Ukraine Takes First Step Toward Carrying Out Minerals Deal With U.S.

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The government is trying to show the Trump administration that it can deliver on the agreement.

Scott Bessent and Yulia Svyrydenko sign documents at a table with their nations’ flags behind them.
In a handout image from Ukraine’s government, Scott Bessent, the U.S. Treasury secretary, and Yulia Svyrydenko, the Ukrainian economy minister, signed the minerals deal in Washington in April.Credit...Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Constant Méheut

June 16, 2025, 12:50 p.m. ET

More than a month after Ukraine signed a landmark agreement granting the United States a stake in its mineral reserves, Kyiv is striving to show the Trump administration that the deal can deliver swift, tangible results.

On Monday, Ukraine approved the first steps to allowing private investors to mine a major state-owned lithium deposit, two government officials said. Such a project would be the first to be greenlit under the deal.

The government agreed to begin drafting recommendations for opening bidding by companies to mine the Dobra lithium field in central Ukraine, according to the two officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive topic. It is one of Ukraine’s largest fields of lithium, a mineral critical for producing electric batteries.

Among the likely bidders is a consortium of investors that include TechMet, an energy investment firm partly owned by the U.S. government, and Ronald S. Lauder, a billionaire friend of President Trump’s. The group has long expressed interest in the Dobra lithium deposit, urging President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine in late 2023 to open bids.

Under the broader deal, half the revenues the Ukrainian government earns from mineral extraction would go to a joint U.S.-Ukraine investment fund. Those revenues would then be reinvested in Ukraine’s economy, though the United States would also claim a portion. Mr. Trump has portrayed that arrangement as repayment for past U.S. aid to the war-torn country.

Drafting the recommendations is expected to take weeks, and the Ukrainian government could still decide against opening the bidding process. The Ukrainian government did not immediately publicly comment on Monday’s decision.


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