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  1. > **Ronald S. Lauder, a billionaire friend of Mr. Trump, is among the investors. The move comes as the Trump administration looks for investment opportunities in Ukraine.**
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    > Ukraine on Thursday awarded a bid to mine a major state-owned lithium deposit to investors that include a billionaire friend of President Trump, as his administration has indicated it is looking for investment opportunities in the war-torn country.
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    > The decision was made by a Ukrainian government commission, according to two commission members who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the vote. While it still requires formal approval from Ukraine’s cabinet of ministers, the officials said the deal was essentially sealed.
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    > The winning consortium is closely connected to the Trump administration. It includes Ronald S. Lauder, a cosmetics heir who has known Mr. Trump since college and planted the idea in his mind of buying resource-rich Greenland. The other investor is TechMet, an energy firm partly owned by a U.S. government investment agency created during Mr. Trump’s first term.
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    > The two commission members said the winning consortium outpaced competitors by meeting most bidding criteria, dismissing any suggestion of favoritism. Still, by cultivating ties with investors connected to Mr. Trump and his administration, Kyiv is positioning itself favorably with the American leader just as it seeks its backing in peace talks with Russia, building on efforts to appeal to his business-oriented mind-set.
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    > A representative for Mr. Lauder and TechMet did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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    > Since Mr. Trump returned to power, the U.S.-Ukrainian alliance has taken on a mercantile character, with Washington halting most military aid to Kyiv and focusing instead on opportunities to profit from investments and weapons sales. Ukrainian officials have adapted, offering potentially lucrative deals in mineral extraction and weapons production.
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    > The transactional nature of the new U.S.-Ukraine relationship is evident in a draft peace plan under negotiation between Kyiv and Washington. The plan includes provisions about a postwar reconstruction plan that President Volodymyr Zelensky has valued at $800 billion and that he has said would create opportunities for American businesses.
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    > “There’s a lot of wealth to be had,” Mr. Trump said last month, as he welcomed Mr. Zelensky to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida for another round of negotiations.
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    > The Ukrainian government has also signaled an openness to deeper business cooperation with American companies in subtler ways. Last month, it appointed Patrick Fragman, the former CEO of Westinghouse, a major U.S. nuclear technology company, to the supervisory board of its state-owned nuclear giant, Energoatom. In his Westinghouse role, Mr. Fragman had expanded that company’s ties with Energoatom.
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    > Several Ukrainian officials and business figures acknowledged that the appointment could pose a conflict of interest. But they said it was likely meant as a signal to the Trump administration that Kyiv is eager to cooperate — particularly if it can advance a peace deal. Mr. Trump has proposed that the United States be involved in the management of a major Ukrainian nuclear plant currently under Russia’s control as part of a peace settlement.
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    > The area that has drawn the most interest from Mr. Trump is Ukraine’s mineral wealth. Last spring, Kyiv signed a deal granting the United States a stake in its mineral resources, a move that was widely seen as an effort by Kyiv to lock in American support through business ties.
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    > The agreement created a joint U.S.-Ukraine fund to invest in future natural resource projects. Ukrainian officials have since sought to show they can deliver results and pitched the lithium field that was ultimately awarded to Mr. Lauder and TechMet as a potential pilot project under the deal.
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    > The deposit, known as the Dobra lithium field, in central Ukraine, is one of the country’s largest reserves of lithium, a key component for technologies such as electric batteries. It will be developed under a production-sharing contract that allows investors to extract minerals in exchange for sharing output with the Ukrainian government.
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    > Under the U.S.-Ukraine minerals deal, half of the revenue the Ukrainian government receives from the Dobra lithium field will be directed to the joint investment fund. The deal also states that a company seeking to develop a mineral site and needing additional investors must first present its project to the fund — a mechanism designed to favor American business interests.
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    > In the case of the Dobra lithium field, that may raise potential conflicts of interest as the U.S. agency overseeing the fund, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, also holds a stake in TechMet.
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    > It remains unclear how much Mr. Lauder and TechMet have committed to invest in developing the Dobra lithium field. The tender set a minimum investment of $179 million, but a member of the commission that voted on Thursday said the consortium’s pledge was significantly higher.
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    > The investment, however, will take years to translate into actual mining and profits. The consortium must first carry out a geological survey to determine the field’s true subsoil value and then finance the equipment and infrastructure needed for extraction. Industry experts say it typically takes about 15 years to move from a viable discovery to extraction — a timeline that would extend well beyond Mr. Trump’s current term in office.

  2. ballthyrm on

    The US is not helping anyone, any time soon. I don’t know why they think they’ll get something out of Trump.

  3. thegoodguyanotherone on

    Global politics really out here turning into a battery powered soap opera plot twists charged and ready to go.

  4. Latter-Corner8977 on

    Of course it does. Fucking corruption everywhere. At every level

  5. Investment stimulates the economy and the ties to Trump could serve as additional incentive for him to stabilize the region. Having the Russians bomb the Ukrainian energy grid isn’t good for business.

  6. FabioSein on

    Do you think the abuse in Ukraine was a result of US manipulation?
    And what if past European immigration policy was also a result of US manipulation?

  7. UrbanCyclerPT on

    They are going to be so fucked up.
    Trusting trump is the new trusting in Santa claus or that big companies care for your wellbeing

  8. -SineNomine- on

    Europe pays for American weapons and indirectly American Ra material companies.

    I’ve got to about, good job America.

  9. PatchyWhiskers on

    Oh dear found some Ukrainian corruption. Somehow I think that the Republicans will consider this the right sort of corruption.

  10. InternationalPin5811 on

    Europe does not step up, yet whines when Ukraine has to negotiate with the facist Trump regime.

  11. Putaineska on

    Just embarassing from Ukraine selling out their country to Trump and his sycophantic acolytes. Are Ukrainian soldiers fighting for these dodgy political deals? How weak Europe is that Ukraine has to bend over to Trump.

  12. Crypt33x on

    Is it in the regions Russia is controlling? That would be nice to know.

  13. mariuszmie on

    Ukraine can cancel this one minute after tump is gone or war ends whatever happens first

  14. Americans who voted for Trump were clear about how they wanted someone who runs the country like a soulless corporation, so this is exactly what they voted for. Business contracts before human lives. Shaking down other nations for profit. This is what the US wants to be.

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