Leaders of the G7 countries are expected to reach agreement on a list of critical minerals on which they should cooperate to curb Chinese dominance, but the EU is pushing back against a US demand for minimum pricing of minerals.
The G7 plans to release an outcome document on critical minerals at the summit that will focus on a small number of strategically important minerals, including heavy rare earth elements such as antimony, graphite and tungsten.
But the EU is leading resistance to a plan drawn up by US vice president JD Vance that would feature minimum pricing for critical minerals based on a pricing formula drawn up by the US Pentagon.
The formula, which is based on artificial intelligence, is designed to estimate fair market prices by taking production costs into account while excluding what Washington sees as distortions caused by Chinese market practices.
However, EU officials are wary that this would replace one dependency with another by leaving them reliant on a US-controlled pricing formula.












