China’s Rare Earth Dominance and Global Strategic Implications

GS 3 – ECONOMY

Context:

China has tightened controls over rare earth elements (REEs), consolidating its position as the largest global producer (60%+ share). New rules by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology seek to:

  • Centralize oversight of extraction, refining, and exports.
  • Control supply chains of critical minerals essential for clean energy, defense, and tech sectors.
WHY IT MATTERS
Dimension Relevance
Strategic REEs are crucial for missiles, semiconductors, EVs, wind turbines, solar panels, and defense
Geopolitical US, India, Japan, and EU depend on China’s REEs → Risk of strategic blackmail
Economic Supply chain disruptions → impacts clean energy transition + industrial manufacturing
Scientific REEs are difficult and expensive to mine + process → High environmental cost

 

What Are Rare Earth Elements (REEs)?
  • Not rare by occurrence, but rarely found in concentrated deposits → costly to mine and refine.
  • 17 elements divided into:
    • Light REEs: Lanthanum, Cerium, Neodymium, Praseodymium, etc.
    • Heavy REEs: Gadolinium, Dysprosium, Terbium, etc.
Key Data & Charts
  1. Production Dominance:
    • China: ~63% of global rare earths mined
    • Controls ~60% of global exports
    • Chart 1: China has 48.1% of total reserves
  2. Export & Processing Power:
    • Chart 3: China = Top global exporter (~55% in 2024)
    • Chart 4: Sectors affected: Magnets, Displays, Ceramics, Optics, Aerospace
  3. Top Importers of China’s REEs:
    • Japan (top), followed by USA and The Netherlands
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