Mapped: Where are Ukraine’s rare earth mineral resources and why does Trump want them?
US president Donald Trump has announced he wants Ukraine to pay for financial and military support by affording Washington access to the countryโs vast but untapped rare earth minerals.
He said on Monday he wants โequalisationโ from Ukraine for the USโ โclose to $300 billionโ in support.
โWe’re telling Ukraine they have very valuable rare earths,โ Mr Trump said. โWe’re looking to do a deal with Ukraine where they’re going to secure what we’re giving them with their rare earths and other things.โ
The Kremlin jumped on the comments, saying it demonstrated the US is no longer willing to provide free aid to Kyiv, before adding, unsurprisingly, that it was against Mr Trump giving any help to Ukraine whatsoever.
Below, we look at where these resources are in Ukraine, and why Kyiv has struggled to mine these minerals.
Ukraine is sitting on one of Europeโs largest deposits of critical minerals, including lithium and titanium, much of which is untapped.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has been trying to develop these resources, estimated to be worth more than ยฃ12 trillion, based on figures provided by Forbes Ukraine, for years.
In 2021, he offered outside investors tax breaks and investment rights to help mine these minerals. These efforts were suspended when the full-scale invasion started a year later.
Anticipating the notoriously transactional Mr Trump might take an interest in this, Mr Zelensky then placed the mining of these minerals into his victory plan, which was drawn up last year.
The minerals are vital for electric vehicles and other clean energy efforts, as well as defence production.
Estimates based on government documents suggest that Ukraineโs resources are also highly varied. Foreign Policy found that Ukraine held โcommercially relevant deposits of 117 of the 120 most-used industrial minerals across more than 8,700 surveyed depositsโ.
Included in that is half a million tonnes of lithium, none of which has been tapped. This makes Ukraine the largest lithium resource in Europe.
It is not surprising that Mr Trump appears keen on benefiting from this, especially as China remains a key player in the mining of minerals such as titanium.
But Vladimir Putinโs invasion has not only delayed Ukraineโs plans to mine these minerals, it has also led to much of these resource-rich areas being destroyed and then occupied.
A little over ยฃ6 trillion of Ukraineโs mineral resources, which is around 53 per cent of the countryโs total, are contained in the four regions Mr Putin illegally annexed in September 2022, and of which his army occupies a considerable swathe.
That includes Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, though Kherson holds little value in terms of minerals.
The Crimean peninsula, illegally annexed and occupied by Mr Putinโs forces in 2014, also holds roughly ยฃ165 billion worth of minerals.
The region of Dnipropetrovsk, which borders the largely occupied regions of Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia, and sits in the face of an advancing Russian army, contains an additional ยฃ2.8 trillion in mineral resources.
Russian difficulties with major military operations seem likely to preclude a serious attempt to take the region but mining operations in the area would be perilous with Moscowโs soldiers so close.
Other ores are well within the sites of Russiaโs forces. One lithium ore on the outskirts of a settlement called Shevchenko in Donetsk is less than 10 miles from the town of Velyka Novosilka, recently captured by Mr Putinโs troops.

