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May 24, 2019


Defense Primer: Acquiring Specialty Metals, Rare Earth

Magnets, and Tungsten


Some metals (such as titanium and tungsten) and metal
alloys, as well as strong permanent magnets known as rare
earth magnets, are critical to U.S. Department of Defense
(DOD) operations. These materials are frequently
integrated into components (such as integrated circuits,
electrical wiring, or optoelectronic devices) or structures
(such as aircraft fuselages or ship hulls) of the military
platforms and weapon systems that enable warfighting
capabilities.

  A rare earth element is one of 17 chemical elements, including
  the 15 metallic chemical elements with atomic numbers 57
  through 71, as well as the chemically similar elements
  scandium and yttrium. These materials are considered rare in
  spite of their relative abundance throughout the Earth's crust,
  as the extraction and production of such materials can be
  difficult and costly. Rare earth magnets produced using rare
  earth elements are the strongest known permanent magnets.

There are few, and in some cases, no known alternatives for
many of these materials, which often have unique physical
properties, such as high material strength coupled with low
density, or resistance to various forms of corrosion. Many
of these materials are subject to sourcing restrictions or
prohibitions established by Congress, in part to protect the
U.S. domestic materials industry and ensure the United
States maintains critical production capabilities and
capacity associated with the U.S. defense industrial base.
Certain sourcing restrictions establish that some items-or
components of such items-incorporating certain metals
and metal alloys known as specialty metals generally must
be produced or manufactured in the United States. Other
sourcing prohibitions establish that some items-or
components of such items-incorporating certain types of
rare earth magnets and tungsten may not be acquired from
specified foreign sources.

      Sourcing Restrictions in Acquisitions
  For more information, see CRS Report R43354, Domestic
  Content Restrictions: The Buy American Act and Complementary
  Provisions of Federal Law, by David H. Carpenter and Erika K.
  Lunder.



Domestic sourcing restrictions for DOD acquisition of
specialty metals first appeared in the FY1973 DOD
appropriations bill (P.L. 92-570) as an expansion of
domestic content restrictions on DOD purchases of food,
clothing, and other goods, commonly known as the Berry
Amendment. The Berry Amendment sourcing restrictions


were included in annual DOD appropriations legislation
from 1941 until 2002, when they were permanently
codified as 10 U.S.C. §2533a by the FY2002 National
Defense Authorization Act (NDAA, P.L. 107-107). In
2006, the FY2007 NDAA (P.L. 109-364) moved the
specialty metal-related provisions from 10 U.S.C. §2533a to
10 U.S.C. §2533b.
The domestic sourcing mandate for specialty metals applies
specifically to the Department of Defense.
Applicability of Restrictions
The specialty metals domestic sourcing restrictions apply to
all DOD prime contracts and subcontracts. For the purposes
of the restriction, 10 U.S.C. §2533b defines a specialty
metal as any of the following metals or metal alloys:
* Steel with a maximum alloy content exceeding one or
   more of the following limits: manganese, 1.65%;
   silicon, 0.60%; copper, 0.60%; or containing more than
   0.25% of any of the following elements: aluminum,
   chromium, cobalt, niobium (columbium), molybdenum,
   nickel, titanium, tungsten, or vanadium.
* Metal alloys consisting of nickel, iron-nickel, and cobalt
   base alloys containing a total of other alloying metals
   (except iron) in excess of 10%.
* Titanium and titanium alloys.
* Zirconium and zirconium base alloys.
DOD uses the foundry location where the final melting or
similar production of a specialty metal takes place to
determine its origin. For example, titanium sponge-
unwrought titanium that has not been melted-that has been
manufactured in Kazakhstan, shipped to the United States,
and melted into ingots at a foundry in Ohio would be
considered compliant with the specialty metals domestic
sourcing mandate. Under the specialty metals restrictions,
DOD generally may not acquire certain military platforms
or weapon systems-or components of these platforms and
systems-that contain any amount of a specialty metal that
was not melted or produced in the United States.
The restriction applies to aircraft; missile and space
systems; ships; tank and automotive items; weapon
systems; and ammunition. DOD and its prime contractors
are also prohibited from directly acquiring any specialty
metal (e.g., metal sheets, rods, plates) if it was not melted or
produced in the United States.
Exceptions
Law and policy provide a number of exceptions to the
specialty metals sourcing mandate, including the following
selected examples:


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