Labor Dept. Grants $22M for Mineral Supply Security

The U.S. Department of Labor today announced the award of $22 million in funding to strengthen critical mineral supply chains and combat China’s reliance on labor abuse as a means of controlling the world’s critical minerals.

Awarded through four cooperative agreements, the grants support efforts to eliminate labor exploitation in key mineral supply chains in Indonesia and the Democratic Republic of Congo that are essential to U.S. manufacturing, energy production, and national security. By addressing abusive labor practices overseas, these projects help ensure that American workers and companies that play by the rules can compete on a level playing field.

The department awarded $7 million to Winrock International and $3 million to the Center for Advanced Defense Studies to combat labor exploitation in Indonesia’s nickel supply chain. The department also awarded $7 million to Pact and $5 million to World Vision to combat egregious labor practices in the cobalt, copper, tantalum, tin, and tungsten supply chains of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Administered by the Bureau of International Labor Affairs , the projects advance the Trump administration’s trade and economic agenda by holding trading partners accountable and defending U.S. workers from unfair foreign practices. The projects will improve access to transparent, reliable sources of critical minerals while protecting American industries from supply disruptions, reputational risk, and legal liability.

In alignment with President Trump’s Executive Order, ” Immediate Measures to Increase American Mineral Production ,” the funding will also help ensure American manufacturers are neither undercut by nor dependent upon producers like China that use exploitation and abuse to lower costs.

Winrock International, founded in 1985, is an international nonprofit that provides solutions to some of the world’s most complex social and agricultural challenges.

Center for Advanced Defense Studies, founded in 2000, is a nonprofit organization with a mission to defeat the illicit networks that threaten global peace and security.

Pact, founded in 1971, is an international nonprofit that builds resilience, improves accountability, and strengthens knowledge and skills.

World Vision, founded in 1950, is a Christian humanitarian nonprofit organization dedicated to working with and empowering the victims of exploitative labor.

The Bureau of International Labor Affairs increases American job and wage growth by combating foreign abusive labor and unfair trade practices in global supply chains that undermine U.S. prosperity and security.

Public Release.