The Great Mineral Lockdown: Export Controls Surge as the World Fails to Break China’s Grip

Apr 28, 2026

Highlights

  • Export restrictions on critical minerals have increased fivefold since 2009, with 45% of rare earth exports now facing controls as countries weaponize resource access.
  • Despite diversification efforts, China maintains dominance with 70% of rare earth production and 90% of processing capacity, while global dependence remains intact.
  • Supply chains are fragmenting as more nations use export controls strategically, creating a new normal where resource access is negotiated and geopolitically conditional.

A new OECD analysis shows export restrictions on critical mineralsโ€”especially rare earthsโ€”have surged fivefold since 2009. Despite years of warnings and policy efforts, global dependence on China remains largely intact, while more countries are now weaponizing resource control. The result: a more fragmented, less predictable supply chain with rising geopolitical risk for investors.

The Quiet Surge No One Stopped

The world saw the risk. It did not act fast enough. As cited by FT (opens in a new tab) and other media, a new OECD-backed analysis reveals that export restrictions on critical mineralsโ€”key inputs for defense, electric vehicles, and advanced technologyโ€”have increased fivefold since 2009. For a general reader: more countries are limiting who can buy their resources, and under what conditions, making global supply chains less reliable.

China remains central, producing roughly 70% of rare earths and over 90% of key processed materials. And despite years of diversification talk, the world is still deeply dependent.

Chokepoints Are Not Bugsโ€”Theyโ€™re Features

The data aligns with what supply chain insiders already know in the Global Powers Era 2.0 trajectory.

Rare earth dominance is not just about miningโ€”itโ€™s about processing, separation, and control of flows. Export restrictions, quotas, and licensing systems are tools of strategy, not accidents.

The OECD highlights that:

  • ~45% of rare earth exports face restrictions
  • Up to 70% for minerals like cobalt and manganese

This is not tightening. It is systemic control expanding outward.

The Missing Chapter: Power, Not Just Policy

The framing leans technocratic. The reality is geopolitical.

The article underplays a critical truth: export controls are increasingly used as strategic leverage, not just economic management. Chinaโ€™s past actionsโ€”cutting off rare earth supply to Japan and later pressuring Western manufacturersโ€”demonstrate this clearly.

There is also limited discussion of:

  • Heavy rare earth bottlenecks (dysprosium, terbium)
  • The separation gap outside China
  • The slow paceโ€”and fragilityโ€”of Western industrial policy

This omission matters. Investors are not buying policyโ€”they are buying execution risk.

The Investorโ€™s Reality: Fragmentation Is the New Normal

The takeaway is stark.

Supply chains are not stabilizingโ€”they are splintering. More countries are restricting exports. Recycling streams are being captured domestically. Trade is becoming conditional, political, and increasingly opaque.

For _Rare Earth Exchanges_โ„ข readers:

  • Dependency is declining slowly, but control is concentrating
  • The real bottleneck remains midstream separation capacity
  • Export restrictions are now a permanent feature, not a temporary risk

In the new resource economy in a new era, access is negotiated.

Control is enforced.

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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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Export restrictions on critical minerals have surged fivefold since 2009, fragmenting supply chains and escalating geopolitical risk. (read full article...)

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