Highlights
- The United States is significantly behind China in rare earth minerals production, processing, and innovation, controlling less than 2% of the global market by 2030.
- China's strategic advantage stems from decades of state-backed control, massive R&D investments, and nearly 26,000 rare earth element patents.
- To compete, the U.S. must implement a comprehensive four-pillar strategy:
- Massive midstream investment
- Workforce development
- R&D innovation
- Allied integration
Despite a flurry of fresh policy moves, the United States remains perilously behind in the rare earth race. Trump’s 2024 administration has launched executive orders, floated a Section 232 national security action critical minerals, and orchestrated a landmark DoD deal—a 15% equity stake in MP Materials, a $110/kg NdPr floor price, and hundreds of millions toward a state-of-the-art magnet facility. Federal agencies are scrambling for non-China sources. But the critical question remains: Is this enough to catch China in five to seven years?
U.S. Still at the Starting Line
America has just one operating rare earth mine (Mountain Pass) and virtually no refining infrastructure. In 2019, 98% of its concentrate was exported to China for processing. Trump 2.0 and even the prior Biden’s Defense Production Act initiatives added hundreds of millions in financing, yet projections remain grim: by 2030, the U.S. may hold just 1.6–2% of the global critical minerals market, while China will command roughly 31%. Specific rare earth refining market percentages are difficult to pinpoint with accuracy within five years, but China controls about 85-90% now; over 98% for heavy rare earth element processing.
True, MP Materials also signed a half-billion-dollar magnet recycling deal with Apple, but the years it will take to ramp up won’t shield the U.S. from looming trade wars or continued reliance on China. Only a comprehensive, well-designed industrial policy placed at the center of Trump’s agenda can change that trajectory.
China’s End-to-End Advantage
China is no minor rival—it controls 85–90% of REE refining and magnet production, producing nearly 70% of rare earths globally. Beijing’s success stems from decades of state-backed control, consolidation of producers, and massive downstream R&D investments. The result is an explosive surge in rare earth innovation: between 1950–2019, China filed nearly 26,000 REE patents, dwarfing the U.S. (9,800) and Japan (13,900). This innovation edge—coupled with production dominance—is more threatening than raw resource control. China even weaponized its leverage with export restrictions (e.g., Japan in 2010, restrictions on heavy REEs in 2023–24).
Allies Are Building Their Playbooks
- Australia & Japan: Government financing turned Lynas into the top non-China refiner.
- Canada: Its 2022 Critical Minerals Strategy spans mining to EV battery supply.
- EU: The Critical Raw Materials Act mandates extraction, recycling, and stockpiling.
- South Korea: Flagged 33 minerals as strategic and ramped up stockpiles and recycling.
- India & Africa: Building partnerships via Quad and MSP frameworks.
Lesson: fragmented efforts won’t do. An integrated industrial strategy across the value chain is essential.
From Tariffs to Teamwork
Trump’s initial tariff broadside—10% on dozens of countries, including allies—backfired. It provoked retaliation, legal blowback, and cultivated a “trust deficit” with key partners. But momentum is turning: the 2025 Quad Critical Minerals Initiative, the Minerals Security Partnership (14 nations), and G7 minerals coordination are prioritizing cooperation over confrontation.
A Road Map for America
To treat rare earths as a Sputnik moment, the U.S. must commit to four pillars:
Massive Investment in Midstream & Downstream
Hundreds of billions for refining, alloy production, and magnet manufacturing. Public-private partnerships, incentives, and offtake guarantees are essential. The DoD–MP deal is just the start.
Workforce Development
By 2029, 220,000 mining workers will retire, and metallurgy programs are shrinking. Scholarships, loan forgiveness, training centers, and visa pathways must scale expertise fourfold. Rare Earth Exchanges has launched a talent development and matching service. We are excited about this ,but mass government support is necessary.
R&D and Innovation
Leapfrog with new alloys, separation techniques, and recycling, not to mention downstream disruption in verticals such as defense, electrification, and life sciences. Back innovation in labs, universities, and startups to compete with China’s patent-driven lead.
Allied Integration
Build a global rare earth alliance with Canada, Australia, Japan, Korea, India, and African producers. Joint ventures, shared processing infrastructure, and defense procurement requirements can anchor resilience. We must not become solely nationalist---this is not America First.
The Choice: Now or Never
Trump’s 2.0– efforts are historic: equity stakes, price floors, policy tools, and strategic supply shopping. But without a coherent, full-spectrum industrial strategy, America will still trail China—especially in innovation, not just mining—by a great deal even by 2030. The clock is ticking: invest, innovate, integrate—or risk permanent dependency.
Sources
- IEA/Council on Foreign Relations projections: U.S. <2% vs. China ~31% share in 2030.
- China’s refining and production dominance (85–90%). See REEx.
- Patent filings: China (26,000) vs. U.S. (9,800), Japan (~13,900). See REEx.
- Quad & MSP initiatives, tariff “trust deficit,” and strategic policy shifts. Council on Foreign Relations and AP News
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