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Australia’s supplying China with a critical mineral vital for hypersonic missiles and its nuclear program

by Emma Walker – News Editor

Australia’s Zirconium Exports Fueling Russian Military⁤ Capabilities, Investigation Reveals

Sydney, ⁤Australia – Australia is exporting significant quantities of zirconium, a critical mineral used in both ​nuclear programs and hypersonic missile production, ⁤to China, with⁣ a substantial‍ portion ultimately ​ending up in the hands of Russian manufacturers linked to​ the state-owned nuclear corporation Rosatom, a Four Corners‌ investigation has revealed.‌

Trade data indicates Image Resources, Australia’s largest zirconium producer, sent over $5 million worth of the mineral to Russia in the year leading up to February 2025. The primary buyer of Chinese zirconium is CMP, a Russian manufacturer and an arm of Rosatom, which produces cladding for nuclear fuel rods and alloys for hypersonic missiles – weapons Russia has reportedly ​tested against civilian targets during the Ukraine war.

“We need to look at ‍how does our economic and our trade policy support our⁢ security strategy,” says Jennifer Parker, a former naval officer and expert associate at ANU’s National Security College. “We need to ask a lot‌ of hard questions about what we are trading, who we’re trading it ⁢with, what does that mean for their​ capability, ⁤and what does that mean for our vulnerabilities.”

another key source of ‍Australian⁣ zirconium is the thunderbird Mine near​ Broome, Western Australia. In 2020, the Foreign Investment Review Board ‍(FIRB) approved Chinese company Yansteel’s ⁣purchase of‍ a 50 per cent share in the mine, which sells 100⁤ per cent of ‌its production to china.

The mine received ‍a ​$160 million concessional loan from⁤ the Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility (NAIF) in 2022, a decision made despite the known‌ defense applications⁤ of ⁢zirconium. At the ⁢time, NAIF stated​ demand was expected to grow from “construction,⁣ advanced manufacturing and renewable ⁣energy,” failing to‍ mention ‍its⁤ military uses.

The full investigation, Trading Fire, airs‌ tonight at 8:30pm on‍ ABC TV and is available on ⁢ ABC ‌iview.

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