Ep 22  |  Michael Every & Craig Tindale

Could the West Lose the Resource Wars? AI, Rare Earths, and Economic Statecraft

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The Great Simplification

Description

As our governments, institutions, and the public become more aware of the increasing pressures on material and energy availability, we’ve simultaneously seen powerful ripple effects for industrial policy, economic planning, and geopolitical dynamics. Parallel to this story are evolving strategies unique to each nation as new lines of power emerge alongside the trends of artificial intelligence, competing demands for rare earth metals, and an increasingly unstable global power balance that underpins all of it. How have these seemingly disparate factors combined to influence recent international events – and how can understanding them help us forecast the future of global governance and power?

In this episode, Nate is joined by financial and economic analysts, Craig Tindale and Michael Every, to discuss the widespread implications of growing geopolitical tensions over scarce resources and the rapidly changing foreign policy and economic statecraft that countries are implementing in response. Importantly, Craig and Michael emphasize the centrality of China and the U.S. as the two superpowers reshaping global alliances, and how industrial capacity and material constraints underpin each move made in their pursuit for dominance. Ultimately, they emphasize the need for clarity and realignment of the goals for economic and industrial policy as we leave behind the era of growth and grapple with a simplifying world.

What can the long overlooked story of rare earth metals, energy resources, and industrial capacity tell us about ongoing geopolitical events? How might continued AI development play a key role in the future of economic statecraft and the international balance of power? And finally, how should we re-think what economic growth actually serves in an era of resource constraints, geopolitical competition, and ecological crisis? In other words, what is GDP truly for? (And what is GPT really for?)

About Craig Tindale

Craig Tindale is a private investor who has spent nearly four decades working in software development, business strategy, and infrastructure planning, including in leadership positions at Telstra, Oracle, and IBM. Additionally, he has direct experience working in East-to-West supply chains, including as the CEO and Asia Regional Director for DataDirect Technologies. 

He’s now pivoted to investing in groundbreaking ideas such as drone reforestation through Air Seed Technologies, and uses his knowledge of Chinese industrial strategy and Western tech demand to identify the choke points in Critical Metals markets. Most recently he released the white paper, Critical Materials: A Strategic Analysis, which offers a systems synthesis on how the race for rare earths and the return of material constraints is shaping geopolitical relationships. 

About Michael Every

Michael Every is Global Strategist at Rabobank Singapore analyzing major developments and key thematic trends, especially on the intersection of geopolitics, economics, and markets. He is frequently published and quoted in financial media, is a regular conference keynote speaker, and was invited to present to the 2022 G-20 on the current global crisis. 

Michael has over two decades of experience working as an Economist and Strategist. Before Rabobank, he was a Director at Silk Road Associates in Bangkok, Senior Economist and Fixed Income Strategist at the Royal Bank of Canada in both London and Sydney, and an Economist for Dun & Bradstreet in London.

In French, we have a motto that says that a simple drawing is often better than a long explanation. Jean-Marc Jancovici Carbone 4 President

That’s very understandable because with left atmosphere thinking, one of the problems is that you see everything as a series of problems that must have solutions. Iain McGilchrist Neuroscientist and Philosopher

We can’t have hundreds and hundreds of real relationships that are healthy because that requires time and effort and full attention and awareness of being in real relationship and conversation with the other human. Nate Hagens Director of ISEOF

This is the crux of the whole problem. Individual parts of nature are more valuable than the biocomplexity of nature. Thomas Crowther Founder Restor

Show Notes & Links to Learn More

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The TGS team puts together these brief references and show notes for the learning and convenience of our listeners. However, most of the points made in episodes hold more nuance than one link can address, and we encourage you to dig deeper into any of these topics and come to your own informed conclusions.

00:00 –

03:30 – ***The war in Iran has started as of Saturday, February 28th, 2026

04:00 – Various headlines: Talks of agreement with Iran vs Concerns about market disruption

04:45 – Critical materials/minerals and rare earth metals’ importance to the global economy

04:50 – Price of silver since December 10th, 2025 (date of Craig’s previous TGS recording)

05:15 – Analysis of raw materials vs. capacity to refine them

05:50 – Unrestricted Warfare by Wang Xiangsui and Qiao Liang

06:10 – Allies, World War I, World War II

06:30 – Percentage of critical materials produced in China, Percentage refined in China

06:40 – Chinese-financed mines outside of China

07:00 – Glencore canceled Canadian copper refinery project due to ESG cost, Recent project cancellation in Australia

08:10 – Craig’s “golden screw” Substack

08:30 – Tellurium, Gallium, Scandium

08:50 – DOE $355 million towards recovery of minerals from coal waste

09:00 – Mine tailings contain recoverable minerals

09:15 – Gallium is strategically important for defense systems

09:30 – Metabolism in industrial systems, Human built material outweighs all natural material, “The cloud” is physical

09:50 – Supply chains for grid components are critical for electrification and data centers

10:35 – Statecraft

11:30 – What GDP measures

11:40 – Rise of neoliberal globalization in Western economies since the 1980s (prioritizing market liberalization, globalization, and deregulation)

11:50 – How China uses state-led industrial policy rather than purely free-market approaches

12:00 – Control over key supply chain “choke points” provides strategic economic and geopolitical leverage

12:50 – Coordinated reform is hard due to “sacred cows” and compartmentized institutions 

13:40 – Recent U.S. legislation (eg. CHIPS Act, Inflation Reduction Act) marks a shift toward more active industrial policy

14:10 – Technology/money alone cannot overcome material and energy constraints

14:20 – People may revert to denial when implications threaten identity/interests, Cognitive dissonance

14:45 – ESG, ESG and permitting constrains Western industry

15:20 – Central banks focus on single policy rates, Proposals for sector-differentiated credit/targeted rates 

15:30 – Credit guidance/directed credit has historical precedent; outcomes mixed

15:45 – Private capital seeks high returns

16:00 – Military success depends on economic mobilization/surge, not only profitability

16:45 – Frankly #127: Wide Boundary News 2/23/26 (3 pricing models)

17:15 – Fuel taxes in Europe, The Economics of Exhaustible Resources by Harold Hotelling

18:00 – Pricing is lagging indicator

18:40 – Hyperfocus on consumption inflation (rather than deindustrialization)

19:00 – Lobbying, How lobbying shapes policy priorities, Registered lobbyists for the Federal Reserve

19:35 – AI privacy concerns

20:45 – Complex societies need horizontal integration (less siloing) to see system-wide tradeoffs

21:30 – Importance of natural systems for economy

24:20 – Upton Sinclair quote (source)

25:10 – Planck’s principle: “Progress in science comes one funeral at a time”

25:40 – Over-specialization within the U.S. educational system

26:20 – Financial claims decoupling from biophysical reality

27:30 – Trump’s focus on reindustrializing 

28:30 – Zero-sum game

29:05 – Europe struggles to cohesively across 27 countries with divergent interests

30:05 – Critical rare earths that the U.S. needs for microchips and jet engines are in short supply

31:05 – U.S. is increasing state-ownership of firms in the U.S., Golden shares,Trump’s 2025 “golden share” deal with U.S. Steel, Trump’s 2026 “golden share” agreements with L3Harris Technologies and ATALCO, Price controls, U.S. price controls on critical minerals, Changing U.S. tariffs

31:30 – U.S. is leveraging oil supply routes/chokepoints in Venezuela and Iran, Importance of this oil/route to China’s economy

32:10 – U.S. oil (in)dependence versus China oil (in)dependence

32:30 – Chinese finger traps

33:05 – U.S. involvement in regime change in Vietnam and Iraq (History of the DBACHILLES Operation in Iraq, 1996 Iraqi coup attempt, 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq

34:00 – Ultra-high-purity quartz from Spruce Pine in North Carolina is a critical semiconductor chokepoint

34:25 – Canada’s response to Trump and move towards China deals, Canada’s deal for 49,000* Chinese EVs, Canada gaining market access for $4* billion grain exports to China

36:15 – Russia/Ukraine war, Europe’s involvement, Greenland purchasing talks

37:35 – Mark Carney (Canada PM) speech at Davos, The Power of the Powerless by Václav Havel

38:35 – Realpolitik

40:25 – Raw materials/metals used in creation of defense products

40:48 – India was the top arms importer globally in 2024, India’s domestic defense industry reformations and challenges

45:50 – Porcupine strategy, Taiwan’s porcupine strategy

46:50 – U.S. versus China electrification

47:15 – Reduced sulfur emissions, Multiple planetary boundaries exceeded

48:00 – Five stages of grief

48:15 – Regenerative agriculture

49:00 – James Hansen on inaccuracies of climate models

51:25 – Gestalt

53:15 – Economic shocks sometimes correlate with more extreme policy/voting

53:45 – AI/data centers are major drivers of critical materials demand

54:05 – Secretary Hegseth pressures Anthropic to allow for U.S. military use of Claude

54:20 – U.S. Department of War’s plan to use and invest in AI

57:20 – Projected copper supply will not meet demand required for the “energy transition”

58:50 – Godley and Minsky models are based on Marx (More info)

1:01:40 – Mustafa Suleyman (Microsoft AI chief) “80% of white collar jobs might be gone in the next 18 months

1:02:30 – AI companies are generating little revenue

1:05:00 – Aging populations increase long-term care needs, Elder care worker shortages and high turnover

1:11:20 – Circular economy, Recovery of Rare Earth Elements and Critical Materials from Coal and Coal Byproducts 

1:14:10 – Trump lowering gas prices and inflation vs. Bernie Sanders petitioning to not build data centers due to electricity bill prices going up for the everyday citizen

1:14:30 – AI data centers in Sydney will use ~*12% of its electricity and ~*25% of its water by 2035

1:15:30 – New York State Senate Bill: Data center permit moratorium, Overall community backlash in the U.S. 

1:18:15 – “Tech bro” 

1:18:35 – Dune; The Butlerian Jihad

1:22:10 – AI hallucinations

1:26:00 – Dangers of AI and screens in education

1:27:40 – Zak Stein (TGS #180, TGS #122, Reality Roundtable #20)

1:30:30 – Long ago philosophers who talked of consciousness as vibration and quantum physics

1:32:10 – Lost television show

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