MP Materials Corp

Lobbying Governance & Transparency

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Lobbying Governance
Overall Assessment Analysis Score
None No evidence found

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E
Lobbying Transparency
Overall Assessment Analysis Score
Limited MP Materials provides only limited visibility into its climate-related lobbying. It signals involvement in broad policy areas linked to the energy transition—highlighting its contract with the U.S. Department of Defense to study heavy-rare-earth separation and its role as “an Affiliate Member of the Critical Materials Institute, a U.S. Department of Energy Innovation Hub”—but it does not name any specific bills, regulations, or rulemakings it sought to influence. The company notes indirect avenues of engagement, such as “regularly partner[ing] with universities, laboratories, and other companies” and membership in federally supported research consortia, yet it offers no detail on the particular meetings, letters, consultations, or the government bodies or officials it approaches. Finally, it confines its stated objectives to broad aspirations like enabling “the transition to a low-carbon economy” and “solving for the rare earth supply chain issues,” without identifying concrete legislative changes or policy outcomes it pursues. Taken together, the disclosure acknowledges some activity but leaves the mechanisms, targets, and desired policy results largely unspecified.

D