Highlights
- Putin's December 1 directive to create a rare earth extraction roadmap contains no new funding, no defined deposits, and repeats promises made since 2019โsignaling political theater rather than industrial capacity.
- Russia claims 28.7 million tonnes of reserves, but the USGS estimates only 3.8 millionโbarely 2% of global reservesโwhile lacking the critical mid-stream processing infrastructure China dominates at 90%+.
- The roadmap focuses on logistics hubs with China and North Korea to bypass sanctions, not technological sovereignty, making Western partnership impossible and self-reliance for allies non-negotiable.
Russian President Vladimir Putinโs latest directiveโto produce a national โrare earth extraction roadmapโ by December 1โmade Western headlines as if Moscow were gearing up to rival Chinaโs dominance. The truth is less cinematic. The order, quietly posted on the Kremlinโs website, contains no new funding, no defined deposits, and no industrial partners. It repeats, almost verbatim, promises made at prior Far Eastern Economic Forums dating back to 2019.
Table of Contents
Russiaโs Natural Resources Ministry touts 28.7 million tonnes of rare-earth reserves across 15 elements. Yet the U.S. Geological Survey places the figure closer to 3.8 million tonnesโa ten-fold gap that speaks volumes about political inflation. Even the higher estimate would represent barely 2 percent of global known reserves. For perspective, Chinaโs Bayan Obo complex in Inner Mongolia processes more rare-earth material annually than Russia has extracted in the last decade combined.
What Putin Really Ordered
Beyond the minerals according to Al Jazeera (opens in a new tab), Putin also instructed his ministers to โdevelop multimodal transport hubsโ at the borders with China and North Koreaโa logistics vision, not an industrial one. The fine print aligns less with technological sovereignty and more with sanctions-bypass architecture: connecting Siberian resource corridors to Chinese and North Korean markets. This is not about breaking dependence on China; it is about deepening it.
The Reuters-based reporting (opens in a new tab) last month implies Russia could partner with the United States on rare-earth projects. That notion is fantastical amid ongoing sanctions and frozen diplomatic channels. U.S. companies cannot finance, equip, or offtake Russian materials without violating multiple layers of trade law. The suggestion borders on misinformation.
The Missing MiddleโProcessing, Not Promises
Even if Moscow could mobilize miners, it lacks mid-stream separation and refining capacityโthe same bottleneck that cripples much of the world outside China. Extracting monazite sands or bastnรคsite ore is trivial compared with the chemical conversion to separated oxides, alloys, and magnets. Russiaโs legacy plants from the Soviet era are obsolete; rebuilding them under sanctions is improbable.
Meanwhile, China still dominates over 90 percent of global REE separation and 95 percent of magnet production. Nothing in the Kremlinโs roadmap changes that equation.
What Matters for Investors
For rare-earth markets, this โroadmapโ is political theatre. It signals intent, not capacity. Moscowโs ambitions may buoy speculative juniors tied toArctic deposits, but without capital, technology transfer, or marketaccess, production remains fantasy. For Washington and its allies, the takeaway is clear: self-reliance remains non-negotiable. The illusion of new supply from sanctioned Russia is not diversificationโit is delusion.
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