Highlights
- Baogang Group and Keshiketeng Banner officials strengthen strategic cooperation in mineral resource development.
- Chairman Meng Fanying pledges alignment with national and regional resource exploration goals.
- Meeting signals China's integrated approach to securing critical mineral supply chains through public-private coordination.
In a meeting held on July 31, 2025, Baogang Group Chairman and Party Secretary Meng Fanying met with senior officials from Keshiketeng Banner, a key mining jurisdiction in Inner Mongolia, to deepen strategic cooperation (opens in a new tab) in mineral resource development and regional integration.
Meng expressed Baogangโs gratitude for the local governmentโs longstanding support, particularly in relation to Huanggang Mining, one of Chinaโs major rare earth mining operations. She emphasized Baogangโs alignment with Inner Mongoliaโs โFive Key Tasksโ policy agenda and reaffirmed the companyโs commitment to Chinaโs national mineral exploration and strategic resource security initiatives.
Local Growth, National Interests
Crucially, Meng pledged to enhance collaboration with local authorities to improve Huanggangโs long-term mineral resource continuity and compliance with regional mandates. She framed Baogangโs ambitions as contributing not just to its own high-quality growth, but also to national development priorities and Inner Mongoliaโs broader socioeconomic agendaโa clear nod to Beijingโs push for resource-based industrial modernization.
Keshiketeng Banner Party Secretary Zhou Jingmin welcomed the delegation and praised the role of Huanggang Mining as a cornerstone of the local economy. He credited Baogangโs investment and management with accelerating โsynchronized and deeply integratedโ development between the enterprise and the region. Zhou pledged continued government support for Baogang and Huanggang, promising a favorable business environment and high-quality administrative services.
Tightening Strategic Alignment
This meeting signals tightening strategic alignment between Chinaโs top rare earth mining SOEs and local governments, reinforcing Beijingโs intent to secure resource access through vertically integrated public-private models. For the U.S. and its allies, itโs another reminder that Chinaโs rare earth dominance is built not just on geologyโbut on political coordination, long-term planning, and unified execution.
MissionโMaintain Dominance
With Keshiketeng Banner home to one of the worldโs richest ionic clay rare earth deposits, continued cooperation between Baogang and local authorities could further entrench Chinaโs upstream control of critical minerals used in clean energy, defense, and advanced manufacturing.
Key takeaway: Baogang isnโt just mining rare earthsโitโs locking in supply security through tight party-government-enterprise integration, a model the West has yet to emulate at scale.
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