
403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
China Extends Rare-Earth Controls Abroad, Testing The World's Supply Chains
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) China has tightened its grip on rare earths-the metals that power electric cars, wind turbines, smartphones, and advanced radars-by rolling out export rules that reach beyond its borders.
Announced on October 9, parts take effect immediately, with the rest starting December 1. The new rules require a Chinese government license before foreign organizations ship rare-earth products or components that contain Chinese-origin material.
The same applies to items made using Chinese mining and processing know-how. Beijing also brought the underlying technology itself under control-covering technical documents, licensing, remote support, and maintenance for production lines.
Humanitarian shipments are exempt, but exporters must notify officials after the fact. Applications tied to military end use, weapons programs, or entities already on China 's control lists are generally denied.
The simple takeaway: China isn't just policing what leaves its ports; it's asserting a say over how Chinese-linked materials and technology are used anywhere in the world.
That's a big deal because China mines about 70 percent of global rare earths and processes close to 90 percent, and it produces the vast majority of high-performance magnets used in EV motors and wind turbines.
Even a small amount of Chinese content-or reliance on Chinese processing methods-could now trigger a licensing step. Behind the story is a larger contest over chokepoints in high-tech supply chains.
China Tightens Rare-Earth Controls, Raising Global Supply Risks
As the United States and Europe tighten controls on advanced chips, Beijing is leveraging its dominance in rare earths to protect national security, prevent re-exports to sensitive end users, and gain visibility into global flows. It's not an embargo; it's bureaucracy with bite.
What this means for readers: manufacturers and traders face new compliance, potential delays, and pressure to audit where Chinese materials and know-how appear in their products.
For countries building out EVs and wind power, costs and timelines could rise in the near term-while the incentive grows to diversify supply and develop local processing. The bottleneck just narrowed, and everyone downstream will feel it.
Announced on October 9, parts take effect immediately, with the rest starting December 1. The new rules require a Chinese government license before foreign organizations ship rare-earth products or components that contain Chinese-origin material.
The same applies to items made using Chinese mining and processing know-how. Beijing also brought the underlying technology itself under control-covering technical documents, licensing, remote support, and maintenance for production lines.
Humanitarian shipments are exempt, but exporters must notify officials after the fact. Applications tied to military end use, weapons programs, or entities already on China 's control lists are generally denied.
The simple takeaway: China isn't just policing what leaves its ports; it's asserting a say over how Chinese-linked materials and technology are used anywhere in the world.
That's a big deal because China mines about 70 percent of global rare earths and processes close to 90 percent, and it produces the vast majority of high-performance magnets used in EV motors and wind turbines.
Even a small amount of Chinese content-or reliance on Chinese processing methods-could now trigger a licensing step. Behind the story is a larger contest over chokepoints in high-tech supply chains.
China Tightens Rare-Earth Controls, Raising Global Supply Risks
As the United States and Europe tighten controls on advanced chips, Beijing is leveraging its dominance in rare earths to protect national security, prevent re-exports to sensitive end users, and gain visibility into global flows. It's not an embargo; it's bureaucracy with bite.
What this means for readers: manufacturers and traders face new compliance, potential delays, and pressure to audit where Chinese materials and know-how appear in their products.
For countries building out EVs and wind power, costs and timelines could rise in the near term-while the incentive grows to diversify supply and develop local processing. The bottleneck just narrowed, and everyone downstream will feel it.

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Most popular stories
Market Research

- Pepeto Presale Exceeds $6.93 Million Staking And Exchange Demo Released
- Citadel Launches Suiball, The First Sui-Native Hardware Wallet
- Luminadata Unveils GAAP & SOX-Trained AI Agents Achieving 99.8% Reconciliation Accuracy
- Tradesta Becomes The First Perpetuals Exchange To Launch Equities On Avalanche
- Thinkmarkets Adds Synthetic Indices To Its Product Offering
- Edgen Launches Multi‐Agent Intelligence Upgrade To Unify Crypto And Equity Analysis
Comments
No comment