EuroWire, KYIV: Ukraine has awarded development rights for the Dobra lithium deposit in the central Kirovohrad region to a consortium that includes TechMet, a U.S.-backed critical minerals investment firm, and U.S. billionaire Ronald S. Lauder, The New York Times reported this week. The report said a Ukrainian government commission made the selection on Jan. 8 and that the agreement still requires formal approval by Ukraine’s Cabinet of Ministers. Lithium is a key input for batteries and other energy storage technologies, and Dobra is among Ukraine’s best-known state-controlled lithium prospects.

The Dobra project is being offered under a production-sharing agreement, a structure used in Ukraine’s extractive sector that sets out how output and revenues are shared between an investor and the state. Ukraine’s Cabinet of Ministers approved the tender process in August 2025. Under the published tender terms, the winning bidder is expected to sign a 50-year agreement and commit to at least $179 million in investment. The minimum includes $12 million earmarked for geological exploration and $167 million for launching extraction and processing, according to Ukrainian government information. The tender terms also require compliance with environmental standards, the use of Ukrainian goods and labor, and investment in local community development.
TechMet has been described in public reporting as a private investment firm focused on critical minerals supply chains. TechMet is partly backed by the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, the U.S. government’s development finance agency. TechMet has said the DFC is among its major investors, and the company has announced additional equity fundraising rounds that included institutional backers. In August 2024, Qatar Investment Authority said it was investing $180 million in TechMet, describing the investment as part of its focus on securing supplies of critical minerals.
Ukraine finalizes award for Dobra lithium deposit
Lauder, heir to the Estée Lauder cosmetics fortune, has been described in the New York Times report as a longtime associate of U.S. President Donald Trump. The report noted Lauder’s role in encouraging U.S. interest in Greenland in earlier discussions about strategic resources. Media reports in Ukraine have also identified Lauder as part of the consortium selected for the Dobra tender alongside TechMet. Requests for comment have produced limited public detail so far; TechMet declined to comment when contacted about the reported selection.
The reported award comes within a broader U.S.-Ukraine framework that links investment and reconstruction funding to natural resources. The United States and Ukraine signed an agreement on April 30, 2025, in Washington to establish the United States-Ukraine Reconstruction Investment Fund, according to statements from the U.S. Treasury. The arrangement gives the United States preferential access to new Ukrainian minerals deals and is intended to channel investment into projects tied to Ukraine’s recovery. The Development Finance Corporation is the U.S. body overseeing implementation of the fund and that the fund reached full operational status in December 2025 after agreeing key policies.
Ukraine expands cooperation in strategic resources
In early January, the DFC launched an online portal to solicit investment proposals for the reconstruction fund. The DFC outlined initial focus areas that include critical minerals, energy projects and infrastructure, and that the fund had begun collecting revenue from Ukrainian hydrocarbon auctions in addition to a seed investment.
Ukraine has said it holds deposits of many materials considered critical for industrial supply chains. Ukraine has deposits of 22 of the 34 minerals considered critical by the European Union, while noting that many sites remain incompletely assessed and would require significant funding to develop. For TechMet, Dobra has featured in earlier public reporting as a potential portfolio addition. TechMet, valued at about $1.3 billion, had raised $300 million with backing that included the Qatar Investment Authority and was considering opportunities including the Dobra lithium deposit.
