Argentina's Chamber of Deputies approved the Super RIGI on 24 June 2026, a USD 1 billion-threshold incentive regime offering 30 years of fiscal stability and a 15% corporate tax rate to attract investment in critical minerals, biotech, semiconductors, and AI.

Argentina’s Chamber of Deputies approved a new incentive framework for large-scale investments in emerging industries, known as the Super RIGI, on 24 June 2026.

The newly proposed “Super RIGI” scheme was established to offer incentives and regulatory certainty for investment projects focused exclusively on developing new economic activities.

The Super RIGI scheme is an expanded version of President Milei’s original 2024 incentive program, aimed at attracting large-scale investment in sectors like critical mineral processing, biotechnology, battery manufacturing, renewable energy (including green hydrogen, EVs, wind, and solar), small modular nuclear reactors, semiconductors, and AI.

Unlike the original framework, which had a USD 200 million investment threshold, the new version requires a minimum of USD 1 billion and excludes natural resource extraction, infrastructure projects, and expansions of existing ventures—making it a more narrowly targeted regime.

Qualifying projects will still receive 30 years of fiscal, customs, and foreign exchange stability, and the scheme itself will stay open for five years (with potential extension), compared to the original’s two-plus-one-year run.