Monash University launches critical minerals initiative as global supply pressures mount

Photo credit: Monash University

Monash University Media Release

Demand for critical minerals is surging, and geopolitical competition is intensifying, yet Australia’s processing capacity is falling behind. Monash has assembled a cross-disciplinary team to tackle the challenge from the ground up.

Australia is sitting on some of the world’s richest reserves of the critical minerals needed to power the global clean energy transition.

Yet exploration rates have fallen, processing capacity remains heavily concentrated offshore, and domestic capability is fragmented across institutions and sectors.

With the International Energy Agency forecasting demand will double – or even quadruple – by 2040, Monash University has launched a major cross-disciplinary initiative aimed at securing Australia’s place in the global supply chain.

The Monash Critical Minerals Initiative (MCMI) brings together more than 40 researchers from the university’s faculties of Business and Economics, Science, Engineering and Arts.

Its work spans the full minerals value chain, from resource discovery and extraction technologies to environmental stewardship, supply chain modelling, investment policy and social licence outcomes.

Professor Russell Smyth, Deputy Dean (Research) in the Faculty of Business and Economics, said the challenge could not be solved within a single discipline.

“The MCMI brings together expertise from across disciplines to help balance supply security with sustainability, ensuring that extraction, processing and recycling are efficient and responsible,” Professor Smyth said.

“By drawing on the considerable expertise on critical minerals across Monash, the MCMI can tailor solutions that anticipate market volatility, reduce geopolitical risk, and accelerate the transition to clean energy technologies.”

From discovery to delivery

The initiative is built around six research pillars: new mineral resources, future processing technologies, mine rehabilitation, environmental and social impact systems, policy and economics, and national security.

The minerals in focus – rare earth elements, lithium, cobalt and others – are essential for technologies such as electric vehicles, batteries, wind turbines, solar panels and defence capabilities.

Researchers will work alongside partners including CSIRO, Geoscience Australia, Resources Victoria, the International Energy Agency, and the ARC Research Hub for Carbon Utilisation and Recycling.

Professor Sankar Bhattacharya, from the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering in the Faculty of Engineering said the initiative positions Monash as a leading Indo-Pacific hub for critical minerals research.

“Our focus is in developing and rapidly scaling-up fundamental scientific proof-of-concept into future processing technologies that are environmentally sustainable and economically feasible,” Professor Bhattacharya said.

“This confidence is backed by our publications and patents harnessing critical metals from low-value and legacy wastes from other industries.”

Beyond the technical

Professor Andy Tomkins, from the Faculty of Science’s School of Earth, Atmosphere and Environment, said the initiative represents an opportunity to make a difference.

“For too long we’ve been hearing about how climate change is going to cause catastrophic change,” Professor Tomkins said. “Now we can start to solve the problems by building the pipeline of critical minerals needed for renewable energy infrastructure, electric vehicles and advanced battery technologies.”

Professor Elizabeth Lester, Director of the Monash Climate Communication Hub, said the sustainable critical minerals sector’s future would depend not only on scientific and technical advances, but also public confidence.

“Net zero and the energy transition are among the greatest economic, technological and infrastructure challenges Australia has faced. Yet, it is increasingly clear that a real challenge is social,” Professor Lester said.

“MCMI is well equipped to tackle the complexities and opportunities that come with critical minerals through its approach that draws on expertise from across a range of disciplines. This is the approach Australia needs to ensure it achieves a viable industry with a strong social licence.”

 

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1 Comment

  1. Critical minerals are in demand. People of good intent want safe power, clean air, improved environment, more good, less bad, no problems. The military industrialists are keen, licking lips, assessing control needs. Government misfits, new ranks recruiting now, are lined up Pynelike, Morrisonmaggotty ready for the Big Sinecures, the ultimate cushiness. What could go wrong for ordinary folk everywhere? They’ll be cheering in the forests, savannahs, flood zones everywhere, for more and more rare minerals. The parasites of Trumpery have it covered for all of us. We can worship what we’ll never see, the benefits to us all, of more minerals.

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