The chip war is moving underground.
As the U.S. ramps up semiconductor production to outpace China, an
unexpected pressure point has emerged: critical minerals.
Copper. Cobalt. Rare earths. These are the physical building blocks
behind every AI chip, data center, and advanced battery. And the U.S.
doesn't have enough of them - yet.
Near the Nevada-Arizona border, and within striking distance of
America's fastest-growing semiconductor corridor, Glenstar Minerals (CSE: GSTR, OTCQB:
GSTRF) is drilling into a site that could help change that.
Located in Nevada's historic Goodsprings district, Glenstar's Green
Monster project is surrounded by some of the most productive mines in the
western U.S. - including Barrick's Cortez Mine.
With a fully funded drill program underway, Glenstar is targeting deep
polymetallic structures rich in copper, nickel, cobalt, and rare earths -
the materials U.S. policy now prioritizes under the CHIPS Act and Defense
Production Act.
Early surface results have already shown promising grades. And with
geopolitical tensions driving tech firms to localize supply chains,
projects like Green Monster are drawing new strategic attention.