What to know about China's new regulations on rare earths
China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology issued new interim rules tightening control over rare earth mining, processing, and exports. The move underscores Beijing’s dominance in rare earths and its strategic leverage amid ongoing tr...

The rules released Friday by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology apply both to rare earths originating in China and those that are sent to China for refining.
They require companies to comply with quotas for various minerals. Companies must have government approval to deal with rare earths and must accurately report the amount of rare earths products being handled. Violators will face legal penalties and also have their quotas for rare earths reduced.
Here's what to know.
Why China has tightened controls on rare earths?
The 17 rare earth elements, including such minerals as germanium, gallium and titanium, aren't actually rare. But they're hard to find in a high enough concentration to make mining them worth the investment. China has been gradually tightening restrictions on exports of such materials, partly in response to US controls on its access to American advanced technology.
Those limits raised worries that manufacturers in the US and elsewhere would run short of vital materials needed for production, an issue in China-US trade talks.
In response to US concessions on access to computer chip design software and jet engines, Beijing announced in June that it was speeding up approvals of rare earths exports.
In July, China's Ministry of State Security said it was cracking down on alleged smuggling of rare earths materials that it said threatened national security, indicating Beijing was moving to exert more control.
Over the past several decades, China has come to dominate rare earths processing. It now supplies nearly 90 per cent of the world's rare earths, even though it mines only about 70 per cent of such materials.
China holds nearly half of the world's known reserves of rare earths, but it also imports significant amounts of rare earths from neighbouring Myanmar for processing and export.
Since it controls technologies used for refining rare earth elements and has banned exporting that know-how, China holds a near-monopoly on smelting and separating them.
In 2024, the United States obtained 70 per cent of the rare earths it used from China; 13 per cent from Malaysia; 6 per cent from Japan and 5 per cent from Estonia. Some of the elements obtained from non-Chinese intermediate sources came from mineral concentrates processed in China and Australia, according to the US Geologic Survey.
The impact on rare earth's trade is unclear
China has agreed to issue some permits for rare earth exports but not for military uses, and much uncertainty remains about their supply.
The rules released Friday spell out tighter controls on licensing of companies dealing in rare earths and centralise controls on mining, exports and processing. They also impose more stringent environmental standards for the industry.
Trump has made it a priority to try to reduce American reliance on China for rare earths, while pushing for Beijing to ease its controls.
China has opted to dial up or down the approval process as needed, while tightening overall controls on the industry.
The new regulations don't spell out the quotas for production and export or specific rare earths elements, but strongly suggest Beijing is serious about exerting stronger control over the industry.
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