From Monopoly to Multipolar? The Rare Earth Power Struggle

Sep 10, 2025

panel of people sitting at a table in front of a projector screen discussing the critical minerals supply chain

Highlights

  • China controls roughly 70% of global rare earth minerals, with significant strategic implications for defense, energy, and technology sectors.
  • Environmental regulations and historical market shifts have reshaped rare earth mineral production, with geopolitical tensions driving new supply chain strategies.
  • Investors should monitor evolving global initiatives, technological innovations, and environmental constraints in the critical minerals market.

The Week (opens in a new tab) in India highlights rare earthsโ€™ ubiquity across defense, energy, and consumer technologyโ€”from fighter jets to EVs. The historical dominance of the Mountain Pass mine until the late 1980s, its eventual decline due to environmental infractions, and Chinaโ€™s rise to global dominance are well-established facts. The market share estimatesโ€”China at roughly 70%, the U.S. around 10%, Myanmar in the single digitsโ€”align broadly with current data, though exact percentages fluctuate by segment (mining vs. separation vs. magnets).

Where the Story Tilts

The speaker, retired Lt. Gen. C.A. Krishnan, offers a military-security lens that frames Chinaโ€™s dominance almost exclusively as a result of strategic intent. While true that Beijing pursued long-term policy advantages, the article glosses over economic realities: lower costs, lighter regulation, and sustained state subsidies made China the natural consolidator. The narrative that the Magnequench acquisition singlehandedly shifted U.S. magnet dominance is partly accurate but oversimplified; U.S. industry had already underinvested in this space.

Lt. Gen C.A. Krishnan

Source: Indus International Research Foundation

Whatโ€™s Left Out

Environmental concerns are painted as an American weakness, yet no mention is made of Chinaโ€™s severe ecological degradation from rare earth mining in Jiangxi and Inner Mongolia. Investors should note that Chinaโ€™s current environmental clampdowns, particularly in Jiangxiโ€™s ionic clay regions, could tighten supply furtherโ€”something absent in this account.

The Subtext: Bias and Strategic Framing

The session was hosted in Bengaluru with clear subcurrents of Indian strategic anxiety. Indiaโ€™s inclusion of 30 minerals on its โ€œcriticalโ€ list is accurate, but the framing here steers toward advocating joint global approachesโ€”implicitly urging Indiaโ€™s deeper participation in rare earth alliances. The omission of Western initiativesโ€”such as U.S. Department of Defense loans, EU-backed refineries, or Japanโ€™s recycling breakthroughsโ€”presents a one-sided picture where China is unassailable.

Investor Takeaway

The piece succeeds in underlining rare earthsโ€™ centrality to energy transition and defense, but it carries the unmistakable fingerprints of a security narrativeโ€”casting China as a calculated monopolist while underplaying Western responses and Chinaโ€™s own vulnerabilities. We must remember that government and corporate elites outsourced this business for decades with no complaints. ย For investors, the key is nuance: yes, China remains dominant, but supply chains are slowly diversifying, and environmental, technological, and recycling trends will shape where value pools emerge.

Citation: The Week, (opens in a new tab) covering remarks by Lt. Gen. C.A. Krishnan during a Bengaluru session on rare earths and critical minerals.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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