REMINDER: 👥 Upcoming Panel: The Contest for Critical Resources (Tue Nov 18, 2025)
From AI to Yttrium
❗ Reminder to econVue subscribers to register for our upcoming panel on the race for critical resources.
↳ When
Tues, Nov 18th at 4 pm (Central Time)
Please register early—space is limited to encourage active participation.
↳ Please register in advance:
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with details on how to join the call, as well as a recommended reading list.
From Globalization to Mobilization
As China and the US continue to go their separate ways, there are calls from the White House and policymakers to create self-sufficiency in US supply chains. China recently granted a one-year reprieve on rare earth exports to the US, but this promise is not written in stone. And a year is obviously not enough time to rebuild supply chains back to the US and its allies. How important is it for us to create resilient and diversified supply chains for energy, technology, and health care? How much will it cost—and how long will it really take? Will Australia and Japan link arms with the US?
We hope you will join our illuminating discussion with econVue experts and guests.
Introductory remarks by our speakers will be recorded, but the Q&A session will be off the record.↳ Topics
Globalization 2.0
Energy & Industrial Materials — rare earths, critical minerals
2. . Technology & Infrastructure — semiconductors & AI
The geopolitics of critical resources: China & the Middle East
Special Guest: Mark P. Mills
📍Washington
Mark P. Mills is founder and Executive Director of the National Center for Energy Analytics, a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a Contributing Editor for the City Journal at the Manhattan Institute’s and a Faculty Fellow at the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science at Northwestern University. His most recent book is The Cloud Revolution.
↳ Panelists
Eleanor Hughes Mark Roeder Eric Huang Karim Pakravan
📍Washington 📍Sydney. 📍 Taiwan 📍Chicago
Moderated by econVue Editor-in-Chief Lyric Hughes Hale
If you are not yet a paying subscriber to econVue and would like to support our work:









