China’s Next Industrial Bet: Quantum Computing, 6G-and the Quiet Power of “Future Materials”

Mar 9, 2026

Highlights

  • China is targeting quantum computing, embodied AI, brain-computer interfaces, and 6G communications as strategic โ€œfuture industries,โ€ using the same industrial policy playbook that helped it dominate EVs and solar panels.
  • Beijing is building innovation centers and pilot production platforms to commercialize breakthrough technologies, backed by over 100 national innovation initiatives in AI, hydrogen energy, and quantum systems.
  • Chinaโ€™s emphasis on โ€œfuture materials,โ€ including rare earth magnets and advanced semiconductors, reinforces its structural supply-chain advantage in robotics, electric motors, and next-generation computing hardware.

China is doubling down on what it calls โ€œfuture industriesโ€โ€”a strategic group of technologies including quantum computing, embodied AI, brainโ€“computer interfaces, and 6G communications. At the 2026 Two Sessions political meetings, Beijingโ€™s Government Work Report highlighted these sectors for the third consecutive year, signaling sustained national focus. For investors and policymakers, the message is clear: China intends to extend the industrial policy playbook that helped it dominate electric vehicles and solar panels into the next generation of advanced technologies.

Beijingโ€™s Blueprint for the Next Technology Wave

At the 2026 National Peopleโ€™s Congress, the Government Work Report called for accelerating development across several frontier sectors:

  • Future energy systems
  • Quantum technologies
  • Embodied artificial intelligence
  • Brainโ€“computer interfaces
  • 6G communications

Officials from Chinaโ€™s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) described these sectors as key drivers of what Beijing calls โ€œnew productive forcesโ€โ€”a concept emphasizing advanced manufacturing, scientific innovation, and high-value industrial capacity.

China enters this phase with considerable momentum. Officials noted that the country has remained the worldโ€™s largest producer of electric vehicles for 11 consecutive years, while investment in aerospace and other advanced manufacturing sectors continues to post double-digit growth.

Turning Laboratory Breakthroughs Into Industrial Scale

Chinese policymakers increasingly frame the next stage of global competition as one driven by technology breakthroughs rather than low-cost manufacturing. According to MIIT officials, China has built substantial technical foundations in several emerging fields, including:

  • Superconducting and photonic quantum computing
  • Laser-based advanced manufacturing
  • Biomanufacturing technologies
  • Atomic-scale manufacturing systems

Government programs have launched more than 100 national innovation initiatives targeting frontier technologies such as artificial intelligence, hydrogen energy, and quantum systems.

To accelerate commercialization, China is building innovation centers, pilot production platforms, and regional โ€œfuture industry zonesโ€ designed to move discoveries from laboratory research into scalable industrial production.

The Hidden Signal: โ€œFuture Materialsโ€

One of the most importantโ€”yet easily overlookedโ€”elements of the policy framework is Beijingโ€™s emphasis on โ€œfuture materials.โ€ In Chinese industrial planning, โ€œfuture materialsโ€ typically refers to advanced functional materials required for next-generation technologies, including:

This matters because several of the highlighted sectorsโ€”particularly embodied AI, robotics, electric vehicles, and renewable energy systemsโ€”depend heavily on rare earth magnets and specialty materials.

Rare earth elements such as neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium, and terbium remain essential for:

  • high-efficiency electric motors
  • industrial robots and automation systems
  • wind turbines
  • advanced defense electronics

China already dominates rare earth mining, separation, and magnet manufacturing, meaning expansion of these โ€œfuture industriesโ€ could reinforce its structural supply-chain advantage.

Quantum computing itself may not require large volumes of rare earth elements, but the broader ecosystem surrounding advanced computingโ€”cryogenic systems, sensors, and quantum materialsโ€”could drive demand for specialized materials and precision manufacturing inputs.

Challenges Beijing Acknowledges

Chinese officials acknowledge that many of these sectors remain in early commercialization stages. Challenges include:

  • incomplete technology maturity
  • duplicated projects across regions
  • shortages of high-end technical talent
  • limited long-term investment capital

Rare Earth Exchangesโ„ขย notes in the Great Powers Era 2.0 thesis other threats, including militarization of certain supply chain chokepoints such as oil production zones (e.g., Venezuela and Iran), as well as less deep and dynamic financial markets, as is found in the USA or the UK, for example.

Despite these hurdles, Beijing is pursuing what it describes as a โ€œfirst-mover strategyโ€ aimed at establishing leadership before global markets fully mature.

Why the West Should Pay Attention

Chinaโ€™s strategy closely resembles the policy framework that helped it dominate solar panels, lithium-ion batteries, and electric vehicles. If Beijing successfully scales these new sectors, it could gain structural advantages in next-generation computing, robotics, AI hardware, and advanced manufacturingโ€”industries tightly linked to critical mineral supply chains.

For Western policymakers attempting to build independent rare earth and critical mineral supply chains, the strategic implication is straightforward: China is not only planning the next industrial ecosystemโ€”it already controls many of the materials needed to build it.

Source: Ministry of Industry and Information Technology commentary during Chinaโ€™s 2026 Two Sessions, published via Chinese state-affiliated media.

Disclaimer: This report relies on information published by the Chinese government and state-linked media outlets. The claims and interpretations should be independently verified before being used for investment or policy analysis.

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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.

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China accelerates quantum computing, embodied AI, and 6G as future industries to dominate next-gen tech and critical material supply chains. (read full article...)

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