South Greenland is increasingly targeted for new mining projects as global demand for critical minerals continues to grow.
OilPrice.com on MSN
The Next Frontier for Critical Minerals
Global powers are accelerating efforts to mine critical minerals in the rapidly warming Arctic, raising geopolitical tensions ...
The Danish Defense Intelligence Service, one of the two key espionage agencies in the Nordic nation, said that the US is ...
Readers respond to escalating tensions between Washington and Caracas as the White House refuses to rule out further seizures ...
Critical Metals (Nasdaq: CRML) announced Tuesday it has executed a term sheet for creating a joint venture with Romanian ...
4don MSN
In race to end China’s chokehold on critical minerals, the U.S. needs all the friends it can get
From Australia to Kazakhstan and Greenland, the U.S. requires critical minerals mining and processing partnerships around the ...
Assumptions about how a potential conflict between the United States and China over Taiwan would unfold should urgently be ...
Ottawa Citizen on MSNOpinion
Canada needs to hold a national conversation about mobilization, but it shouldn't start with an internal directive | Opinion
Canada needs to hold an open, national conversation about mobilization. Polling shows that geopolitical instability is ...
President Trump’s new corollary to the Monroe doctrine will provide more triggers for forceful action in the Western ...
ZME Science on MSN
A Radical Climate Proposal Aims to Channel Seawater Into a Giant Egyptian Desert to Fight Sea Level Rise
Flooding Egypt’s vast Qattara Depression with seawater could slightly lower global sea levels and reshape climate adaptation.
OilPrice.com on MSN
Landmark Deal Gives North America Its First Heavy Rare Earth Refinery
American rare earth company, has engaged in a partnership with the Saskatchewan Research Council, a move that could corner US ...
Mongabay News on MSN
Can we create new inland seas to lower sea level rise? Interview with researcher Amir AghaKouchak
Sea levels are rising, threatening coastal areas, including cities, around the world. Due to climate change, the global ocean has already risen by 21-24 centimeters (about 8-9.5 inches) since 1880, ...
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