Highlights
- China Northern Rare Earth Group, the world's largest rare earth producer, reported record 2025 revenues.
- The company outlined an aggressive 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030) focusing on capacity expansion and price stabilization.
- Aims to build a 'full-element, full-product' industrial system spanning mining to downstream applications.
- Intends to move up the value chain to become a world-class leader beyond volume production.
- Beijing's strategic focus on rare earth dominance poses significant competitive challenges for Western localization efforts.
- Confirms China's ability to influence global supply and pricing.
China Northern Rare Earth Group, the worldโs largest rare earth producer and a state-owned enterprise under Baogang Group, used two January 9, 2026 press releases to outline a forceful start to Chinaโs 15th Five-Year Plan (2026โ2030)โwith clear implications for global rare earth supply, pricing, and industrial policy.

At its employee and union congress in Baotou, company leadership reported that 2025 revenues, profits, output, and market capitalization all ranked first globally in the rare earth sector, capping what it described as a successful conclusion to the 14th Five-Year Plan. Management emphasized that the company expanded production, stabilized supply, and supported prices, while explicitly framing its role as safeguarding Chinaโs rare earth supply-chain security.
For Western audiences, this is notable: Beijingโs top rare earth producer is publicly confirming both capacity expansion and deliberate market management, reinforcing Chinaโs ability to influence global availability and pricing.
Looking ahead to 2026, China Northern Rare Earth set out an aggressive agenda:
- Build a โfull-element, full-productโ rare earth industrial system, spanning mining, separation, processing, and downstream materials.
- Deepen integration of technology and industry, accelerating R&D and commercialization.
- Expand capacity and optimize industry, while strengthening international influence.
- Advance the โtwo rare earth basesโ strategy, aimed at consolidating Chinaโs dominance in both upstream resources and downstream applications, as Rare Earth Exchangesโข has chronicled.
The company repeatedly stressed its ambition to become a โworld-class rare earth leaderโ, not merely a volume producer. Officials highlighted reforms, operational efficiency, and scientific innovation as key leversโsignaling that China intends to move further up the value chain into higher-margin rare earth products.
For U.S. and Western stakeholders, the updates are strategically significant. First, the confirmation of continued capacity expansion paired with price-stability objectives suggests China will remain capable of countering non-Chinese supply with scale. Second, the focus on full-spectrum integration underscores why Western efforts to localize rare earth processing and magnet manufacturing face a steep competitive challenge. Third, the explicit linkage between rare earths and national strategy reinforces Rare Earth Exchangesโ prior warning that Chinaโs industrial strength remains formidableโeven as broader economic strains persist.
As REEx previously noted in โChinaโs Growth Engine Is Still RunningโBut the Transmission Is Slipping,โ Beijing is grappling with weak domestic demand and overcapacity elsewhere in the economy. Rare earths stand out as a sector where China is doubling down on strategic control, consolidation, and global leadership, rather than retrenchment.
Disclaimer: This news summary is based on official releases from a Chinese state-owned enterprise. The information reflects the companyโs own statements and should be independently verified.
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