The Trump administration plans to use a Pentagon-developed AI program to set reference prices for critical minerals, including gallium and germanium, as part of a broader effort to build a global metals trading bloc, Reuters reported on February 24, citing three sources with direct knowledge of the effort.

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suspending that ban in November 2025 amid broader trade negotiations.

OPEN has been focused from its inception on metals that are thinly traded or not actively exchange-traded, where manufacturers struggle to determine whether quoted prices reflect actual supply-and-demand conditions rather than subsidized Chinese output. The program is scheduled to be transferred to the non-profit Critical Minerals Forum next year.

Not everyone is convinced the tariff-backed pricing model will hold. “You can try to set something approximating a price floor, but ultimately the trade barriers aren’t going to guarantee someone on the other side of that tariff wall an actual price floor because multiple producers are still going to compete on price,” Nathaniel Horadam, a former U.S. Department of Energy staffer who managed critical minerals lending programs across both the Biden and Trump administrations, told Reuters.

The plan also raises questions around scope, particularly because current tariff structures could potentially apply to finished products containing these minerals, though the administration has not clarified that. In any case, whether introducing AI-powered analysis to the already tumultuous climate for international trade can help level the playing field remains to be seen.

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