According to me-metals cited by mining.com, The funding is part of a larger $275 million initiative announced in November to support pilot-scale opportunities for byproduct critical minerals and materials recovery at domestic industrial facilities.
Five projects have been selected as the first of two topic areas under funding consideration: Mines & Metals Pilots—Coal-Based Industry. The selected sites are:
These facilities will produce market-ready critical materials, including rare earth elements, and other minerals such as germanium, gallium and aluminum, the DOE said in a statement. The National Energy Technology Laboratory will manage the projects.
“American industrial facilities have the potential to produce valuable critical materials from coal and coal byproducts,” Assistant Secretary of Energy Audrey Robertson said in a news release. “By investing in these facilities, we can increase domestic critical materials production and help mitigate the financial risk of commercial deployment.”
Selections under the second topic area, Mines & Metals Pilots—All Industries, will be announced at a later date.
The selections stem from DOE’s August 2025 announcement of nearly $1 billion to advance and scale mining, processing and manufacturing technologies across key stages of the critical minerals and materials supply chains.
Recent announcements include the Rare Earth Elements Demonstration Facility Program.
The announcement, the DOE said, advances the Trump Administration’s efforts to strengthen the US coal sector, including nearly $700 million for coal infrastructure and operations, and reflects a broader commitment to unlock the value of coal and coal-based feedstocks as domestic sources of critical minerals and materials.
source: mining.com