Information Request on Financing Support for Critical Minerals Projects

Published date07 March 2024
Record Number2024-04883
Citation89 FR 16564
CourtExport-import Bank
SectionNotices
Federal Register, Volume 89 Issue 46 (Thursday, March 7, 2024)
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 46 (Thursday, March 7, 2024)]
                [Notices]
                [Pages 16564-16565]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2024-04883]
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                EXPORT-IMPORT BANK
                Information Request on Financing Support for Critical Minerals
                Projects
                AGENCY: Export-Import Bank of the United States.
                ACTION: Notice.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                SUMMARY: To assist the Export-Import Bank of the United States (EXIM)
                in supporting critical minerals transactions, which are crucial to the
                supply chains of several of the Congressionally mandated
                Transformational Export Areas in EXIM's Charter, EXIM seeks information
                on the financing gaps faced by project sponsors, users of critical
                minerals, and suppliers to critical minerals projects.
                DATES: Comments are due on May 6, 2024.
                ADDRESSES: Interested parties may submit comments on this transaction
                electronically on www.regulations.gov. To submit a comment, enter
                ``Information Request on Financing Support for Critical Minerals''
                under the heading ``Enter Keyword or ID'' and select Search. Follow the
                instructions provided at the Submit a Comment screen. Please include
                your name, company name (if any) and ``Information Request on Financing
                Support for Critical Minerals Projects'' on any attached document.
                Comments can also be sent by email or mail to Scott Condren,
                [email protected], Export-Import Bank of the United States, 811
                Vermont Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20571.
                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: To request additional information,
                please contact Scott Condren, [email protected], 202-509-4227.
                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In EXIM's 2019 reauthorization, Congress
                directed the agency to create the China and Transformational Exports
                Program
                [[Page 16565]]
                (CTEP) and use its tools and authorities to advance the comparative
                leadership of the United States with respect to the People's Republic
                of China (PRC), or support United States innovation, employment, and
                technological standards through direct exports in 10 transformational
                export areas. These export areas include:
                 Artificial intelligence.
                 Biotechnology.
                 Biomedical sciences.
                 Wireless communications equipment (including 5G or
                subsequent wireless technologies).
                 Quantum computing.
                 Renewable energy, energy efficiency, and energy storage.
                 Semiconductor and semiconductor machinery manufacturing.
                 Emerging financial technologies (including technologies
                that facilitate financial inclusion through increased access to capital
                and financial services; data security and privacy; payments, the
                transfer of funds, and associated messaging services; and efforts to
                combat money laundering and the financing of terrorism).
                 Water treatment and sanitation (including technologies and
                infrastructure to reduce contaminants and improve water quality).
                 High-performance computing;
                 Associated services necessary for use of any of the
                foregoing exports.
                 Additionally, EXIM reviews over the last few years indicate that
                critical minerals are a crucial component of multiple transformational
                export areas--and the U.S. lags the PRC in the proven reserves, mining,
                and processing of almost all critical minerals. Thus, EXIM has
                prioritized critical minerals that are part of the supply chain for
                transformational export areas and clearly align to the capacity to
                produce and foreign demand for U.S. goods and services in
                transformational export area industries.
                 Therefore, to understand how EXIM financing can better support U.S.
                exporters in this sector, diversify supply chains, and ensure access to
                critical minerals by U.S. users, EXIM is seeking public comment on the
                financing gaps stakeholders face. EXIM has identified specific
                questions for specific stakeholders but welcomes feedback from all
                relevant stakeholders not specifically identified here.
                 (A) For U.S. exporters to critical minerals projects:
                 (1) What part of the supply chain do you supply (e.g., mining,
                refining, or processing)?
                 (2) What goods and services do you provide to such projects (e.g.,
                services, capital equipment, intermediate components, consumables)?
                 (3) What are the financing challenges, if any, that prevent
                securing sales with foreign buyers?
                 (4) Are you aware of or facing competition backed by foreign
                government financing?
                 (5) If so, please identify the competition and the type of foreign
                government financing provided.
                 (6) Have you previously used financing tools from the Export-Import
                Bank of the United States?
                 (7) If you have not utilized EXIM financing, please explain why not
                (e.g., no need, fees too high, could not meet policy criteria such as
                content).
                 (B) For U.S.-based users of critical minerals:
                 (1) Which critical minerals are most important to your operations?
                 (2) In what geographies are you most likely to seek access to those
                minerals?
                 (3) Is there now or expected to be in the future competitive U.S.-
                based sources of those minerals?
                 (4) What financial hurdles are there to obtaining critical
                minerals? Please distinguish between short-term hurdles (such as
                insufficient access to working capital to import specific cargos) and
                longer-term (such as requirements of foreign projects for large down
                payments in exchange for long-term supply contracts).
                 (5) What impact does lack of access to critical minerals have on
                your operations, particularly regarding employment and exports?
                 (6) To what extent are you aware of foreign competitors gaining
                access to critical minerals resources via foreign government support
                (such as lending to a foreign mine conditional on selling output to a
                particular company)?
                 (7) What form does such support take?
                 EXIM encourages respondents, when addressing the points above,
                unless raising other challenges to financing critical minerals
                transactions, to identify which point they are responding to by using
                the same numbers and heading as set forth above. For example, a user of
                critical minerals submitting comments responsive to (4), ``What
                financial hurdles are there to obtaining critical minerals'', would use
                that same text as a heading followed by the respondent's specific
                comments responding to it. This formatting will assist EXIM in more
                easily reviewing and summarizing the comments received in response to
                these specific points of inquiry.
                Scott Condren,
                Vice President, Policy Analysis Division, Office of Policy Analysis and
                International Relations.
                [FR Doc. 2024-04883 Filed 3-6-24; 8:45 am]
                BILLING CODE 6690-01-P
                

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