New Patent Review Reveals China’s Rare Earth Edge, Rising Tech Race in Extraction Innovation

Highlights

  • China leads global rare earth element patent activity with significant state support and technological breakthroughs.
  • Other nations like Japan, US, and Russia are making strategic advances in green extraction and process optimization.
  • The study emphasizes the importance of intellectual property and cross-border collaboration in securing REE supply chains.

A recent peer-reviewed study published in Monatshefte für Chemie (opens in a new tab) (July 23, 2025) delivers a sharp assessment of the global patent landscape in rare earth element (REE) extraction. The paper, authored by Nurul Ain Ismail and Siti Nor Amanina Said, confirms China’s overwhelming lead in REE patent activity—fueled by strong state support and breakthroughs in hydrometallurgy and separation science.

The review maps a rapidly evolving field, spotlighting key patent trends across China, the U.S., Japan, and Russia. While China dominates in volume and application diversity, other nations are making strides in areas such as green extraction methods, high-purity separation, and waste minimization. Japan, notably, excels in sensor-based process optimization; the U.S. and Russia show strength in cleaner extraction reagents and device design.

Despite this momentum, the study warns of innovation gaps in newer subfields, such as bioleaching and advanced solvent systems—suggesting the industry has room to grow in aligning technology with sustainability goals.

For investors and policymakers, the message is clear: securing REE supply chains will depend not only on mine development but also on control of intellectual property and extraction expertise. The authors urge greater cross-border collaboration, increased R&D investment, and a robust IP strategy to ensure long-term resilience.

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