U.S. and Philippines Plan 4,000-Acre Economic Security Zone to Secure Supply Chains
Summary
The U.S. Department of State announced plans with the Philippines to establish a 4,000-acre Economic Security Zone in the Luzon Economic Corridor. The Zone, designated under the Pax Silica Initiative, aims to secure critical mineral supply chains including nickel, copper, chromite, and cobalt. Joint governance frameworks between the two governments are under development to facilitate long-term development and sovereign alignment.
What changed
The U.S. Department of State released a fact sheet announcing plans to establish a 4,000-acre Economic Security Zone in the Luzon Economic Corridor of the Philippines. This initiative under the Pax Silica Initiative represents a new model for AI-native investment acceleration hubs intended to secure critical mineral supply chains.
For manufacturers, investors, and supply chain managers, this announcement signals a new framework for allied manufacturing partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region. The Zone is designed to leverage the Philippines' mineral endowments and strategic position, with joint governance structures yet to be finalized. No binding regulatory obligations or compliance deadlines are established by this announcement.
Archived snapshot
Apr 17, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Home Office of the Spokesperson Press Releases U.S. and Philippines Plan the Launch of Historic 4,000 Acre Economic Security Zone to Shore Up Supply Chains
U.S. and Philippines Plan the Launch of Historic 4,000 Acre Economic Security Zone to Shore Up Supply Chains
Fact Sheet
April 16, 2026
Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs Jacob Helberg today announced the United States’ and the Philippines’ plans to establish a 4,000-acre industrial hub to secure inputs vital to American and global supply chains. The site is located in the Luzon Economic Corridor of the Philippines. The site—the first of its kind—is being designated by the Philippines as an Economic Security Zone, a new model for AI-native investment acceleration hubs being developed under the Pax Silica Initiative.
The Economic Security Zone is part of a broader strategy to surge production for inputs vital to U.S. supply chains. It is expected to serve as a purpose-built platform for allied manufacturing—an investment acceleration hub where the specific industrial activities are shaped by market demand, host-country comparative advantages, and the evolving needs of the allied network. Situated within the Luzon Economic Corridor, the Zone can leverage the Philippines’ geographic centrality in the Indo-Pacific, its young and technically skilled workforce, and its deepening alliance with the United States.
Structure and Planned Governance
Joint governance: The two governments intend to identify appropriate frameworks for the long-term development of the Zone that facilitate sovereign alignment and shared upside as it scales.
Enhanced Operational Certainty: The Economic Security Zone is intended to fuse American expertise in institutions and legal regimes – internationally enforceable contracts, transparent regulatory standards, and expert dispute resolution – with enhanced access to the Philippines’ outstanding workforce and talent, mineral endowments, energy resources, and strategic position at the crossroads of Indo-Pacific trade.
The Philippines and Pax Silica
Critical minerals: The Philippines holds significant reserves of nickel, copper, chromite, and cobalt—minerals increasingly vital to global supply chains.
Infrastructure: The Luzon Economic Corridor (LEC) is a coordinated, high-impact investment in key sectors, including in transportation, energy, digital infrastructure, and advanced manufacturing. The LEC will transform Luzon into a more prosperous and interconnected region while delivering value to American investors.
The Economic Security Zone
First of many: The Luzon hub is intended to be the first Zone in a broader industrial network—a constellation of integrated manufacturing sites, logistics corridors, and shared financial instruments spanning partner nations across multiple continents.
System transformation: This interconnection can transform Pax Silica industrial policy from a collection of bilateral projects into a genuine system capable of competing with—and ultimately displacing—the concentrated supply chains on which the world currently depends.
For media inquiries, please submit questions here, and stay updated by following @UnderSecE on X. For more information, visit Pax Silica.
Tags
Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs Bureau of Economic, Energy, and Business Affairs Minerals Office of the Spokesperson Pax Silica Philippines Supply Chains Under Secretary for Economic Affairs
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