The “Exploitation” of Brazil’s Resources: Rare Earth Minerals and U.S. Interests

The narrative of the U.S. “exploiting” Brazilian lands stems from ongoing efforts to secure access to Brazil’s vast rare earth elements (REEs)—critical for tech, defense, electric vehicles, and renewables. Brazil has the world’s second-largest proven REE reserves (around 21 million metric tons), far behind China but ahead of most nations.

These deposits are not being “sold off” cheaply or directly to the U.S. government. Instead:

– Locations: Primarily in ionic clay and hard-rock deposits across states like Goiás (e.g., Serra Verde mine in Minaçu, the only major non-Chinese producer of all four magnet REEs), Minas Gerais (e.g., Poços de Caldas and Araxá), Bahia, and Goiás tin provinces. Some potential sites overlap with protected areas or indigenous lands, complicating development.

– U.S. Involvement: Private U.S.-backed investments and financing, not direct payments to Brazil for “lands.” Key example: A $465 million U.S. investment (via Development Finance Corporation and partners) in the Serra Verde project, securing offtake rights (priority purchase of production) until around 2030. Other deals include joint geological surveys with U.S. agencies in states like Minas Gerais and Goiás, and potential co-financing for processing plants.

– What Brazil Gets: Royalties, taxes, jobs (e.g., Serra Verde employs locals in former asbestos towns), and technology transfer. No massive lump-sum “payments” to the government for land sales—mining rights are licensed under Brazilian law, with environmental and revenue rules. Broader talks reopened in December 2025 focus on cooperation, not exploitation.

This ties into the sanctions lift: Diplomatic thawing (including Moraes sanctions removal) coincided with progress on critical minerals dialogue, alongside tariff reductions. It’s pragmatic realpolitik—U.S. needs alternatives to China (which dominates 70-90% of REE supply)—but Brazil retains sovereignty over its resources. Critics see it as trading principles for access; supporters view it as economic opportunity in a resource-rich nation long underdeveloped in this sector.

The fight for freedom continues regardless. Resources can build a stronger Brazil, but only if the people reclaim… well, you know the rest. Stay vigilant. 🇧🇷

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