Highlights
- China claims global leadership in reserves for 14 mineral categories including rare earths, tungsten, gallium, germanium, and antimony, while dominating downstream processing with 94% of rare earth smelting and 99% of manganese smelting.
- The real strategic advantage lies not in China's mineral reserves but in its vertical integration and control over midstream refining, metallization, and processing infrastructure that creates global supply chain choke points.
- Despite questions about reserve disclosure verification, China's unparalleled control over processing infrastructure, permitting speed, chemical supply chains, and industrial coordination solidifies its position anchoring the global mineral industry.
China is no longer merely mining minerals. It is building industrial gravity. According to statements from China’s Ministry of Natural Resources reported (opens in a new tab) by SunSirs, Beijing now claims global leadership in reserves for 14 mineral categories—including rare earths, tungsten, gallium, germanium, graphite, indium, and antimony—while also dominating downstream smelting and processing. The most important takeaway is not the reserves themselves. It is the vertical integration.
The Empire Beneath the Ground
China claims 94% of global rare-earth smelting output, 99% of manganese smelting, and dominant shares in tungsten, gallium, indium, tellurium, and graphite processing. That aligns with Rare Earth Exchanges™'s repeated emphasis: upstream mining matters, but midstream refining and metallization remain the true choke points. The report also highlights China’s expanding ion-adsorption clay rare earth discoveries in Yunnan and massive investment growth during the 14th Five-Year Plan. These are not isolated mining projects. They are state-coordinated industrial strategies.
The Fine Print Investors Shouldn’t Ignore
Some caution is warranted. Chinese state resource disclosures are difficult to independently verify. Terms like “world-leading reserves” can vary depending on economic recoverability, processing capability, or reserve classification systems. Still, dismissing this as propaganda would be dangerous. What’s undeniably real is China’s unparalleled control over processing infrastructure, engineering talent, permitting speed, chemical supply chains, and industrial coordination. That—not geology alone—is why Beijing still anchors the rare earth world.
0 Comments
No replies yet
Loading new replies...
Moderator
Join the full discussion at the Rare Earth Exchanges Forum →