Highlights
- Baotou is accelerating China's '1144 industrial system' strategy:
- One core rare earth industry
- One green/digital transformation direction
- Four pillar industries
- Four emerging sectors
- Landmark results in rare earth development:
- Phase I completion of the world's largest rare earth green smelting project
- China's first integrated power project for electrolytic aluminum
- Fully connected long-distance hydrogen pipeline
- All core sectors surpassing RMB 100 billion output
- Baotou's next five-year plan:
- Target to become China's largest rare earth new materials base and a global applications leader
- 90%+ digital penetration across industrial firms
- National zero-carbon industrial park
- Signaling China's intent to dominate midstream processing and downstream applications, areas where Western nations are struggling to rebuild.
A new government work report summary published by Baotou Daily Digital Newspaper (dated January 22, 2026) says Baotou—Inner Mongolia’s industrial hub and one of China’s most important rare earth centers—is accelerating a state-backed plan to build what it calls an “1144 modern industrial system” and to secure a strong start to China’s next national planning cycle.
Table of Contents
1144 System
The “1144 system” is Chinese policy shorthand for Baotou’s modern industrial strategy, designed to concentrate state support around a tightly managed set of priorities. In practical terms, it means one core strategic industry (rare earths), one transformation direction (green and digital upgrading of heavy industry), four pillar industries that anchor the local economy (including rare earths, steel, aluminum, and energy-linked advanced materials), and four emerging future industries such as hydrogen energy, energy storage, wind power equipment, and high-end advanced manufacturing. For Western readers, the significance is not the numbering itself but what it signals: China is deliberately hard-wiring rare earth dominance into an integrated, low-carbon, and increasingly digital industrial ecosystem, reducing commercial risk for domestic firms while strengthening midstream and downstream control—precisely where the U.S. and Europe remain most vulnerable.
China Industrial Policy Targets
The report highlights five-year gains that Beijing-style planning tends to emphasize: average annual GDP growth of 8%, roughly RMB 200 billion in added economic output, and a sharp rise in Baotou’s national city ranking. For Western readers, the most material claim is that construction of Baotou’s “two rare earth bases” has achieved “landmark results,” while core sectors—steel, rare earths, silicon PV, and aluminum—each surpassed the RMB 100 billion output threshold.
For 2025, Baotou claims industrial momentum and several project milestones that stand out as business-relevant. It says Phase I of the “world’s largest rare earth green smelting” project reached full production, with Phase II beginning construction. It also reports completion of China’s first “source–grid–load–storage” integrated project for electrolytic aluminum (a model designed to stabilize power costs and enable higher “green power” usage). The city says it has connected more of the wind equipment, new energy storage, and hydrogen value chain—most notably with a long-distance hydrogen pipeline fully linked end-to-end—and cites new projects in large-format battery cells and even nuclear fuel components.
Forward Looking
Looking ahead, the draft outline for the next five-year period sets an explicit ambition: to become China’s largest rare earth new materials base and a globally leading rare earth applications base, while pushing aggressive targets for digital transformation (90%+ penetration across major industrial firms) and “green manufacturing,” including a national-level zero-carbon industrial park concept.
Relevant in the West/USA?
If these claims are accurate, Baotou is signaling that China intends to tighten its advantage not just in rare earth mining, but in midstream processing, materials, and downstream applications—the exact layers the U.S. and Europe are trying to rebuild. The emphasis on “green” smelting, power integration, and digitalized industrial control also suggests a push to make China’s supply chain cheaper, cleaner on paper, and harder to displace.
Disclaimer: This item is based on reporting from Baotou Daily Digital Newspaper, a state-affiliated Chinese media outlet. Figures and project claims should be verified through independent sources, corporate disclosures, and third-party data.
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