Highlights
- Sarawak Premier announces a complete ban on rare earth exports, declaring REE as strategic assets that must fuel domestic technology manufacturing instead of foreign economies.
- The policy mirrors China's protectionist approach but faces a critical infrastructure gap—Malaysia lacks domestic refining capabilities at scale to process REE.
- This resource nationalism pivot joins a regional trend, tightening Southeast Asia's REE supply while signaling opportunity for technology-transfer partnerships.
In a bold declaration (opens in a new tab) with far-reaching implications, Sarawak Premier Tan Sri Abang Johari Tun Openg (opens in a new tab) announced that the Malaysian state will not export its rare earth elements (REE). Speaking during the National Environment Day celebration in Sematan, Abang Johari underscored that these minerals are “strategic components” that must drive domestic value-added industries—not foreign economies. His message was unmistakable: Sarawak intends to emulate China’s protectionist model, keeping REE at home to fuel local technology manufacturing rather than shipping raw concentrates abroad.
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This policy marks a decisive pivot for Malaysia’s eastern state, which holds part of the country’s RM809.6 billion in potential REE resources. Investors eyeing Malaysian rare earths, particularly firms with partial American ownership now entering the market, will find this stance a sobering reminder that access is no longer guaranteed unless they have some way of weaving into the fabric of the national and state economies and the mining ecosystem.
From Resource Extraction to Local Innovation
Abang Johari’s argument is economically sound—and politically strategic. Malaysia has watched China’s decades-long playbook: retain REE, develop refining and manufacturing capabilities, and dominate global magnet and battery markets. Sarawak now wants to follow suit.
“We possess these resources, but we will not export them,” the Premier said, linking REE stewardship to sustainable technology manufacturing. The move aligns with Sarawak’s broader environmental vision, including an upcoming Bill on waste management aimed at converting industrial waste into economic resources. The messaging was clear: development, yes—but not at the expense of sovereignty or environmental integrity.
Reality Check: Malaysia’s Refining Gap
While the policy sounds visionary, Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) notes a critical gap—Malaysia lacks domestic refining infrastructure at scale. Sarawak’s ambition to capture value downstream will require billions in capital investment, advanced processing technology, and strict regulatory oversight to prevent the kind of environmental backlash that crippled past REE projects in Peninsular Malaysia.
Without partnerships that transfer both technology and know-how, the no-export stance risks leaving REE locked in the ground.
Still, this is no idle rhetoric. By framing REE as strategic assets, Sarawak joins a growing list of governments—Indonesia, Myanmar, and China among them—redefining “resource nationalism” for the green economy era. And China has announced that it might be open to exporting rare earth element technology to Malaysia.
The Calm Beneath the Headline
For the rare earth supply chain, this is both a warning and an opportunity. Malaysia’s move ostensibly tightens Southeast Asia’s REE export window but hints at a new industrial awakening—one where nations insist on climbing the value chain. The real test will be whether Sarawak can turn its declaration into industry capacity, not just political capital.
Source: Bernama, Oct. 29, 2025.
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