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Rare Earths, Real Power: China's Leverage, Brazil's Opening, Vietnam's Promise
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Rare earths are the quiet hardware of modern life-inside EV motors, wind turbines, smartphones, medical devices, and defense systems.
The story behind the story is that the real power isn't in the mines. It's in the chemistry labs and factories that separate elements and make high-performance magnets.
That is where supply chains concentrate, and where politics can pinch. China still runs the table on the hardest steps, handling close to nine in ten tons of global processing and a dominant share of magnet manufacturing.
Tighter export licensing has turned technical leadership into market leverage. For companies abroad, that means prices and delivery schedules can move with policy, not just demand.
Brazil is the new variable outsiders should watch. It holds roughly 21 million tons of reserves and restarted production in 2024 at Serra Verde in Goiás, designed for about 5,000 tons a year in its first phase and backed in 2025 by a major international loan to scale.
If the country keeps rules clear, permits predictable, and partnerships open, it can grow beyond exporting concentrates into the higher-value steps-separation and magnet inputs-that lock in jobs and know-how.
Stable, execution-first governance would make Brazil a credible second pillar for the West. Vietnam's deposits are meaningful but the numbers are often misunderstood. The most current reserve estimate is about 3.5 million tons, and production remains small.
After high-profile delays and clean-ups, the path forward is straightforward: attract partners who bring proven processing technology, and keep the rules steady enough for long-term capital to commit.
The United States is rebuilding capacity: more ore from Mountain Pass, plus first steps into separated metals and trial magnet output in Texas. The bottleneck is magnets at scale. That will turn on private offtake deals and streamlined, science-based permitting.
For expats and foreign investors, the takeaway is simple. Diversification is happening-but only where property rights are strong, contracts hold, and industry runs on competence over ideology.
Watch Brazil's ramp, Vietnam's partnerships, and U.S. magnet factories. The winners will be the places that favor open markets, predictable rules, and factories that deliver on time, every time.
The story behind the story is that the real power isn't in the mines. It's in the chemistry labs and factories that separate elements and make high-performance magnets.
That is where supply chains concentrate, and where politics can pinch. China still runs the table on the hardest steps, handling close to nine in ten tons of global processing and a dominant share of magnet manufacturing.
Tighter export licensing has turned technical leadership into market leverage. For companies abroad, that means prices and delivery schedules can move with policy, not just demand.
Brazil is the new variable outsiders should watch. It holds roughly 21 million tons of reserves and restarted production in 2024 at Serra Verde in Goiás, designed for about 5,000 tons a year in its first phase and backed in 2025 by a major international loan to scale.
If the country keeps rules clear, permits predictable, and partnerships open, it can grow beyond exporting concentrates into the higher-value steps-separation and magnet inputs-that lock in jobs and know-how.
Stable, execution-first governance would make Brazil a credible second pillar for the West. Vietnam's deposits are meaningful but the numbers are often misunderstood. The most current reserve estimate is about 3.5 million tons, and production remains small.
After high-profile delays and clean-ups, the path forward is straightforward: attract partners who bring proven processing technology, and keep the rules steady enough for long-term capital to commit.
The United States is rebuilding capacity: more ore from Mountain Pass, plus first steps into separated metals and trial magnet output in Texas. The bottleneck is magnets at scale. That will turn on private offtake deals and streamlined, science-based permitting.
For expats and foreign investors, the takeaway is simple. Diversification is happening-but only where property rights are strong, contracts hold, and industry runs on competence over ideology.
Watch Brazil's ramp, Vietnam's partnerships, and U.S. magnet factories. The winners will be the places that favor open markets, predictable rules, and factories that deliver on time, every time.
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