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Country / jurisdiction: Australia · Year: 2022 · Status: In force · Level: National · Type: Voluntary
Australia's critical minerals list highlights the country's priority critical minerals based on Australia's geological endowment and potential with global technology needs, particularly those of partner countries around electrification, advanced manufacturing and defence.
As of the 2022 Critical Minerals Strategy, the list includes 26 critical minerals. The list is a table including information on which minerals are also prioritised on other countries' national lists, each mineral's geological potential in Australia, the minerals' economic demonstrated resources for 2020, Australian production for 2020 and global production for 2020. The critical minerals listed benefit from project facilitation, increased government engagement and government investment. The list comprises the following minerals:
High purity alumina
Antimony
Arsenic
Beryllium
Bismuth
Chromium
Cobalt
Fluorine
Gallium
Germanium
Graphite
Hafnium
Indium
Lithium
Magnesium
Manganese
Nickel
Niobium
Platinum-group elements
Rare-earth elements
Rhenium
Scandium
Selenium
Silicon
Tantalum
Tellurium
Titanium
Tungsten
Vanadium
Zirconium
The minerals in bold are additions to the 2022 list, designated critical after consultation with the critical minerals industry and Australia's sciences agencies, because of their use in a variety of technologies including lithium-ion batteries and semiconductors.
The minerals in italic are additions to the 2023 list, updated on 16 December 2023. Helium was removed in this update.
Nickel was added to the list in February 2024 in response to challenging global market conditions for the metal.
Official source: https://www.industry.gov.au/data-and-publications/2022-critical-minerals-strategy
Source
https://www.iea.org/policies/15861Canonical document at the regulator. Always cite this URL — not the Vantage detail page — in compliance evidence.