2022 Invocation of the Defense Production Act  May 27, 2022 
for Large-Capacity Batteries: In Brief 
Heidi M. Peters 
On March 31, 2022, President Joseph R. Biden issued Presidential Determination No. 
Analyst in U.S. Defense 
2022-11, invoking authorities under Section 303 of the Defense Production Act (DPA) 
Acquisition Policy 
and directing the Department of Defense (DOD) to strengthen the U.S. domestic 
  
industrial base for large-capacity batteries used in “the automotive, e-mobility, and 
Erica A. Lee 
stationary storage sectors.” As justification, the President cited the need to ensure “a 
Analyst in Emergency 
robust, resilient, sustainable, and environmentally responsible domestic industrial base” 
Management and Disaster 
as a critical component of clean energy manufacturing supply chains and a clean energy 
Recovery 
economy.
  
 
Nina M. Hart 
The Defense Production Act (DPA) of 1950 (P.L. 81-774, 50 U.S.C. §4501 et seq.), as 
Legislative Attorney 
amended, confers upon the President a broad set of authorities to influence domestic 
  
industry in the interest of national defense. The authorities can be used across the federal 
Brandon S. Tracy 
government to shape the domestic industrial base so that, when called upon, it is capable 
Analyst in Energy Policy 
of providing essential materials and goods needed for the national defense. Though 
  
initially passed in response to the Korean War, the DPA is historically based on the War 
Powers Acts of World War II. Gradually, Congress has expanded the 
 
term 
national defense, as defined in the DPA. Based on this definition, the scope of DPA authorities now extends 
beyond shaping U.S. military preparedness and capabilities, as the authorities may also be used to enhance and 
support domestic preparedness, response, and recovery from natural hazards, terrorist attacks, and other national 
emergencies. 
The March 31 Presidential Determination authorizes the Secretary of Defense to exercise specific authorities in 
order to support mining and processing of strategic and critical materials for the production of large-capacity 
batteries for the “automotive, e-mobility, and stationary storage sectors.” In particular, the Determination directs 
the Secretary of Defense to support (1) feasibility studies for “mature mining, beneficiation, and value-added 
processing projects” for such critical materials; (2) byproduct and co-product production at existing mining and 
other industrial facilities; and (3) improvements to increase productivity, workforce safety, and sustainability in 
critical minerals mining, beneficiation, and processing. The exercise of these authorities is subject to funding 
available in the Defense Production Act Fund (DPA Fund), for which DOD serves as fund manager. The 
Presidential Determination does not authorize activities beyond those in Section 303 of the DPA, including 
authorities to issue prioritized federal contracts and allocate materials essential to the national defense under Title 
I. 
President Biden’s invocation of the DPA may be viewed within the context of strategic and critical material 
supply chain concerns, and related actions taken by the executive branch and Congress. For example, both the 
DOD and the Department of Energy (DOE) have recently made recommendations related to the exercise of DPA 
authorities to promote domestic mining of critical and strategic minerals. In a 2022 report, the DOE set out 
strategies the federal government could follow, including use of the DPA, to develop domestic supply chains 
related to the production of magnets produced with certain critical minerals. The report also recommended that 
Congress consider directly appropriate funding to DOE to implement DPA Title III actions to support a clean 
energy transition. DOD similarly recommended use of DPA Title III actions to support this transition. 
Congress may consider performing oversight or otherwise monitoring how DOD implements this Determination 
and evaluating potentially relevant issues, including use of allocations available in the DPA Fund and potential 
consequences for public lands and tribal communities adjacent to the mining activities. 
  
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2022 Invocation of the Defense Production Act for Large-Capacity Batteries: In Brief 
 
Contents 
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
Brief Overview of the Defense Production Act (DPA) ................................................................... 1 
Selected Authorities Under Title III of the DPA ....................................................................... 2 
Presidential Determinations ................................................................................................ 2 
Section 303 of the DPA ....................................................................................................... 3 
Recent Delegation of DPA Authorities ...................................................................................... 4 
President Biden’s 2022 Determination ............................................................................................ 4 
DPA Actions Authorized ........................................................................................................... 4 
Limitations on DOD Action ...................................................................................................... 5 
Strategic and Critical Materials ....................................................................................................... 6 
Executive Branch Recommendations and Actions: Critical Minerals and Materials ................ 8 
Related Congressional Actions: Critical Minerals .................................................................. 10 
Selected Legislation Enacted in the 117th Congress.......................................................... 10 
Congressional Considerations ........................................................................................................ 11 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 12 
 
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2022 Invocation of the Defense Production Act for Large-Capacity Batteries: In Brief 
 
Introduction 
On March 31, 2022, President Joseph R. Biden issued Presidential Determination No. 2022-11, 
invoking authorities in Section 303 of the Defense Production Act (DPA) of 1950 (P.L. 81-774, 
50 U.S.C. §4501 et seq.) and directing the Department of Defense (DOD) to strengthen the U.S. 
domestic industrial base for large-capacity batteries (i.e., those used in electric vehicles and for 
grid-connected electricity storage).1 As justification, the President cited the need to ensure “a 
robust, resilient, sustainable, and environmentally responsible domestic industrial base to meet 
the requirements of the clean energy economy.” The President noted that “the United States 
depends on unreliable foreign sources for many of the strategic and critical materials necessary 
for the clean energy transition.... Demand for such materials is projected to increase exponentially 
as the world transitions to a clean energy economy” and to reduce reliance on foreign sources of 
critical materials, including lithium, nickel, cobalt, graphite, and manganese.2 
This In Brief provides an overview of the DPA and presidential delegations of its authorities; 
discusses actions authorized by the March 2022 Presidential Determination (hereinafter the 
Presidential Determination); examines potential limitations associated with these authorizations; 
and provides an overview of recent executive and congressional actions relevant to the invocation 
of the DPA for critical minerals necessary for large-capacity battery production. It also explores 
considerations for Congress regarding the implementation, limitation, or expansion of the 
Presidential Determination. 
Brief Overview of the Defense Production Act (DPA) 
The DPA confers broad presidential authorities to mobilize domestic industry in service of a 
statutorily defined conception of national defense.3 These authorities can be used across the 
federal government to shape the domestic industrial base so that, when called upon, private 
industry and other entities are capable of providing the essential materials and goods needed for 
national defense.4 
Gradually, Congress has expanded the definition of 
national defense for purposes of the DPA.5 
The scope of DPA authorities now extends beyond shaping U.S. military preparedness and 
capabilities, and has been used to enhance and support domestic preparedness, response, and 
recovery from natural hazards, terrorist attacks, and other national emergencies.6 
                                                 
1 Presidential Determination Pursuant to Section 303 of the Defense Production Act (DPA) of 1950, as Amended, 87 
Federal Register 19775, April 6, 2022 (hereinafter “Presidential Determination Pursuant to Section 303”). 
2 Ibid.; The White House, “Fact Sheet: President Biden’s Plan to Respond to Putin’s Price Hike at the Pump,” March 
31, 2022, at https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/03/31/fact-sheet-president-bidens-
plan-to-respond-to-putins-price-hike-at-the-pump/; the White House, “Background Press Call by Senior Administration 
Officials on President Biden’s Plan to Respond to Putin’s Price Hike at the Pump,” March 31, 2022, at 
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/press-briefings/2022/03/31/background-press-call-by-senior-
administration-officials-on-president-bidens-plan-to-respond-to-putins-price-hike-at-the-pump/. 
3 Section 702(14) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4552(14). 
4 For a detailed discussion on the history and authorities of the DPA, see CRS Report R43767, 
The Defense Production 
Act of 1950: History, Authorities, and Considerations for Congress, by Heidi M. Peters. 
5 See ibid., pp. 4-5 for a discussion of the evolving scope of “national defense” as defined in the DPA.  
6 “The term ‘national defense’ means programs for military and energy production or construction, military or critical 
infrastructure assistance to any foreign nation, homeland security, stockpiling, space, and any directly related activity. 
Such term includes emergency preparedness activities conducted pursuant to title VI of The Robert T. Stafford Disaster 
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Current DPA authorities include, but are not limited to: 
  
Title I: Priorities and Allocations, which allows the President to require persons 
(including businesses and corporations) to prioritize and accept contracts for 
materials and services as necessary to promote the national defense; 
  
Title III: Expansion of Productive Capacity and Supply, which allows the 
President to incentivize the domestic industrial base to expand the production and 
supply of critical materials and goods. Incentives include loans, loan guarantees, 
direct purchases and purchase commitments, and the authority for the federal 
government to procure and install equipment in private industrial facilities. 
(further detail on these authorities is provided below); and 
  
Title VII: General Provisions, which includes several distinct authorities, 
including the authority to establish voluntary agreements with private industry; 
the authority to block proposed or pending foreign corporate mergers, 
acquisitions, or takeovers that threaten national security;7 and the authority to 
employ persons of outstanding experience and ability and to establish a volunteer 
pool of industry executives who could be called to government service in the 
interest of the national defense.8 
Selected Authorities Under Title III of the DPA 
Title III authorities help to ensure that the nation has an adequate supply of, or the ability to 
produce, essential materials and goods necessary for the national defense. Using Title III 
authorities, the President may provide financial incentives to develop, maintain, modernize, 
restore, and expand the production capacity of domestic sources for critical components, critical 
technology items, materials, and industrial resources essential for the execution of the national 
security strategy.9 The President also may use Title III authorities to ensure that critical 
components, critical technology items, essential materials, and industrial resources are available 
from reliable sources when needed to meet defense requirements during peacetime, graduated 
mobilization, and national emergency.10  
Presidential Determinations 
The DPA affords significant discretion to the President to exercise Title III and other DPA 
authorities. However, in the absence of a related national emergency declared by Congress or the 
President, the DPA, including Title III, generally requires that the President determine certain 
                                                 
Relief and Emergency Assistance Act [42 U.S.C. §5195 et seq.] and critical infrastructure protection and restoration.” 
Section 702(14) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4552(14). 
7 The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), which operates pursuant to Section 721 of the 
DPA, reviews foreign investment transactions to determine if (1) they threaten to impair the national security; (2) the 
foreign investor is controlled by a foreign government; or (3) the transaction could affect homeland security or would 
result in control of any critical infrastructure that could impair the national security. The President has the authority to 
block proposed or pending foreign investment transactions that threaten to impair the national security. This authority 
is generally considered separate and distinct from other DPA provisions. See 50 U.S.C. §4565; 31 C.F.R. chap. VIII. 
See CRS In Focus IF10952, 
CFIUS Reform Under FIRRMA, by James K. Jackson and Cathleen D. Cimino-Isaacs.  
8 For a comprehensive overview of the DPA see CRS Report R43767, 
The Defense Production Act of 1950: History, 
Authorities, and Considerations for Congress, by Heidi M. Peters. 
9 Section 107(a) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4517. Many of these terms are defined further in 50 U.S.C. §4552.  
10 Section 107(b)(1) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4517. 
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conditions are met prior to invoking many DPA authorities.11 For example, except in periods of 
such an emergency, to issue loan guarantees, the President must determine that loans and loan 
guarantees are the most “cost-effective, expedient, and practical alternative” to meet the intended 
need, and that no other reasonable means exists to do so.12 
DPA presidential determinations do not expire unless the President expressly indicates so in the 
determination, or the determination is otherwise amended or revoked. The DPA does not require 
the President to report these determinations to the public. However, the President must provide 
notice to the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs and the House 
Committee on Financial Services before using certain authorities under Section 303(a) of the 
DPA.13  
Section 303 of the DPA 
Section 303 provides several authorities through which the President may incentivize the 
domestic industrial base to expand the production and supply of critical materials and goods, 
including: 
  Direct purchases and purchase commitments of industrial resources or critical 
technology items for use or resale; 
  Encouragement of “exploration, development, and mining of critical and 
strategic materials, and other material”;  
  Development of productive capacity; and  
  Increased use of certain emerging technologies.14  
To enter into contracts as a means of using these authorities, the President must determine in 
writing that: 
  The material is “essential to the national defense”; 
  U.S. industry “cannot reasonably be expected to provide the capability for the 
needed” material in a timely manner without use of Section 303; and 
  Actions “are the most cost effective, expedient, and practical alternative method” 
for meeting national defense needs.15 
The President may waive these requirements and other limitations under Section 303(a)(7) during 
national emergencies, or if he or she finds that “action is necessary to avert an industrial resource 
or critical technology item shortfall that would severely impair national defense capability.”16 
                                                 
11 See, for example, Sections 301(a)(2), 302(b)(2), and 303(a)(5) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §§4531(a)(2), 4532(b)(2), 
4533(a)(5). 
12 See, for example, Sections 301(a)(2)(C); 50 U.S.C. §4531(a)(2)(C), which requires presidential determinations that 
“the loan guarantee is the most cost effective, expedient, and practical alternative for meeting the needs of the Federal 
Government” before the President may invoke the DPA to issue loan guarantees, and Section 302(b)(2)(B); 50 U.S.C. 
§4532(b)(2)(B), which requires the President to determine that “without the loan, United States industry cannot 
reasonably be expected to provide the needed capacity, technological processes, or materials in a timely manner,” 
before the President may provide direct loans through the DPA. When authorized, these determinations may be issued 
by the designated delegate. 
13 Section 303(a)(6)(A) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4533(a)(6)(A). 
14 Section 303(a)(1)(A)-(D) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4533(a)(1)(A)-(D). 
15 Section 303(a)(5) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4533(a)(5). 
16 Section 303(a)(7) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4533(a)(7). 
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Recent Delegation of DPA Authorities  
Over time, Presidents have chosen to delegate some DPA authorities to department and agency 
heads. Most recently, President Barack Obama did so through Executive Order (E.O.) 13603 in 
2012.17 E.O. 13603 identified the “head of each agency engaged in procurement for national 
defense” and delegated to each the majority of authorities provided to the President under Titles I 
and III of the DPA.18 Notably, E.O. 13603 also delegated Section 303 authority “to encourage the 
exploration, development, and mining of strategic and critical materials and other materials” to 
the Secretaries of Defense and the Interior.19  
Prior to 2020, DOD generally exercised DPA authorities, particularly prioritization authorities 
under Title I of the DPA, more frequently than other executive branch agencies.20 In addition to 
the Department’s frequent use of Title I prioritization authorities, DOD has maintained a 
longstanding DPA Title III program office “dedicated to ensuring the timely availability of 
essential domestic industrial resources to support national defense and homeland security 
requirements.”21 The office generally focuses on facilitating DPA Title III investment actions for 
military purposes. Other executive agencies can and have made use of DPA authorities, 
particularly in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.22 Observers have noted that the Department 
of Energy (DOE) and the Department of the Interior, also cited in the 2022 Determination, have 
less frequent direct experience with carrying out activities under DPA authorities generally and 
Title III authorities specifically.23  
President Biden’s 2022 Determination 
DPA Actions Authorized 
The Presidential Determination authorizes DOD to use some Section 303 authorities to support 
“sustainable and responsible domestic mining, beneficiation, and value-added processing of 
                                                 
17 Executive Order 13603, “National Defense Resource Preparedness,” 77 
Federal Register 16651, March 22, 2012. 
18 Sections 301-304, 305(b), 307-308, and 310-312 of E.O. 13603. 
19 In statute, see Section 303(a)(1)(B) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4533(a)(1)(B). The President delegated this authority to 
the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of the Interior in consultation with the Secretary of Defense as the National 
Defense Stockpile Manager, in Section 306 of E.O. 13603. 
20 For example, in the 2020 Report to Congress of the Defense Production Act Committee, DOD indicated that it places 
approximately 300,000 priority rated contracts and orders (i.e., “rated orders”) per year. See Federal Emergency 
Management Agency, “The Defense Production Act Committee Report to Congress,” calendar year 2020 report to 
Congress, September 20, 2021, p. 10, at https://www.fema.gov/sites/default/files/documents/fema_DPAC-report-
Defense-production-act-committee_2020.pdf. 
21 Department of Defense, “Assessments & Investments: Defense Production Act (DPA) Title III,” at 
https://www.businessdefense.gov/ai/dpat3/index.html. 
22 For more information, see U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), 
Defense Production Act: Opportunities 
Exist to Increase Transparency and Identify Future Actions to Mitigate Medical Supply Chain Issues, GAO-21-108, 
November 19, 2020, at https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-21-108; GAO, 
COVID-19: Agencies Are Taking Steps to 
Improve Future Use of Defense Production Act Authorities, GAO-22-105380, at https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-22-
105380. 
23 Department of Defense, “Title III of the Defense Production Act,” p. 2, at https://www.energy.gov/sites/prod/files/
2014/03/f14/2_seaford_roundtable.pdf; Department of Energy, 
America’s Strategy to Secure the Supply Chain for a 
Robust Clean Energy Transition, Department of Energy Response to Executive Order 14017, “America’s Supply 
Chains,” February 24, 2022, at https://www.energy.gov/policy/articles/americas-strategy-secure-supply-chain-robust-
clean-energy-transition. 
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strategic and critical materials for the production of large-capacity batteries for the automotive, e-
mobility, and stationary storage sectors” because these materials “are essential to the national 
defense.”24  
The Secretary of Defense must implement this broad directive by supporting, among other 
activities: 
  feasibility studies for “mature mining, beneficiation, and value-added processing 
projects” for such critical materials; 
  byproduct and co-product production at existing mining and other industrial 
facilities; and 
  improvements to increase productivity, workforce safety, and sustainability in 
critical minerals mining, beneficiation, and processing.25 
DOD must also consult the Secretaries of the Interior, Agriculture, and Energy in carrying out 
these activities and is required to issue annual reports to the President and Congress on whether 
the domestic industrial base for critical materials for battery production warrants continued used 
of Section 303 authorities. 
Although the Presidential Determination permits DOD to enter into contracts to implement 
Section 303 authorities, the President also appears to have waived certain requirements of the 
DPA for purposes of implementing the 2022 Determination.26 For example, the waivers may 
allow DOD to execute contracts without following certain requirements for these contracts (e.g., a 
prohibition on the government from reselling purchased commodities below certain prices).27 The 
practical implication of these waivers, made under Section 303(a)(7) of the DPA, with regard to 
DOD’s authority to enter into contracts remains unknown, as there are no public contracts yet 
available to show whether or how the waiver has affected contracts in practice.  
Limitations on DOD Action 
The Presidential Determination does not appear to authorize all economic activities covered by 
Section 303. For instance, the President would have to make additional determinations and 
findings to authorize the Secretary of Defense to make subsidy payments on any relevant 
domestically produced materials.28  
Further, the Presidential Determination does not allow the Secretary of Defense to use Title III 
authorities beyond those in Section 303. To implement other Title III authorities, the President 
and Congress must take additional actions. For example, to issue loan guarantees or direct loans, 
the relevant budget authority must be specifically included in an appropriations act.29                                                  
24 Presidential Determination Pursuant to Section 303. 
25 Ibid. 
26 Ibid. 
27 Ibid. Section 303(a)(7)(B) of the DPA authorizes the President to waive requirements, including the requirement in 
Section 303(a)(3) that “[n]o commodity purchased under this subsection shall be sold at less than—(A) the established 
ceiling price for such commodity, except that minerals, metals, and materials shall not be sold at less than the 
established ceiling price, or the current domestic market price, whichever is lower; or (B) if no ceiling price has been 
established, the higher of—(i) the current domestic market price for such commodity; or (ii) the minimum sale price 
established for agricultural commodities owned or controlled by the Commodity Credit Corporation, as provided in 
section 407” of the Agricultural Act of 1949 (7 U.S.C. §1427). 
28 Section 303(c)(1) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4533(c)(1). 
29 Section 301(a)(3)(A) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4531(a)(3)(A). 
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Additionally, the President would need to make additional determinations that would affirm the 
ability of the borrower to repay the loan and the absence of other available credit on reasonable 
terms for the intended purpose.30 
Practical limitations may also constrain implementation. In particular, the exercise of Section 303 
authorities is subject to funding available in the Defense Production Act Fund (DPA Fund).31 The 
DPA Fund primarily supports standing DOD Title III activities. As account manager under E.O. 
13603, DOD exercises considerable discretion over how fund appropriations are used—a source 
of prior dispute with Congress.32 
Strategic and Critical Materials  
President Biden’s invocation of the DPA may be viewed within the context of strategic and 
critical material supply-chain concerns, and recent related actions taken by the executive branch 
and Congress. In addition, some Members of Congress had urged the President to invoke DPA 
authorities to address domestic energy supply shortages by promoting domestic production and 
processing of critical minerals.33 Other Members of Congress urged the President to invoke the 
DPA to secure other energy resources through other means that were not reflected in the 
Presidential Determination—for example, by using the DPA to promote oil refinery 
enhancements,34 or increase domestic manufacturing capacity for electric heat pumps.35 Still other 
Members of Congress have asked the President not to invoke the DPA to address domestic 
mineral supply, citing implications for the environment and tribal communities.36 
                                                 
30 Sections 301(a)(2)(B)-(G) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4531(a)(2)(B)-(G). 
31 Section 304(c) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4534(c).  
32 In the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (P.L. 117-7), Congress appropriated $10 billion to a new account for the 
Department of Health and Human Services to implement pandemic-related Title III actions, in part to bypass DOD 
control over the fund, as explained by Chairwoman of the House Committee on Financial Services Maxine Waters: 
The Committee also expects that the funds provided by this section will primarily be used by the Secretary of Health and Human 
Services (HHS). The DPA allows the President to delegate his authority under the DPA to various agencies, and he has 
delegated DPA authority under Title III of the Act to HHS. While the DPA has been administered by the Department of Defense, 
the funds made available by this section are not for support of the Defense Industrial Base, but are for medical supplies and 
equipment related to the COVID–19 Pandemic ... the Committee intends that the President establish a new account to allow 
these funds to be used....  
See Chairwoman of the House Committee on Financial Services Maxine Waters, “American Rescue Plan Act of 2021,” 
Explanatory Statement on H.R. 1319, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 167, part 45 (March 10, 2021), p. 
H1281, at https://www.congress.gov/117/crec/2021/03/10/CREC-2021-03-10-pt1-PgH1196.pdf. For further discussion 
and explanation of the creation of this new HHS account for DPA Title III actions, see CRS Report R46834, 
American 
Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (P.L. 117-2): Public Health, Medical Supply Chain, Health Services, and Related Provisions, 
coordinated by Johnathan H. Duff and Kavya Sekar, pp. 19-21.  
33  Senator Lisa Murkowski, “Senators Murkowski, Manchin, Risch and Cassidy Urge Administration to Meet 
Domestic Mineral Demand, Address Supply Chain Crisis,” press release, March 11, 2022, at 
https://www.murkowski.senate.gov/press/release/senators-murkowski-manchin-risch-and-cassidy-urge-administration-
to-meet-domestic-mineral-demand-address-supply-chain-crisis). 
34 Representative Jared Golden et al., Letter to the President regarding the use of the DPA to increase oil and gas 
production, March 10, 2022, at https://golden.house.gov/sites/golden.house.gov/files/.
Letter%20to%20POTUS%20Invoke%20the%20DPA%20for%20Domestic%20Energy%20Production%20.pdf).  
35 Senator Markey et al., Letter to President Biden regarding use of the DPA to increase manufacturing capacity for 
technologies that reduce fossil fuel demand, March 23, 2022, at https://www.markey.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/ 
(03.23)%202022.03.23%20Executive%20Actions%20on%20EE%20%20Clean%20Tech%20Letter.pdf. 
36 House Natural Resources Committee, “Chair Grijalva, Rep. Lowenthal Urge Biden Administration Not to Use the 
Defense Production Act to Increase Mining,” press release, March 29, 2022, at https://naturalresources.house.gov/
media/press-releases/chair-grijalva-rep-lowenthal-urge-biden-administration-not-to-use-the-defense-production-act-to-
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Strategic and Critical Materials—Definitions 
The terms “strategic and critical materials,” “critical and strategic materials,” “critical minerals and materials,” and 
“critical minerals” can be, and often are, used interchangeably. 
Defense Production Act The Presidential Determination under the DPA authority includes a determination that “strategic and critical 
materials for the production of large-capacity batteries for the automotive, e-mobility, and stationary storage 
sectors are essential to the national defense.”37 Neither the Presidential Determination nor the DPA includes a 
definition of “strategic and critical materials.” However, the DPA authorizes the President to “make provision ..  
for the encouragement of exploration, development, and mining of critical and strategic materials, and other 
materials,” among other actions.38 Additionally, E.O. 13603, which delegated authorities and addressed national 
defense policies and programs under the DPA, includes a definition of “strategic and critical materials”: 
(m) “Strategic and critical materials” means materials (including energy) that (1) would be needed to supply 
the military, industrial, and essential civilian needs of the United States during a national emergency, and (2) 
are not found or produced in the United States in sufficient quantities to meet such need and are vulnerable 
to the termination or reduction of the availability of the material.39 
Critical Materials Defined by the Energy Act of 2020 The Presidential Determination references five minerals associated with large capacity, rechargeable batteries 
(lithium, nickel, cobalt, graphite, and manganese); these minerals, among others, have been designated “critical 
minerals” by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).40  
Section 7002 of the Energy Act of 2020 (Division Z, P.L. 116-260) includes a definition of “critical material”—
distinct from that associated with the DPA via E.O. 13603—that makes explicit the connection between critical 
materials and critical minerals: 
The term “critical material” means— 
(A) any non-fuel mineral, element, substance, or material that the Secretary of Energy determines— 
(i) has a high risk of a supply chain disruption; and 
(i ) serves an essential function in 1 or more energy technologies, including technologies that produce, 
transmit, store, and conserve energy; or 
(B) a critical mineral.41 
Section 7002 of the Energy Act of 2020 also codifies the methodology to determine the list of critical minerals. 
Part of the methodology includes directing the Secretary of the Interior, acting through the Director of the USGS, 
to consult with the Secretaries of Defense, Commerce, Agriculture, and Energy and the United States Trade 
Representative during the process of finalizing the list of critical minerals.42 Provisions allow the Secretary of the 
Interior to “designate and include on the list any mineral, element, substance, or material determined by another 
Federal agency to be strategic and critical to the defense or national security of the United States.”43 
According to the USGS, the methodology used to develop the list of critical minerals includes measures of 
country-level production, U.S. net import reliance,44 and a qualitative assessment of importance. Another 
                                                 
increase-mining. See also discussion in U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, 
Full 
Committee Hearing on Domestic Critical Mineral Supply Chains, hearing, 117th Cong., 2nd sess., March 31, 2022. 
37 Presidential Determination Pursuant to Section 303. 
38 50 U.S.C. §4533(a)(1)(B). 
39 Executive Order 13603, “National Defense Resource Preparedness,” 77 
Federal Register 16651, March 22, 2012. 
40 U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), “2022 Final List of Critical Minerals,” 87 
Federal Register 10381, February 24, 
2022. 
41 30 U.S.C. §1606(a)(2). 
42 P.L. 116-260. 
43 30 U.S.C. §1606(c)(4)(B). 
44 According to the USGS, “Net import reliance (NIR) is calculated as the amount of imported material (including 
changes in stockpiles) minus exports and changes in government and industry stocks and is expressed as a percentage 
of domestic consumption” (Steven M. Fortier, Nedal T. Nassar, and Graham W. Lederer, et al., 
Draft Critical Mineral 
List—Summary of Methodology and Background Information—U.S. Geological Survey Technical Input Document in 
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consideration used to determine the list of critical minerals regards risks associated with mineral supply chains, or 
supply risk. Supply risk is defined in the methodology as “the confluence of the fol owing three factors: the 
likelihood of a foreign supply disruption, the dependency of the U.S. manufacturing sector on foreign supplies, and 
the vulnerability of the U.S. manufacturing sector to a supply disruption.”45 
Executive Branch Recommendations and Actions: Critical Minerals 
and Materials 
In February 2021—prior to the March 31, 2022, Presidential Determination invoking the DPA—
President Biden ordered a supply chain review from multiple executive branch departments.46 
The resulting review, completed in June 2021, includes a DOE chapter on “Review of Large 
Capacity Batteries” and a DOD chapter on “Review of Critical Minerals and Materials.”47 Some 
recommendations include use of the DPA. For example, in its review of large-capacity battery 
supply chains, DOE recommends: 
Increase[d] support for resource mapping at the USGS and the DOE to enable informed 
policy  and  investment  decisions  around  production  and  refinement  of  lithium  and  other 
critical  materials  and  minerals.  The  Federal  Government  should  explore  using  purchase 
price  and  quantity  guarantees  for  a  stockpile  serving  as  a  backstop,  providing  loans  or 
guarantees  through  DOE’s  Loan  Program  Office  (LPO),  leveraging  the  DPA  including 
Title III and VII authorities to support extraction, and standing  up new public financing 
streams.... Invest[ing] in domestic [mineral processing] ... similarly through a potential mix 
of purchasing guarantees, the DOE LPO, the DPA, and new financing programs in concert 
with [research and development] R&D investment to advance existing techniques.48 
DOD also made recommendations related to the use of executive branch authorities, including 
those invoked in the President’s Determination issued on March 31, 2022. For example, DOD 
recommended that “DPA, Title III and similar authorities should be used to support domestic 
production in sustainable production and processing operations,” and that the government “should 
use [DPA Title VII] authorities to convene a government-industry working group to identify 
opportunities to expand sustainable domestic production, and explore opportunities to create 
consortiums or public-private partnerships for sustainable domestic processing of key strategic 
and critical materials.”49 
Both DOE and DOD made additional recommendations related to critical materials and minerals, 
among other recommendations; executive authority to act on these recommendations lies outside 
that granted by the DPA. For example, some DOE recommendations include: 
                                                 
Response to Secretarial Order No. 3359, U.S. Geological Survey, Open-File Report 2018-1021, p. 9). For additional 
information on NIR, see this source. 
45 Nedal T. Nassar and Steven M. Fortier, 
Methodology and Technical Input for the 2021 Review and Revision of the 
U.S. Critical Minerals List, USGS Open-File Report 2021–1045, Reston, VA, 2021, p. 3.  
46 Executive Order 14017, “America’s Supply Chains,” 86
 Federal Register 11849, March 1, 2021. 
47 White House, 
Building Resilient Supply Chains, Revitalizing American Manufacturing, and Fostering Broad-Based 
Growth, June 2021, pp. 85-204, at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/100-day-supply-chain-
review-report.pdf. 
48 Ibid., p. 139. 
49 Ibid., pp. 199-200. 
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The  Administration  should  pursue  a  whole  of  government  approach  to  stimulating 
domestic demand and production of [electric vehicles] EVs and stationary storage through 
Federal purchases, consumer incentives, and standard setting.50 
The Federal Energy Management Program (FEMP), housed at the DOE, should call for 
Federal agencies to procure stationary battery storage for Federal facilities in addition to 
procuring other types of stationary storage.51 
[The United States should] work with allies and partners to expand global production and 
ensure secure global supplies.52 
Some related DOD recommendations include: 
The U.S. Government should incentivize domestic and foreign production, processing, and 
recycling  of  strategic  and  critical  materials,  ensuring  that  they  adhere  to  strong 
environmental  standards,  meaningful  community  consultation  including  government-to-
government consultation with Tribal Nations, and strong labor standards.53 
Through  the  Department  of  State  and  the  Office  of  the  U.S.  Trade  Representative,  the 
United States should engage with like-minded foreign producers of strategic and critical 
materials  to  promote  a  value-based  approach  as  they  consider  approaches  to 
sustainability—rather than one focused on cost-imposition—and encourage alignment of 
U.S. and foreign product sustainability standards.54 
Subsequently, the DOE released a separate report outlining a strategy intended to secure supply 
chains needed for a robust clean energy transition.55 This report sets out related strategies the 
federal government could follow, including use of the DPA to develop domestic supply chains 
related to the production of magnets produced with certain critical minerals.56 The report also 
contains recommendations that could require additional authority from Congress.57 They include 
that “Congress should consider appropriating adequate funding specifically for the purpose of 
enabling DOE to utilize Title III of the Defense Production Act to support the production of 
critical energy technologies ... and take other actions as needed to support and maintain a secure 
Energy Sector Industrial Base for civilian use.”58  
In addition to issuing recommendations, DOD has awarded grants to companies to assist in 
furthering development of the domestic critical mineral supply chain, with focus on a specific 
group of critical materials: the 17 rare earth elements for which the United States does not 
currently have any industrial scale extraction capacity.59 Some examples of DOD’s recent 
                                                 
50 Ibid., p. 135. Stationary storage refers to the use of batteries connected to the electricity grid to temporarily store 
energy for later use. 
51 Ibid., p. 138. 
52 Ibid., p. 140. 
53 Ibid., p. 195. 
54 Ibid., p. 201. 
55 U.S. Department of Energy, 
America’s Strategy to Secure the Supply Chain for a Robust Clean Energy Transition, 
U.S. Department of Energy Response to Executive Order 14017, “America’s Supply Chains,” February 24, 2022, 
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2022-02/America%E2%80%99s%20Strategy%20to%20Secure%20the%20
Supply%20Chain%20for%20a%20Robust%20Clean%20Energy%20Transition%20FINAL.docx_0.pdf.  
56 Ibid., p. 45. 
57 Ibid., p. 45. 
58 Ibid., p. 48. 
59 For more information on rare earth elements, see CRS Report R46618, 
An Overview of Rare Earth Elements and 
Related Issues for Congress, by Brandon S. Tracy. 
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activities include granting $28.8 million to the Urban Mining Company to assist with the 
development of a domestic source of rare earth magnets;60 $35 million to MP Materials to assist 
with the construction of a rare earth element extraction facility;61 and $30.4 million to Lynas Rare 
Earths Ltd. for a rare earth element separation facility.62 
Related Congressional Actions: Critical Minerals  
In recent years, Congress has included provisions to address critical minerals or materials in 
various laws, including defense authorization and appropriations acts. This section identifies 
selected legislation enacted in the 117th Congress as of May 17, 2022.63  
Selected Legislation Enacted in the 117th Congress 
As of mid-May 2022, the 117th Congress has enacted two measures that provide support for 
critical minerals or critical materials mining and processing. 
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (P.L. 117-58) includes multiple sections with 
provisions addressing critical minerals.64 For example, Section 40205 directs the Secretary of 
Energy to fund “a facility to demonstrate the commercial feasibility of a full-scale integrated rare 
earth element extraction and separation facility and refinery.” Section 40206 directs the Bureau of 
Land Management and the Forest Service to complete the federal permitting and review 
processes related to critical mineral mines on federal lands with maximum efficiency. Sections 
40207, 40208, and 40210 direct the Secretary of Energy to award over $6 billion in grants related 
to the supply, processing, and recycling of battery critical materials and minerals. Section 40401 
amends the DOE Title XVII loan guarantee program to consider projects that increase the supply 
of domestically produced critical minerals.65 
The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 (P.L. 117-81) includes provisions 
directing the Secretary of Defense to create “a demonstration program on recovering rare earth 
elements and critical minerals from acid mine drainage and other coal byproducts.”66  
                                                 
60 Department of Defense, “DOD Announces $77.3 Million in Defense Production Act Title III COVID-19 Actions,” 
press release, July 24, 2021, at https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/2287490/dod-announces-773-
million-in-defense-production-act-title-iii-covid-19-actions/. 
61 DOD, “DoD Awards $35 Million to MP Materials to Build U.S. Heavy Rare Earth Separation Capacity,” press 
release, February 22, 2022, at https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/2941793/dod-awards-35-
million-to-mp-materials-to-build-us-heavy-rare-earth-separation-c/. 
62 DOD, “DOD Announces Rare Earth Element Award to Strengthen Domestic Industrial Base,” press release, 
February 1, 2021, at https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/2488672/dod-announces-rare-earth-
element-award-to-strengthen-domestic-industrial-base/. 
63 Earlier Congresses also have considered and enacted measures with provisions pertaining to critical minerals or 
materials. For instance, the 116th Congress enacted three laws mentioning critical minerals or critical materials, as used 
in the context discussed in this report: the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (P.L. 116-92), the 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (P.L. 116-260 ), and the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021(P.L. 116-283).  
64 For more information on these sections, see CRS Report R47034, 
Energy and Minerals Provisions in the 
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (P.L. 117-58), coordinated by Brent D. Yacobucci. 
65 42 U.S.C. §§16511 et seq. For more information about the program, see CRS Insight IN11432, 
Department of 
Energy Loan Programs: Title XVII Innovative Technology Loan Guarantees, by Phillip Brown et al. 
66 P.L. 117-81 Title III Operation and Maintenance, Subtitle B—Energy and Environment, Section 320. Demonstration 
Program on Domestic Production of Rare Earth Elements from Coal Byproducts. 
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Congressional Considerations 
The President exercises discretion when exercising DPA authorities. However, Congress may 
consider supporting, limiting, or monitoring the President’s invocation of the DPA for critical 
minerals mining and processing in relation to large-capacity batteries. Issues and options for 
Congress may include the following:  
  DOD may utilize existing DPA Fund appropriations for any DPA-related projects. 
Congress could evaluate the sufficiency of available funding for implementation 
of Section 303 authorities in the Presidential Determination, and, as warranted, 
appropriate additional funding for federal entities responsible for carrying out 
related efforts. Congress also may consider whether to appropriate funds specific 
to critical materials mining activities to carry out Section 303 authorities under 
the Presidential Determination, as well as what terms and parameters are of use 
to attach to such funding.67  
  In a 2022 report, DOE recommended that Congress consider directly appropriate 
funding to DOE to implement DPA Title III actions to support a clean energy 
transition.68 Additionally, some Members of Congress have called upon the 
President to utilize the DPA to increase manufacturing capacity for technologies 
that reduce fossil fuel demand, such as “electric heat pumps, efficient electric 
appliances, renewable energy generation and storage, and other clean 
technologies.”69 Congress may consider providing additional appropriations or 
responsibilities to agencies beyond DOD for DPA actions to secure domestic 
energy supplies—particularly those undertaken for both civilian and military 
purposes. As noted above, DOD typically undertakes projects in service to 
military purposes. Alternatively, Congress may opt to retain existing agency roles 
relevant to the exercise of DPA Title III authorities and utilization of DPA Fund 
appropriations. 
  As of publication of this report, the President has not invoked DPA authorities 
beyond Section 303. Congress may consider whether to encourage the President 
to invoke other DPA authorities, such as Title I authorities to issue priority 
contracts for critical and scarce supplies or Title VII authorities to enter into 
voluntary agreements with private industry to help provide for the national 
defense. Congress may also encourage the President to utilize DPA authorities 
through passing legislation or resolutions. Alternatively, Congress could 
                                                 
67 For example, Congress could support or reject a request for additional emergency supplemental funding (White 
House, “FACT SHEET: White House Calls on Congress to Provide Additional Support for Ukraine,” press release, 
April 28, 2022, at https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/04/28/fact-sheet-white-house-
calls-on-congress-to-provide-additional-support-for-ukraine/). 
68 U.S. Department of Energy, 
America’s Strategy to Secure the Supply Chain for a Robust Clean Energy Transition, 
U.S. Department of Energy Response to Executive Order 14017, “America’s Supply Chains,” February 24, 2022, pp. 
xiv, at https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2022-02/America%E2%80%99s%20Strategy%20to%20Secure%20
the%20Supply%20Chain%20for%20a%20Robust%20Clean%20Energy%20Transition%20FINAL.docx_0.pdf; 
Department of Energy, “DOE Releases First-Ever Comprehensive Strategy to Secure America’s Clean Energy Supply 
Chain,” February 24, 2022, https://www.energy.gov/articles/doe-releases-first-ever-comprehensive-strategy-secure-
americas-clean-energy-supply-chain. 
69 Senator Markey et al., Letter to President Biden regarding use of the DPA to increase manufacturing capacity for 
technologies that reduce fossil fuel demand, March 23, 2022. 
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discourage the exercise of authorities in the Presidential Memorandum or pass 
legislation that prohibits the use of DPA authorities for such purposes. 
  The DPA requires the President to notify Congress of industrial base shortfalls 
that warrant the invocation of Section 303(a) authorities.70 Congress may 
consider whether changes to this level of reporting and oversight authorities are 
needed.  
  Members of Congress disagree about the use of the DPA to increase domestic 
mining. As noted, some have called upon the President to exercise DPA 
authorities to respond to domestic energy shortages. Others have opposed the 
invocation of the DPA to address domestic mineral supply, as called for in the 
Presidential Determination, due to “the harmful impacts of mining” on public 
lands, water and tribal communities.71 Congress may choose to monitor the 
consequences of DPA-related mining activities on adjacent tribal communities. 
Additionally, Congress could consider the desirability of requiring additional 
oversight or reporting on the impacts of DPA related mining on tribal 
communities, public lands, and water resources. Congress may additionally 
decide to revise the President’s authorities to implement the DPA with attention 
to potential risks to natural resources and tribal communities.  
 
Author Information 
 Heidi M. Peters 
  Nina M. Hart 
Analyst in U.S. Defense Acquisition Policy 
Legislative Attorney 
    
    
Erica A. Lee 
  Brandon S. Tracy 
Analyst in Emergency Management and Disaster 
Analyst in Energy Policy 
Recovery 
    
    
                                                 
70 Section 303 (a)(6) of the DPA; 50 U.S.C. §4533(a)(6). 
71 House Natural Resources Committee, “Chair Grijalva, Rep. Lowenthal Urge Biden Administration Not to Use the 
Defense Production Act to Increase Mining,” press release, March 29, 2022, at https://naturalresources.house.gov/
media/press-releases/chair-grijalva-rep-lowenthal-urge-biden-administration-not-to-use-the-defense-production-act-to-
increase-mining. See also discussion in U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, 
Full 
Committee Hearing On Domestic Critical Mineral Supply Chains, hearing, 117th Cong., 2nd sess., March 31, 2022. 
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Disclaimer 
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