HR-7037-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Young Kim (R-CA)
What it does
This bill would create a new Bureau of Energy Security and Diplomacy within the State Department, led by an assistant secretary, to coordinate U.S. international energy and critical minerals policy. It would authorize the State Department to negotiate multi-year energy security compacts with partner countries aimed at improving access to energy and critical minerals for both sides. It would also authorize U.S. participation in a Minerals Security Partnership (MSP) to support investment in critical mineral mining, processing, and refining globally, and establish fellowship programs to exchange mining professionals and academics between the U.S. and foreign institutions.
Who benefits
U.S. manufacturers and technology companies that depend on critical minerals (e.g., electric vehicle, semiconductor, and defense industries). U.S. mining companies and investors who could gain access to new international projects through the MSP. U.S. mining students and early-career professionals who would receive fellowships to study abroad. Partner countries that gain access to U.S. investment and expertise. The U.S. defense industrial base, which relies on critical mineral supply chains. Foreign mining academics and professionals placed at U.S. institutions who gain research and career opportunities.
Who is hurt
Chinese state-owned mining enterprises and other foreign competitors that currently dominate critical mineral supply chains and could lose market share. Domestic environmental and land-use advocates who may oppose expanded mining activity abroad with fewer U.S. environmental oversight requirements. Taxpayers who would fund the new bureau, fellowship programs, and any associated compact commitments. Partner-country communities near mining sites that may bear environmental or social costs of expanded extraction. Congressional appropriators who may see foreign policy spending commitments made through compacts with limited legislative input.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that China currently controls a dominant share of global critical mineral processing — estimated at over 60% for many minerals essential to defense systems, electric vehicles, and semiconductors — creating a strategic vulnerability for the U.S. and its allies. They contend that institutionalizing energy and minerals diplomacy through a dedicated bureau and the MSP framework would give the U.S. a coordinated, long-term tool to diversify supply chains, reduce dependence on adversarial nations, and strengthen economic ties with allied partners in a way that ad hoc diplomatic efforts cannot achieve.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a new State Department bureau adds bureaucratic overhead without guaranteeing supply chain results, and that existing agencies — including the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation and the Export-Import Bank — already have authority and funding to support overseas mineral investment. They contend that multi-year energy security compacts negotiated by the executive branch without Senate ratification as treaties could circumvent the Treaty Clause, and that the MSP's prioritization criteria are vague enough to allow politically driven project selection with limited congressional accountability over how U.S. resources and diplomatic capital are committed.