Highlights
- China's MOFCOM has issued six sweeping decrees expanding control over rare earths, lithium batteries, and superhard materials, with extraterritorial jurisdiction over products containing even 0.1% PRC-origin materials.
- Mayer Brown's legal briefing reveals China's measures mirror the U.S. Foreign Direct Product Rule but with wider scope, turning material purity into geopolitical leverage rather than mere trade policy.
- The new 0.1% threshold forces global manufacturers to audit trace-level PRC content in every magnet and battery transaction, creating massive compliance burdens across electronics, defense, and semiconductor sectors.
Tuning the rules of trade into a weapon?ย This is the case for China suggests global white-shoe law firm Mayer Brown (opens in a new tab), founded in Chicago, Illinois, United States--with offices in 22 cities in 10 countries throughout the Americas, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East, with its largest offices being in Chicago, Washington, D.C., New York City, and London.ย ย The firmโs October 9 client briefing, โPRC Announces New Export Controls on Rare Earth and Battery Materials and Technology,โ is not another dry legal updateโit reads like the legal codification of a global power shift. As Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) reported, Beijingโs Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) has rolled out six sweeping decrees expanding its control over rare earths, lithium batteries, and superhard materials, effective in stages through December 1, 2025.
As noted in the REEx platform, for the first time, China asserts extraterritorial jurisdiction over products made outside its borders that containโeven in trace amounts (โฅ0.1%)โPRC-origin rare earths or technology. Itโs a mirror image of Washingtonโs own _Foreign Direct Product Rule_โbut with a wider scope and fewer exemptions.
The Legal Facts: Tight, Technical, and True
Mayer Brownโs summary is precise. Each cited provision aligns with MOFCOMโs official statements: immediate controls on rare-earth mining technologies, November 8 implementation for lithium battery and graphite materials, and December 1 enforcement of extraterritorial rules. The description of the โ50% ruleโโdenying export licenses to affiliates majority-owned by listed entitiesโis consistent with language in Chinaโs Announcement No. 61.
Likewise, the practical implications ring true: electronics, defense, and semiconductor sectors will face new licensing and documentation burdens. Mayer Brown accurately notes that the 0.1% de minimis threshold could pull countless foreign-made magnet assemblies into Chinaโs legal orbit.
Where Interpretation Meets Intention
The briefingโs neutrality begins to blur as it implies equivalence between Chinaโs measures and U.S. export regimes. While itโs true both nations use โdual-useโ justifications, MOFCOMโs new rules are not purely reciprocalโtheyโre coercive tools of statecraft. The memo published via JD Supra stops short of calling that out, treating escalation as procedural symmetry rather than a deliberate geopolitical maneuver.
The piece also avoids the elephant in the room: the credibility of enforcement. Chinaโs licensing system is opaque, and historically, license denials and delays have served as political levers rather than administrative oversight.
The Rare Earth Chain Reaction
For global supply chains, the impact is seismic. The 0.1% rule effectively embeds China in every magnet or battery transaction on Earth. Western manufacturers must now map exposure down to trace levels of PRC contentโan auditing nightmare and a compliance bonanza for trade lawyers.
Mayer Brownโs analysis, though accurate, understates the shift in leverage: Beijing has turned material purity into geopolitical policy. This is not just about tradeโitโs about control.
ยฉ!-- /wp:paragraph -->
0 Comments