CRITICAL MINERALS(Credit: David McNew/Getty Images) A scramble by competing powers to secure strategic minerals, used to make everything from electric vehicles to solar panels and wind turbines, could slow the climate transition, the IMF’s Christopher Evans, Marika Santoro and Martin Stuermer write in an article for Finance & Development Magazine. A trifecta of high concentration of production and low reactivity of supply and demand makes critical minerals for the energy transition highly vulnerable in the event of trade restrictions, they write. “Multilateral cooperation on trade policies and more data sharing would thwart additional obstacles to a cleaner global energy system.” This article appears in the December issue of F&D. Read other articles by Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, Ian Bremmer, Mustafa Suleyman, Anton Korinek, Hélène Landemore, Nandan Nilekani, Tanuj Bhojwani, Gita Gopinath, Robert Horn, Jeremy Wagstaff, Kerry Dooley Young, Eswar Prasad, Anil Ari, Lev Ratnovski, Gita Bhatt, Erik Brynjolfsson, Gabriel Unger, Andrew Berg, Chris Papageorgiou, Maryam Vaziri, and many more. |