WND By Benjamin Roberts, Daily Caller News Foundation May 6, 2026
Long-standing regulations mean the United States may not be able to compete with Chinese critical mineral production despite the recent discovery of 328 years' worth of lithium stretching across the Appalachian Mountains.
In April, the United States Geological Survey estimated 2.33 million metric tons of extractable lithium lay underneath multiple Appalachian states. Red tape and lacking infrastructure could thwart the find's promised economic potential, analysts told the Daily Caller News Foundation.
Lithium is a critical resource essential for rechargeable batteries, including those used in electric vehicles, portable electronics such as laptops and phones, and electrical grid storage. Chinese companies presently account for two-thirds of worldwide lithium battery processing capacity.
"We have simply made it too difficult to permit a mine here in the United States and that must change. If China wants a new mine, they can open one tomorrow. But it takes 29 years to bring a mine online in the U.S. – the second longest timeline in the world; that's not sustainable," a National Mining Association (NMA) spokesperson told the DCNF when asked about mining prospects for the Appalachian deposits.
More:
https://www.wnd.com/2026/05/what-nobody-will-tell-you-about-massive-lithium/