Highlights
- Ford CEO Jim Farley confirms factory shutdown caused by rare earth material import challenges from China.
- Nearly 90% of U.S. refined rare earth imports come from China, creating significant manufacturing dependency.
- The incident highlights the urgent need for domestic rare earth production and diversified international supply strategies.
In a striking admission of industrial vulnerability, Ford Motor Company CEO Jim Farley confirmed that a shortage of rare earth elements, triggered by tightened Chinese export controls, forced the automaker to temporarily shut down a factory in May. The revelation underscores Beijing’s enduring leverage over global supply chains and the fragility of U.S. manufacturing in the face of strategic mineral dependencies. Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) reported on this unfolding situation, but the disclosure from the company’s CEO further underscores the critical need for the United States, along with its allies, to develop a rare earth industry industrial policy.
Speaking to Bloomberg TV (opens in a new tab), Farley described the situation as “hand-to-mouth,” revealing that Ford has struggled to secure licenses from China’s Ministry of Commerce to import essential rare earth materials. “We have had to shut down factories,” he said. “It’s day to day.” Rare earths are indispensable for a wide range of applications, including electric motors, audio systems, seatbelts, and windshield wipers.
The disruption follows China’s April 2025 escalation of export controls on rare earths—ostensibly in retaliation for U.S. tariffs—requiring cumbersome application processes that have delayed shipments to American manufacturers. Ford CFO Sherry House confirmed that the new licensing regime has injected unpredictable delays and administrative uncertainty into parts procurement.
The Ford shutdown is the first major public example of a Western OEM halting production due to Chinese rare earth bottlenecks. It sends a clear warning to governments and industries that rely on just-in-time supply chains for strategic inputs, which are largely controlled by a geopolitical competitor.
Earlier this week, U.S. and Chinese negotiators reached a tentative agreement in London aimed at restoring “regular” rare earth exports. However, applications for export licenses are still being reviewed “one at a time,” Farley said, offering little confidence in future supply reliability.
Policy analysts at the Center for Strategic and International Studies warned that the role of rare earths in the trade talks “underscores the severity of the chokehold Beijing holds on global supply chains.” Nearly 90% of U.S. refined rare earth imports come from China, according to the U.S. Geological Survey and a CBS report (opens in a new tab).
With China’s grip unrelenting and Western production years behind, calls are growing louder for accelerated investment in domestic refining, recycling, and processing capacity. The Ford incident may be the first major casualty—but it won’t be the last.
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