Agricultural Automation’s Mineral Achilles’ Heel

Mar 27, 2026

Highlights

  • China controls 90% of rare-earth magnet production and 80%+ of battery materials, creating concentrated supply-chain exposure for autonomous tractors, drones, and robots that depend on these critical minerals.
  • April 2025 export controls on heavy rare earths have already triggered export declines and regional price gaps, with the highest near-term risk to magnet-dense products like agricultural drones and compact field robots.
  • Mitigation options remain limited despite diversification efforts by MP Materials, Lynas, and Neo Performance Materials, leaving investors to favor firms with transparent sourcing tiers and strategic inventory buffers.

Agricultural automation is growing as farms need more reliable work with fewer people. Autonomy depends on motors, magnets, batteries, and chipsโ€”so it depends on critical minerals and rare earth elements (REEs).ย Chinaย dominates key midstream stages for rare-earth magnets and many battery materials, creating export leverage that can ripple into equipment pricing and availability.ย 

Executive Summary

Rare Earth Exchangesโ„ข reports numerous estimates suggesting China held about 60% of 2024 mining for magnet REEs (Nd, Pr, Dy, Tb), about 90% of separation/refining, and about 90% of NdFeB magnet manufacturing. In April 2025 China implemented export controls on seven heavy REEs and related magnets, followed by export declines and large non-China price gaps. 

Battery exposure is comparable. China holds 80%+ shares in many battery midstream/downstream segments, including near-monopoly positions (95%+) in some, and it flags graphite anode material as a key vulnerability, with supply options outside China remaining very limited.ย 

The Sectorโ€™s Pull

U.S. Department of Agriculture research on specialty crops frames automation as urgently needed to address labor shortages and rising labor costs.  OECD analysis of AI uptake in European agriculture links adoption to an ageing and shrinking workforce.  Once autonomy enters a fleet, it becomes a multi-year procurement program, so mineral exposure persists.

The Hidden Bill of Materials

โ€œChina-dominatedโ€ here means concentrated Chinese midstream and/or demonstrated export-control leverage. 

Product category (includes sub-systems)Key mineral / REE inputsChina-dominated exposure
Autonomous tractors; motors; actuators; permanent magnetsNdPr + Dy/Tb (NdFeB); CuHigh
Drones/UAVs; battery systems; power electronicsNdPr + Dy/Tb; Li; Ni/Co; graphite; GaHigh
Ground robotics; battery systems; sensorsNdPr + Dy/Tb; Li/graphite; TaHigh 
Precision sensors (vision/LiDAR/radar)Ga; In; TaMed-High
GPS/comms hardwareGa; TaMed-High
Electric irrigation/pumps (VFDs, controllers)Cu; Ga; possible NdPrMedium

U.S. Department of Energyย explains NdFeB magnets rely on Nd/Pr, with Dy (and sometimes Tb) added for high-temperature stability.ย ย U.S. Geological Surveyย notes magnets are the leading global end use for rare earths and often arrive embedded in finished goods.ย ย USGS also reports 100% U.S. reliance on net imports for gallium, a key input for GaAs/GaN semiconductors.ย 

Company Exposure Table

Product focus is drawn from official product pages and investor releases. 

CompanyProduct FocusREE/mineral exposureExport-risk vulnerability
Deereautonomous tractorsmagnets + chipsMedโ€“High
CNH Industrialautonomy/roboticsmagnets + chipsMedium
AGCO / Trimbleretrofit autonomy + guidancechips + actuatorsMedium
Kubotaautonomous tractorsactuators + chipsMedium
DJI*ag dronesmagnets + batteriesHigh
Naรฏo Technologieselectric field robotsmagnets + batteriesHigh

*Chinese drone maker

Where the Shock Lands in One to Three Years

Highest-risk products are magnet-dense and battery-dependent: drones and compact robots. Rare Earth Exchanges reporting shows April 2025 controls reduced exports and drove sharp regional price gaps, and it warns magnet capacity outside China remains limited. 

Near-term risk channels include price shocks; licensing/qualification delays; certification and quality gaps in non-China magnets and anode materials; and inventory/contract mismatches (electronics ready, magnets not). 

LikelihoodImpactRisk
HighHighNdFeB export licensing delays
MediumHighgraphite/anode disruption
MediumMediumgallium constraints hit power electronics
LowHighgeopolitical embargo shock

The Steps

  • mining
  • separation
  • alloying/magnets
  • components
  • assembly
  • farm product

Show Code

Mitigation exists, but it is thin. Companies pursue diversification, long-term contracts, stockpiles, onshoring pilots, vertical integration, recycling, and design substitution (for example, reducing Dy where feasible).ย ย Examples:ย MP Materialsย is scaling U.S. NdPr metal and NdFeB magnet output;ย Neo Performance Materialsย opened a magnet facility in Estonia; andย Lynas Rare Earthsย is pursuing processing partnerships (including in Vietnam) aimed at feeding U.S. magnet manufacturing.ย 

Investor implication: favor firms that can show magnet sourcing tiers (including Dy/Tb), battery chemistry, and graphite/anode sourcing, gallium exposure, and strategic inventory buffers.

Methods and What to Watch

Bill-of-materials detail is often proprietary. The product-to-mineral mapping above is an informed inference, not a disclosed SKU-level BOM. Some market-growth forecasts can be optimistic; labor, trade, and geology sources are more reliable. Priority sources: IEA critical-minerals and battery-risk analysis; USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries 2026; and DOE magnet supply-chain reports.

Spread the word:

Search
Recent Reex News

Washington Moves Fast, Brussels Moves Carefully

China Gains Quietly While the World Burns-But the Story Isn't That Simple

Japan's Rare Earth Strategy: Competing Without Competing with China

Rare Earth Magnets Supply Chain and Recycling

When Politics Masks a Supply Chain Reality

By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

0 Comments

No replies yet

Loading new replies...

D
DOC

Moderator

3,741 messages 67 likes

China's dominance in magnets and batteries threatens agricultural automation supply chain, creating price and availability risks for autonomous farm equipment. (read full article...)

Reply Like

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Straight Into Your Inbox

Straight Into Your Inbox

Receive a Daily News Update Intended to Help You Keep Pace With the Rapidly Evolving REE Market.

Fantastic! Thanks for subscribing, you won't regret it.

Straight Into Your Inbox

Straight Into Your Inbox

Receive a Daily News Update Intended to Help You Keep Pace With the Rapidly Evolving REE Market.

Fantastic! Thanks for subscribing, you won't regret it.