Utah Magnesium, F-35s, and the ESG Tradeoff Nobody Talks About

The Utah magnesium plant was closed for ESG reasons. 25% of an F-35 is titanium. Titanium requires magnesium. Connect the dots.

US Magnesium operated a production facility on the south side of Salt Lake, Utah. It was, by most accounts, one of America’s highest-polluting industrial plants. It was also one of America’s only domestic sources of magnesium — a material that is absolutely essential to titanium production.

The facility went bankrupt. The state of Utah acquired it for approximately $30 million. And then, driven by ESG and environmental concerns, the facility was retired.

Here’s what that decision means in practical terms: 25% of an F-35 fighter jet is titanium. Titanium production requires magnesium as a reducing agent. Without domestic magnesium, you cannot have domestic titanium. Without domestic titanium, your most advanced fighter aircraft program depends on a supply chain you do not control.

Craig Tindale cited this case as the clearest example of competing narratives colliding — and the wrong one winning. The ESG narrative is coherent within its own framework: the plant was polluting, the pollution was real, Utah residents bore the environmental cost, and shutting it down was the environmentally responsible choice.

The national security narrative is equally coherent: in a state capitalist system, you don’t close that facility. You fund its modernization. You invest in cleaner processing technology. You treat the environmental remediation cost as the price of strategic self-reliance. You do not hand a rival the leverage that comes from controlling your titanium supply chain.

We chose the ESG narrative. We chose a clean lake over a secure country. I’m not saying that’s simple or obviously wrong — these are genuinely hard tradeoffs. But I am saying we made that choice without fully accounting for what we were trading away, and the people who will pay for it aren’t the environmentalists who advocated for the closure. They’re the pilots flying aircraft whose supply chains are now someone else’s leverage.

In a serious industrial policy framework, you don’t make that choice by default. You make it explicitly, with full awareness of the security cost, and you fund the alternative before you retire the capability.

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Author: timothymccandless

I have spent most of my professional life helping people who were being taken advantage of by systems they did not fully understand. As an attorney, I represented consumers against predatory lending practices and worked in elder law protecting seniors from fraud. My family lost $239,145 to identity theft, which became the foundation for my seniorgard.onlime and deepened my commitment to financial education. Since 2008, I have maintained a blog at timothymccandless.wordpress.com providing free financial education. Not behind a paywall. Free, because financial literacy should not cost money. I trade with real money using the exact strategy described in this book. My current positions: Pfizer at $16,480 deployed generating $77,900 per year net. Verizon at $29,260 deployed generating $51,000 per year net. Combined: 293% annualized pace. These are my only active positions. Not cherry-picked.