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US is pushing more expansive minerals deal with Ukraine, sources say

FILE PHOTO: FILE PHOTO: Miners work at a coal mine in Donetsk region
March 27, 2025

By Erin Banco, Andrea Shalal and Gram Slattery

(Reuters) - The Trump administration has proposed a new, more expansive minerals deal with Ukraine, according to three people familiar with the ongoing negotiations and a summary of a draft proposal obtained by Reuters.

The U.S. has revised its original proposal, said the sources, and it gives Ukraine no future security guarantees but requires it to contribute to a joint investment fund all income from the use of natural resources managed by state and private enterprises across Ukrainian territory.

US is pushing more expansive minerals deal with Ukraine, sources say
FILE PHOTO: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy visits Washington, D.C.

The terms put forward by Washington go well beyond the deal discussed in the days leading up to the contentious Oval Office meeting last month between U.S. President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has been leading negotiations for the United States, said one of the sources.

Bessent did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The proposal makes no mention of the U.S. taking ownership of Ukraineโ€™s nuclear power plants, according to the summary - something Trump had talked about.

Trump has said a minerals deal will help secure a peace agreement by giving the United States a financial stake in Ukraine's future. He also sees it as America's way of earning back some of the tens of billions of dollars it has given to Ukraine in financial and military aid since Russia invaded three years ago.

National Security Council spokesperson James Hewitt declined to confirm the terms of the latest proposal, but said the deal would strengthen the relationship between the U.S. and Ukraine.

โ€œThe mineral deal offers Ukraine the opportunity to form an enduring economic relationship with the United States that is the basis for long term security and peace," said Hewitt.

Ukraine's ministry of foreign affairs did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

An earlier version of the deal proposed a joint investment fund where Ukraine would contribute 50% of proceeds from the future profits of the extraction of the state-owned natural resources. It also set out terms that the U.S. and Ukraine would jointly develop Ukraineโ€™s mineral resources.

Zelenskiy told reporters on Tuesday that the U.S. had proposed a โ€œmajorโ€ new deal and that Ukrainian officials were still reviewing its terms.

Zelenskiy said on Thursday the U.S. is "constantly" changing the terms of the proposed minerals deal, but added that he did not want Washington to think Kyiv was against the deal.

In an interview with Fox News earlier this week, Bessent said the U.S. had โ€œpassed along a completed document for the economic partnershipโ€ and that Washington hopes to โ€œgo to full discussions and perhaps even get signatures next week.โ€

The new proposal stipulates that the U.S. is given first rights to purchase resources extracted under the agreement and that it recoup all the money it has given Ukraine since 2022, in addition to a 4% annual interest rate, before Ukraine begins to gain access to the fund's profits, according to the summary. The updated proposal was first reported by the Financial Times.

If agreed, the joint investment fund would have a board of five people, three appointed by the U.S. and two by Ukraine, and the funds generated would be converted into foreign currency and transferred abroad, according to the summary. The fund would be managed by the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC).

A separate source with knowledge of the negotiations said there had been discussions about having the DFC administer the fund.

(Reporting by Erin Banco, Andrea Shalal and Gram Slattery; Additional reporting by Tom Balmforth in London; Editing by Don Durfee and Daniel Wallis)

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