South Korea Sets Sail in Rare Earth Race-But What’s Below the Surface?

Highlights

  • South Korea’s KIGAM deployed Tamhae 3, a 6,000-ton research vessel, to explore rare earth element deposits in international waters.
  • The six-year Seabed Rare Earth Element Exclusive Exploration Project aims to map potential mineral-rich zones on the Pacific seabed.
  • Current mission is a research initiative, not a commercial mining operation, with significant legal and technological challenges ahead.

In a quiet but geopolitically charged move, South Korea has launched a rare earth exploration mission into the western Pacific. The Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM (opens in a new tab)) has deployed the Tamhae 3, (opens in a new tab) a 6,000-ton deep-sea research vessel, to international waters in search of rare earth element (REE) deposits. This follows earlier domestic trials and marks South Korea’s most assertive foray yet into deep-sea critical mineral prospecting.

What’s Confirmed

The facts check out. Tamhae 3 is a known asset,operated by KIGAM, capable of 3D and 4D seismic surveying. The Seabed Rare Earth Element Exclusive Exploration Project (opens in a new tab), launched in 2024, has now moved into Phase II: mapping potential REE-rich zones on the Pacific seabed. KIGAM confirms this is a six-year initiative focused on high-resolution geophysical mapping and long-term development feasibility.

China and Japan are indeed already active. Japan has conducted pilot REE extraction projects at depths exceeding 5,000 meters, while China holds International Seabed Authority (ISA) exploration contracts. South Korea’s move signals intent to close a strategic gap.

rare earth elements inWestern Pacific ...
Source: Korea.net

Let’s Get Real

The article implies that South Korea is entering a “global competition,” but fails to address the legal, environmental, and economic challenges it will face. It omits the critical fact that while exploration in international waters is permitted, actual commercial exploitation is governed by the International Seabed Authority (ISA) regulations, rules still under negotiation and deeply contested.

The notion that Korea is on the cusp of extraction is premature.

This is a research mission, not a mining operation. There’s no confirmation of viable deposits, let alone readiness for extraction technology. And while the article praises the use of “purely domestic technology,” it does not clarify whether Korea possesses the metallurgical capability to separate REEs at scale, especially heavy rare earths such as dysprosium and terbium.

REEx Bias Meter

  • Dong-A Ilbo Reporting Bias:

    The piece is nationalistic in tone, emphasizing Korea’s independence and strategic positioning. It lacks balance on regulatory challenges and overstates the immediacy of mineral development.

  • Speculative Language Alert:

    Words like “key minerals,” “global competition,” and “strategically important” are not incorrect, but they frame an early-stage survey as a near-term supply breakthrough, which it is not.

Investor Take

For rare earth investors, this is a long-term geopolitical signal, not an immediate commercial event. Korea is entering the deep-sea REE arena—but real investment implications won’t materialize until feasibility, legality, and downstream capabilities catch up.

Discuss more at the REEx Forum (opens in a new tab).

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