Highlights
- Shenghe Resources held strategic talks with Chengdu Institute of Multipurpose Utilization of Mineral Resources on Feb 25, focusing on efficient utilization of strategic minerals, green beneficiation technologies, and overseas resource evaluation.
- The collaboration centers on Shenghe's five-year development strategy emphasizing green, low-carbon resource utilization while upgrading rare earth and zirconium-titanium industrial chains with state-backed technical support.
- This partnership signals structured coordination between China's industrial operators and research institutions, accelerating technology transfer for complex ore processing and reinforcing China's competitiveness in strategic mineral value chains.
On February 25, Shenghe Resources Holding Co., a major Chinese rare earth and strategic minerals company, sent Vice Chairman and General Manager Huang Ping and senior management to the Chengdu Institute of Multipurpose Utilization of Mineral Resources for a formal New Year strategic exchange.
Chengdu, China

While presented as a courtesy visit, the discussions were substantive. The two sides focused on efficient utilization of strategic mineral resources, green beneficiation technologies, compliance management, and overseas resource evaluation — all core themes in China’s current industrial policy framework.

Huang emphasized that Shenghe is actively upgrading its rare earth and zirconium-titanium industrial chains and is seeking technical support in processing complex ores and conducting integrated assessments of overseas resources. The company’s next five-year development strategy centers on “green, low-carbon, and high-efficiency resource utilization,” reflecting Beijing’s emphasis on environmental performance alongside industrial scale.
The Chengdu institute — a leading state research body in mineral processing, metallurgical technology, and ecological mine restoration — outlined recent progress in rare earth and zirconium-hafnium resource evaluation and high-efficiency separation technologies. Both sides agreed to deepen cooperation across compliance systems, talent development, laboratory construction, key technical problem-solving, and commercialization of research.

For Western markets, the significance lies in coordination. Shenghe is already globally active, with overseas resource exposure and downstream integration capabilities. Closer alignment with a top research institute suggests accelerated technology transfer from laboratory to industrial application — particularly in difficult-to-process ores and recovery optimization.
This announcement does not detail a specific technological breakthrough.Rather, it signals structured collaboration between China’sindustrial operators and state-backed research institutions — reinforcing technical depth and long-term competitiveness in strategic minerals.
Profile
The Chengdu Institute of Multipurpose Utilization of Mineral Resources (IMUMR), (opens in a new tab) based in Chengdu, Sichuan (610041), is a leading Chinese state research institution operating under the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences (CAGS) and the China Geological Survey (CGS), both overseen by the Ministry of Natural Resources. The institute specializes in the comprehensive utilization, beneficiation, and technological advancement of strategic mineral resources, with particular focus on rare earth elements, vanadium-titanium magnetite, scandium recovery, zirconium-hafnium systems, and the valorization of mineral tailings.IMUMR conducts applied research in mineral processing, extractionmetallurgy, resource evaluation, geochemical analysis (including techniques such as Raman spectroscopy), and geological mapping, serving as a national center for innovation in complex ore beneficiation and green processing technologies. It maintains close ties with industry and has played an incubation or shareholder role in several mining enterprises, including Shenghe Resources, reflecting China’s integrated research-to-industry model. The institute is widely regarded as a technical backbone in China’s strategy to enhance resource efficiency, reduce environmental impact, and strengthen domestic control over critical mineral value chains.
Disclaimer: This report originates from media outlets affiliated with a Chinese state-owned company and reflects official corporate communications. The information should be independently verified and interpreted within the broader context of China’s industrial policy messaging.
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