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Digging deeper: Assessing the trade-offs of domestic cobalt mining in the United States of America

CSS Publication Number
CSS25-21
Full Publication Date
August 29, 2025
Abstract

Cobalt is a critical mineral for the global shift to decarbonized energy systems. Cobalt supply chains, however, raise urgent questions about their stability and environmental impact, and are embroiled in human rights issues. Recent U.S. federal initiatives have intensified efforts to onshore critical mineral mining. The goals of onshoring include securing domestic sources and reducing China's dominance over mineral supply chains. Although large cobalt deposits are rare in the U.S., southeastern Idaho has a significant and untapped source. Accessing U.S domestic reserves of cobalt, like other critical minerals, involves complex trade-offs at the intersection of decarbonization, national security, and global supply chain dynamics. Drawing on qualitative interviews with diverse stakeholders, this study unpacks these trade-offs and challenges. These interrelated challenges include environmental degradation, access and quality of reserves, economic interests, and the disproportionate risks of mining to Indigenous communities. We integrate expert and community perspectives to highlight the profound moral complexities at the core of U.S. critical mineral onshoring efforts, exemplified through cobalt mining. We urge policymakers and scholars to grapple with the layered consequences of cobalt mining and demonstrate that sustainability questions must necessarily be considered across geographies and contexts.

Co-Author(s)
Chava Makman
Research Areas
Urban Systems and Built Environment
Materials
Impacts & Burdens
Keywords

Cobalt, mineral mining, decarbonization, supply chains, environmental impact, trade-offs

Publication Type
Journal Article
Digital Object Identifier
doi.org/10.1016/j.resourpol.2025.105729
Full Citation

Makman, C., & Finn, B. M. (2025) "Digging deeper: Assessing the trade-offs of domestic cobalt mining in the United States of America." Resources Policy 109. CSS25-21.