United States | Cobalt blues

A millennial is building America’s first nickel-cobalt refinery

But it’s proving ethically trickier than she expected

The construction site of Westwins pilot plant in Lawton.
Photograph: WhiteWolfCreative, Nick Bright and Paul Lawson's team
|LAWTON, OKLAHOMA

Kaleigh Long believed there had to be an American fix. As an Oklahoman working on political campaigns in the Democratic Republic of Congo she saw all too closely the bloodiness of the critical-mineral trade. Militias killed her flatmate’s siblings, burnt homes on resource-rich land and forced children to dig in the mines—as Chinese companies tolerated the abuses.

Back home the 28-year-old single mother reckoned that getting into the mineral business was the best way to clean up the supply chain and ease China’s chokehold on cobalt and other minerals vital to a greener economy. America had no nickel-cobalt refineries of its own. In early 2022 Ms Long set out to build its first. She raised $50m for her startup, Westwin Elements, and recruited oil-and-gas tycoons, a former intelligence officer and the longtime boss of Boeing, an aerospace company, to sit on her board. In her Oklahoma City headquarters the self-described libertarian touched her necklace, the pendant a silhouette of Africa, as she spoke about the $185m grant Westwin next hopes to win from the Department of Energy.

Explore more

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline "Cobalt blues"

How high can markets go?

From the March 2nd 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from United States

Checks and Balance newsletter: Trump, Biden and piratical shamelessness

American pupils have missed too much school since the pandemic

But clever policies have got some truant children back in the classroom


Will unions sweep the American South?

The UAW won big at Volkswagen in Tennessee, but organising at other car plants is harder