US Strategic Metals and Saudi Industrial Center Forge Critical Minerals Processing Alliance
New partnership announced at Riyadh’s Future Minerals Forum to build processing capacity in Saudi Arabia and strengthen supply chains for essential metals
In a strategic initiative announced at the Future Minerals Forum in Riyadh on January fifteen, U.S. Strategic Metals and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s National Industrial Development Center (NIDC) formalised an alliance to develop critical minerals processing infrastructure in the Kingdom.
The partnership, which spans exploration, downstream processing and value-chain integration, reflects Riyadh’s ambitions to become a global hub for minerals vital to energy transition, advanced manufacturing and defence applications, while deepening industrial cooperation with American partners.
The term sheet unveiled by US Strategic Metals, a vertically integrated multi-metallic critical minerals company based in Missouri, through its Saudi affiliate, lays the groundwork for joint ventures that will support processing and refining facilities designed to transform raw mineral feedstocks into high-value metals and alloys essential for emerging technologies.
Officials framed the alliance as complementary to broader U.S.–Saudi cooperation on critical minerals supply chains under existing frameworks agreed during senior diplomatic engagements, which prioritise diversified and resilient sources of materials beyond traditional suppliers.
Saudi industry leaders emphasised that the alliance will leverage the Kingdom’s geological wealth and the NIDC’s capabilities in building value-added industrial platforms, aligning with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 objective to diversify the economy beyond oil and strengthen domestic industrial capacity.
The NIDC plays a central role in Saudi Arabia’s metals and minerals strategy, working with partners to develop globally competitive processing bases for primary, semi-finished and finished metals that feed automotive, aerospace, machinery and other advanced sectors.
U.S. Strategic Metals’ leadership reiterated that the collaboration with the NIDC will enhance secure supply chains for critical elements, reinforce industrial ties between Riyadh and Washington and attract further investment into strategic minerals infrastructure.
As global demand accelerates for materials such as lithium, rare earths, cobalt and other strategic components, the alliance is expected to contribute to long-term diversification of supply chains that are foundational to clean energy deployment, high-performance technologies and national security markets.