America Has No Tungsten Mine and a 2027 Deadline -- Now Field Crews Are on the Ground at a Past-Producing Nevada Project
Why this matters
This development underscores a growing institutional focus on securing critical raw materials domestically amid geopolitical and supply-chain uncertainties. Tungsten, essential for manufacturing and defense applications, has no active US production, exposing industrial and infrastructure sectors to import vulnerabilities. The reactivation of a past-producing Nevada tungsten project signals a strategic pivot toward onshore resource development, which could attract infrastructure and natural-resources-focused capital seeking to hedge against global supply disruptions. For commercial real estate investors and capital allocators, this trend may presage increased demand for industrial land and specialized facilities tied to mining operations, processing, and logistics in the western US. It also reflects broader market dynamics where resource scarcity and government policy are reshaping capital flows into hard assets beyond traditional CRE sectors. Lending conditions may tighten around projects with complex permitting and operational risks, but institutional appetite for early-stage natural resource plays could rise if supply constraints persist. Ultimately, this move highlights how commodity supply challenges are influencing capital allocation strategies, with implications for regional real estate markets and the intersection of industrial infrastructure and natural resource extraction in the US.
Editorial analysis · AI-assisted
Issued on behalf of Western Star Resources Inc. With drone geophysics underway at White Star and three U.S. tungsten projects active in 2026, Western Star Resources Inc. (CSE: WSR) (OTC: WSRIF) (FRA: 4K2) is racing a…
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