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China snubs Western complaints, restricts rare earth exports again

By | January 9, 2013, 5:28 AM PST

The biggest company you probably didn't know you do business with. China's Baogang Group owns Baotou Steel Rare-Earth, the country's largest rare earth producer. Rare earths are vital to your gadgets, computer, cars and much more. China owns the market.

World Trade Organization probe? What World Trade Organization probe?

Last July, the WTO opened an investigation into whether China is unfairly restricting the export of rare earth metals - the substances vital not only to your iPod and smartphone, but also to so many other important things, from missiles to cars to wind turbines to light bulbs.

So how has China responded?

In the quiet of the Western world’s Christmas holiday, it blew a raspberry, tightening export restrictions once again.

“China, the world’s biggest rare earths supplier, cut the first-batch export quota for next year by 27 percent as overseas demand for the elements waned,” Bloomberg News reported in the Taipei Times on Dec. 29.

China’s Ministry of Commerce sets rare earth export limits twice a year. It pegged the first allotment for 2013 at 15,501 tonnes, down from 21,226 tonnes for 2012’s first setting.

To be fair, China had loosened restrictions last August, soon after the WTO began its investigation after the U.S., European Union and Japan complained about Chinese limits and tariffs on the metals. The 9,700 tonnes that China allowed in 2012’s second half brought the full-year limit to a three-year high of 30,996 tonnes, Bloomberg noted.

RARE DOMINANCE

For historical reasons including a disregard for environmental concerns in toxic rare earth mining and processing procedures, China controls about 95 percent of the world’s rare earth market.

Change is afoot in the industry. As Bloomberg noted, one of the reasons China curtailed exports is that worldwide demand has dropped off. You can probably attribute that to the sluggish global economy. Also, companies in Japan and elsewhere are finding ways to reduce their reliance on rare earths. And Western companies like Molycorp in the U.S. have started up rare earth operations, although Molycorp has faced criticism for selling to China rather than to the U.S.

With demand down, prices have fallen. China is not only limiting exports, but it has also limited production - all of which should choke supply and in the rules of supply and demand, help lift prices.

China has also started a massive consolidation of its rare earth industry, led by Baotou Steel Rare-Earth. It says it is doing this for among other reasons, to assert more control over cleaner industrial practices. With China’s central planning prowess, it should also give it greater ability to control the global market that it already dominates.

This year will be a busy one for rare earth developments in China and internationally. Rare earths are of double importance to the economy, not only for their direct use in products, but also because they occur in minerals that  contain thorium and uranium, two nuclear fuels that could help move the world off of CO2- emitting hydrocarbons.

Stay tuned for more stories about them soon on SmartPlanet.

Image from Baogang Group website.

Rare earth stories are not so rare on SmartPlanet:

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Mark Halper

About Mark Halper

Mark Halper is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Mark Halper

Mark Halper

Contributing Editor

Mark Halper has written for TIME, Fortune, Financial Times, the UK's Independent on Sunday, Forbes, New York Times, Wired, Variety and The Guardian. He is based in Bristol, U.K.

Follow him on Twitter.

Mark Halper

Mark Halper

Mark has no financial holdings in the companies he writes about. He occasionally travels at the expense of companies or their press relations agencies in order to report on a company or industry event related to it; Mark will prominently disclose this information when appropriate. This relationship will have no influence on his coverage. Companies he covers do not get to review columns in advance, or select or reject topics.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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0 Votes
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Chinese products
So how long will the USA continues to put up with all the issues of giving china all of our manufacturing? Its time we move all manufacturing back to the United States and end the unemployment here.
Quality not quanity of junk piles should be on our agenda. Chinese products such as cell phones, TV's, computers etc don't last a year. You can't tell me they are designed to last any longer. Viruses that ruin millions of computers a week ? Its 2013 we should be virus free. kitchen applicances your lucky to get 5 years out of them in the not so far past they lasted a life time, made right here in the good ol USA.
Americanize yourselves people....
Posted by jpwalkerjr
9th Jan
0 Votes
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Rules
Seems that the Chinese are insisting on NOT playing by the rules.
As far as I'm concerned, it's now open season for the West to start to pick and choose what we we sell them.
Enough already !
Posted by da philster
9th Jan
+2 Votes
+ -
Now that we've allowed ourselves to become a debtor nation...
...and yet still retain our desire to spend beyond our means, there really isn't much we can do about this.

You were warned.
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
9th Jan
0 Votes
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According to the article,
China last year exported some 30 996 tonnes of so-called rare earths (which are not at all that rare, just expensive in both financial and environmental terms to mine) - a three year high, we are told. Allotments for the first half of this year have been set at 15 501 tonnes ; presumably, if demand picks up and these products can be sold at profitable prices, a similar allotment will be granted for the second half of the year, which would bring the total to something similar to or slightly exceeding that of this year. Where, then, is the beef, Mr Halper ? Rare earths are widely found throughout the world, not least in the United States ; why then should the Chinese, in a situation with falling demand and falling prices, continue to mine these minerals, with all the concommitant harm that such mining does to the environment in China, simply to build up a surplus which would further depress prices ? Would you recommend such a course for any other business, Mr Halper, in any other country, or is it merely China that is the object of your particular concern ?...

Henri
Posted by mhenriday
9th Jan
+3 Votes
+ -
Because...
...China exports them cheaply. We could easily match China in rare earth production, but we are not willing to pay the environmental costs that the Chinese do not have, knowing all the time that China can flood the market with cheap product at any time.
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
10th Jan
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