American Resources Corporation

The Foundation of America’s Future

INFRASTRUCTURE HAS EVOLVED – SO HAVE WE.

From its inception, American Resources has focused on supplying the foundational inputs that power infrastructure. Today, that mission has evolved to include critical minerals - essential to securing national and economic resilience and enabling next-generation technologies.

Modern infrastructure is no longer defined solely by roads, bridges, and pipelines. Today, digital infrastructure - including data centers, advanced energy systems, and commercial and defense technologies - is driving the next era of economic growth.

We uniquely leverage ReElement Technologies’ advanced refining platform – already commercialized – to efficiently convert diverse feedstocks into high-purity, manufacturing-grade products to reshore domestic manufacturing and strengthen allied supply chains.

This capital-efficient, proven approach avoids the need for large-scale, capital-intense investments, years of development and the risks of replicating legacy, single-source models that have proven unsustainable.

Securing Critical Mineral Inputs To Power the Modern Economy

AREC

Regional Feedstock Sourcing

Validated, high-grade global feedstock pipeline supporting scalable rare earth oxide (SREO) production

Blue Background

These feedstocks include high-grade concentrations of both light rare earth elements (LREEs), such as neodymium (Nd), praseodymium (Pr) and samarium (Sm), and heavy rare earth elements (HREEs), including dysprosium (Dy), terbium (Tb), gadolinium (Gd), yttrium (Y), holmium (Ho), ytterbium (Yb), and erbium (Er), with performance validated through ReElement’s refining platform.

In addition to rare earth elements, the Company is advancing a diversified feedstock portfolio that includes strategic minerals such as germanium (Ge), gallium, tungsten (W), antimony (Sb), battery materials including lithium (Li) and cobalt (Co) and nickel (Ni), as well as recycled inputs through its wholly owned subsidiary, Electrified Materials Corporation, and coal-based byproducts sourced from controlled assets at American Resources.