Ukraine has chosen a consortium that includes U.S.-connected investors as the preferred bidder to develop the Dobra lithium deposit in Kirovohrad Oblast, according to a report by The New York Times. The decision was taken on January 8 by a government commission and is expected to receive formal approval from the Cabinet of Ministers, though officials say the outcome is effectively settled.
The winning consortium includes TechMet, an energy investment company partly owned by a U.S. government-backed investment agency, and billionaire Ronald Lauder, a long-time associate of U.S. President Donald Trump. Commission members cited the consortium’s strong technical and financial proposal, saying it met most of the tender’s criteria and denying allegations of favoritism.
The Dobra deposit is one of Ukraine’s largest known lithium resources and is considered strategically important for technologies such as electric vehicle batteries. Development will take place under a production-sharing agreement, allowing investors to extract lithium in exchange for sharing output with the Ukrainian state.
Under a broader U.S.-Ukraine minerals framework, half of the revenue generated for Ukraine from the project is to be channelled into a joint investment fund. Companies seeking to develop mineral deposits are also required to first present their projects to this fund, a mechanism designed to attract U.S. investment.
While the minimum investment threshold for the tender was set at $179 million, officials indicated that the consortium’s pledged investment exceeds that figure. The agreement предусматривает spending at least $12 million on geological exploration and $167 million on launching extraction and processing, alongside compliance with environmental standards, use of Ukrainian labour and goods, and investment in local communities.
Before mining can begin, the consortium must complete detailed geological studies to confirm the deposit’s commercial value and then finance the necessary infrastructure. Industry experts note that moving from exploration to full-scale production typically takes more than a decade.
The Dobra project is expected to become one of the first initiatives implemented under the U.S.-Ukraine minerals partnership, following the launch of a joint reconstruction investment fund earlier this year.