Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

China Signals End To Rare-Earth Curbs On U.S. Industry


(MENAFN- The Arabian Post)

Chinese authorities have agreed to suspend implementation of a new wave of export controls on rare-earth metals and to cease investigations into U. S. semiconductor companies, signalling a de-escalation in trade tensions between the world's two largest economies. According to a White House fact sheet, the measures to be paused were those announced by People's Republic of China in October and would have expanded export licences and extraterritorial jurisdiction on materials such as gallium, germanium, antimony and rare-earth metals.

The United States will respond by delaying additional reciprocal tariffs and halting plans to enforce a threatened 100 per cent tariff on Chinese goods scheduled for November. Under the pact, China will issue general licences for exports of rare-earth elements, gallium, germanium, antimony and graphite“for the benefit of U. S. end users and their suppliers around the world”. This move amounts to a“de facto” removal of controls introduced in April 2025 and October 2022.

Beijing's decision follows an intensive phase of trade negotiations and surveillance of U. S. firms in the semiconductor supply chain. Companies such as Nvidia Corporation had been reported to face scrutiny by Chinese regulators under anti-monopoly and anti-dumping probes. The change therefore removes a significant regulatory overhang for major U. S. high-tech firms.

China's controls had been introduced amid its dominant position in the rare-earth sector: it supplies more than 90 per cent of the world's processed rare-earth materials and magnets, used in electric vehicles, aircraft engines and defence systems. The new rules announced in October expanded the ban list and applied extraterritorially to products made using Chinese technologies.

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Industry watchers warn the suspension may be tactical rather than permanent. The framework allows China to preserve leverage in strategic supply chains while recalibrating its stance. One analysis noted that“while some observers have dismissed the new controls as a bargaining chip...the extraterritorial rules for export controls announced in October are significant”.

For the U. S., this development opens room to ease pressure on strategic industries. The relief on rare-earth supply will bolster manufacturers of magnets, semiconductors and clean-energy technologies that depend on subtle compounds and derivative products vulnerable to licensing delays. The concession also provides a window for the U. S. to take stock of its dependency on China-dominated supply chains.

Nevertheless, the pact leaves unresolved some structural issues. China retains the capacity to enact controls, as the earlier regulations showed that such leverage can be mobilised quickly in future disputes. Moreover, foreign companies still reliant on Chinese input materials or processing may face risk if Beijing decides to reintroduce extraterritorial restrictions.

U. S. officials emphasised that agricultural commitments were part of the broader deal: China pledged to resume large-scale purchases of U. S. soybeans and other farm commodities, and the U. S. extended a tariff exclusion process that had been due to expire. These provisions suggest the agreement is part of a wider trade truce, not solely a rare-earth settlement.

From Beijing's perspective, the decision offers breathing-room ahead of potential high-level talks and helps stabilise a global view of its trade posture. The Chinese Ministry of Commerce had earlier argued that its export controls were driven by“national security” concerns and targeted defence and semiconductor users, rather than broad economic retaliation.

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For global supply chains, the thaw may reduce risk premiums associated with sectors such as electric vehicles, permanent magnets, and advanced computing. Firms that had begun accelerating diversification away from China may now reassess their strategies, though many analysts caution against over-optimism-the integrated nature of rare-earth processing means that dependency cannot be unwound overnight.

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The Arabian Post

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