have the opportunity to benefit from the export of these minerals, but with time, the opportunity to also add value locally,鈥 says Jos茅 Puppim de Oliveira, a professor at the Funda莽茫o Getulio Vargas university in S茫o Paulo and co-author of that argues for the creation of a global trust to manage the production and trading of critical minerals fairly, without geopolitics interfering.

鈥淎t the center of a geopolitical dispute鈥

While Brazil鈥檚 rare earth potential is generating excitement in boardrooms and government offices, locals around Po莽os de Caldas are skeptical.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e trying to get environmental permits for gigantic operations,鈥 says Daniel Tygel, an environmental activist and former city councilor of Caldas. He sees parallels with the short-lived hype around uranium in the 1970s and 鈥80s, which left his sleepy town of 14,000 people with lakes of radioactive waste.

Caldas resident Marcos Bruno Raimundo worries about the impact that mining will have on his community, Aug. 12, 2025.
Constance Malleret

Meteoric Resources and Viridis each plan to dig up 5 million tons of clay per year, from which the rare earth concentrate is extracted through a chemical process known as 鈥渓eaching.鈥

In Caldas, Meteoric Resources is trying to gain permission to dig its caves in the buffer zone of an environmentally protected area, where local legislation prohibits mining. Viridis鈥 plans place its mines just meters away from a low-income residential area south of Po莽os de Caldas.

Water usage tops resident concerns, as well as pollution from dust particles and the impact that the mining will have on the community.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to seriously disrupt our daily life,鈥 says Marcos Bruno Raimundo, who lives in a rural area of Caldas and feels a deep affection for the surrounding hills.

The mining companies say they will take every precaution to mitigate environmental impacts, but not everyone is convinced. And the thought of foreign governments鈥 interests dictating these projects causes concern for people like Edna Leite, a Po莽os de Caldas local and NGO worker.

鈥淒onald Trump has his eye on rare earths because he needs to keep up arms production. They鈥檙e going to make weapons with these rare earths,鈥 she says.

President Lula might be doubling down on his defense of Brazil鈥檚 national sovereignty in reaction to U.S. interest in rare earths, but 鈥淚鈥檓 still not seeing sovereignty in the sense of giving a voice or listening to the region,鈥 says Mr. Tygel. He wants the community to be given more of a say over the terms of the mining projects.

鈥淲e鈥檙e at the center of a geopolitical dispute,鈥 he says. It echoes Brazil鈥檚 uranium-mining bust, when it was pressured by the U.S. to drop its burgeoning nuclear program during the Cold War.

Amid the buzz around rare earths, the Brazilian government has promised to soon present a national policy for strategic minerals, which could include investment strategies and specific rules for exploiting these resources.

Right now, says Dr. Puppim, there is a vacuum in national and international regulations which leaves the rare earth supply chain vulnerable to the whims of powerful nations. But Brazil could create an opportunity out of these geopolitical tensions, he says, and with time develop an industry to rival China鈥檚.