U.S. and Central Asian Officials to Meet in Astana on Critical Minerals Investment
The Astana Mining & Metallurgy Congress will seek to turn November 2025 C5+1 framework agreements into investment decisions. The U.S. delegation includes heads of the Export-Import Bank and the U.S. Development Finance Corp.
ecns.cnU.S. and Central Asian officials will meet June 11-12 in the Kazakh capital Astana to explore deals concerning the mining and processing of critical minerals. The gathering marks a step forward for the C5+1 Dialogue, which strives to expand economic, educational, and political ties linking the United States and Central Asia.
The meeting, officially titled the Astana Mining & Metallurgy Congress (AMM-2026), seeks to catalyze “the transition from the framework agreements reached at the November [C5+1] 2025 summit in Washington to concrete investment decisions,” according to a Kazakh government statement.
The Trump administration is helping promote foreign investment in Central Asia’s mining sector, mobilizing government agencies, especially the Export-Import Bank of the United States and the US Development Finance Corp. (DFC), to help de-risk dealmaking.
The US delegation at the Astana meeting will include the heads of the Ex-Im Bank and the DFC, along with top mining-sector executives, including the founder of Ivanhoe Mines, Robert Friedland, and former Anglo American CEO Mark Cutifani. Kazakhstan is taking steps to facilitate investment by allowing investors to retain a majority share in projects.
Kazakh officials point to a recently finalized tungsten deal as a role model, in which an American consortium known as Kaz Resources Inc.
Will develop major deposits in Kazakhstan, with the American entity retaining 70 percent of the shares in the project, while the Kazakh government retains the remaining 30 percent. Since returning to power in early 2025, the Trump administration has made widening access to Central Asia’s mineral wealth a top diplomatic priority.

