Highlights
- China has begun filming Light of Rare Earths, a state-backed documentary designed to control the narrative around rare earth supply chains and position them as foundational to Chinaโs technological civilization.
- The documentary reinforces Baotouโs strategic position as the โWorld Capital of Rare Earthsโ and ties rare earth development to Chinaโs 15th Five-Year Plan industrial ambitions.
- Beyond mining capacity, China is leveraging soft power through storytelling, AI-generated historical reconstructions, and workforce prestige to secure industrial legitimacy and long-term technological leadership.
China is not only consolidating rare earth supply chains. It is increasingly shaping the narrative around them. According to Chinese state-affiliated media, filming has officially begun on a new documentary titled Light of Rare Earths (โ__็จๅไนๅ __โ), a major state-supported cultural production focused on the history, strategic importance, and future of Chinaโs rare earth industry. The project is centered in Baotouโoften branded domestically as the โWorld Capital of Rare Earths.โ
The documentary is being produced with involvement from China Media Group (CCTV), the Inner Mongolia regional broadcasting authority, Baotou municipal propaganda officials, and representatives from Baogang Group.
Rare Earths as National Storytelling
The messaging is notable.
Chinese officials described the documentary as both an industrial and cultural mission designed to โtell Chinaโs rare earth storyโ and communicate the strategic value of rare earths to the public. The production reportedly traces rare earths from obscure mining origins to their role in advanced technology sectors, including EVs, permanent magnets, consumer electronics, hydrogen technologies, and high-end manufacturing.
The documentary repeatedly refers to rare earths as โindustrial vitaminsโโa phrase increasingly common in Chinese industrial messaging and now spreading more broadly into global supply-chain discourse. Importantly, the project also appears designed to humanize and nationalize the industry, emphasizing generations of โrare earth workersโ who contributed to Chinaโs industrial rise through scientific research, exploration, and state-backed industrial development.
Baotou Reinforces Its Strategic Position
The documentary strongly reinforces Baotouโs central role within Chinaโs industrial policy framework. Officials highlighted Baotouโs role as one of the birthplaces of Chinaโs modern rare-earth industry, noting that the city produced Chinaโs first batch of rare-earth ferrosilicon alloy in 1959. The region remains home to the giant Bayan Obo Mine deposit, widely considered one of the worldโs most strategically important rare earth resources.
The report also tied the documentary to Chinaโs current โ15th Five-Year Planโ era industrial ambitions, including efforts to strengthen the countryโs โtwo rare earth basesโโlanguage generally associated with expanding both upstream resource control and downstream advanced manufacturing clusters.
Soft Power Meets Industrial Strategy
For Western audiences, the documentary itself may appear symbolic. But the broader implication is strategic. China increasingly appears to understand that rare earth dominance is not merely about mining or processing capacity. It is also about narrative control, industrial legitimacy, workforce prestige, public support, and long-term national identity tied to technological leadership. The planned use of AI-generated historical reconstructions and cinematic storytelling techniques suggests Beijing wants rare earths viewed not as obscure commodities, but as foundational pillars of Chinaโs future technological civilization and industrial sovereignty.
That should not be dismissed lightly.
Disclaimer: This article is based on reporting from Chinese state-affiliated media, including Baotou News and organizations linked to the Chinese government and state-owned enterprise structures. Statements regarding industrial strategy, historical interpretation, production significance, and future development goals should be independently verified.
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