China Showcases 162 New Mining Projects in Xinjiang-Includes Rare Earths, Rubidium as Strategic Priorities

Highlights

  • Xinjiang Mining Rights Promotion Conference reveals 162 mining projects spanning critical minerals and metals.
  • China strategically explores domestic rare metal sources, including a specific rubidium project to enhance technological capabilities.
  • The province of Xinjiang emerges as a key resource hub with 154 identified minerals.
  • Reinforcing Beijing’s goal of de-risking foreign supply dependencies.

In a major signal of China’s continued push for resource security, the Xinjiang Mining Rights Promotion Conference (opens in a new tab)—held June 12 in Urumqi—unveiled 162 mining projects for public offering. The showcased projects span oil and gas, coal, copper, gold, and key strategic minerals, with selections based on favorable geology and high exploration potential.

Of particular note to global observers: among the 135 metallic mineral projects, one is dedicated to rare metals—specifically rubidium—a critical material in advanced electronics and military applications. Although only a single rare earth-related project was listed, its inclusion underscores China’s strategic intent to explore deeper domestic sources beyond the dominant sites, such as Bayan Obo and Sichuan. Additionally, 54 copper-nickel, 47 gold-silver, and 26 iron projects (including vanadium-titanium deposits) round out the list, offering broad metallurgical potential.

Xinjiang is increasingly positioned as a cornerstone of China’s national resource strategy. With 154 different minerals identified and 103 deposits confirmed to date, the province is emerging as both an energy stronghold and a critical minerals hub. This announcement reinforces Beijing’s dual goals: de-risk foreign supply exposure and assert dominance across the full mineral value chain.

Implications for the West

As the U.S. and its allies scramble to secure non-Chinese critical mineral supply chains, China is accelerating exploration at home, even in frontier regions. The inclusion of rubidium and strategic metals in Xinjiang suggests that China is preparing for a new era of high-tech material competition. Western governments and private developers will need to expedite permitting, exploration, and downstream processing investments if they hope to remain competitive.

Source: Asia Metal News, June 13, 2025

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