Highlights
- China Northern Rare Earth Group hosted a party celebration emphasizing loyalty and national strategic planning.
- Company leadership highlighted the connection between corporate performance and communist party objectives.
- The event underscores the strategic importance of rare earth production in China’s geopolitical landscape.
On July 2, 2025, China Northern Rare Earth Group, the world’s largest producer of light rare earths, held a grand celebration marking the 104th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The event doubled as a high-profile awards ceremony for top-performing Party members, workers, and propaganda cadres.
According to state-run announcements, the meeting began with the playing of the Chinese national anthem and a collective recitation of Party oaths. Liu Peixun, Chairman and Party Secretary of Northern Rare Earth and senior Baogang (Baotou Steel) executive delivered a keynote urging cadres to “draw strength from the Party’s revolutionary history, Baogang’s construction legacy, and the rare earth sector’s development.”
Liu emphasized the need for unwavering loyalty to the Party, strict organizational discipline, and service to China’s national strategies—including execution of the “14th Five-Year Plan” and planning for the “15th Five-Year Plan.”
Several workers and Party units received awards for excellence in political work, ideological promotion, ethnic unity, and frontline production. A new corporate-published book, Light of Rare Earth: Interviews with Industry Exemplars, was launched and ceremonially distributed to work units.
Why This Matters to the West
Northern Rare Earth is not just a mining company—it is a strategic extension of the Chinese state. Events like this underscore that China’s rare earth supply chain is deeply intertwined with Party loyalty, national planning, and propaganda, rather than being driven solely by market dynamics.
The U.S. and its allies should note that Northern Rare Earth is openly aligning its operations with China’s geopolitical and industrial goals, including the development of the “two rare earth bases” (processing and innovation). This may further entrench China’s export leverage at a time when the West seeks to diversify.
Key Unanswered Questions:
- How will these ideological commitments affect corporate governance, innovation agility, or commercial responsiveness at Northern Rare Earth?
- Is the emphasis on “fighting spirit” and “political discipline” a signal of coming assertiveness in rare earth pricing or export policy?
- Will increased propaganda investment obscure market transparency or environmental performance metrics?
Source: (Northern Rare Earth Group), via official Party media release (opens in a new tab)
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