Highlights
- China Northern Rare Earth approved three joint ventures to expand downstream into alloy production and cerium-containing NdFeB magnetic materials, each targeting 10,000 tons per year capacity.
- The partnerships include a strategic tie-up with China National Nuclear Resources Development Co., signaling closer coordination between rare earth and nuclear resource networks.
- These moves highlight China's continued dominance in high-value rare earth processing and magnet manufacturingโthe stages Western nations struggle most to replicate outside China.
China Northern Rare Earth Group High-Tech Co., Ltd. has approved three new joint-venture moves that point to a familiar but important strategy: expand further downstream, closer to the higher-value stages of the rare earth supply chain. In a March 13, 2026 board meeting held by remote vote, all 14 directors unanimously approved resolutions tied to a joint venture with China National Nuclear Resources Development Co., Ltd. (opens in a new tab) and two additional ventures focused on rare earth alloy production and cerium-containing NdFeB magnetic materials.
A Resource Tie-Up Worth Watching
The first resolution approves Northern Rare Earthโs participation in forming a joint venture with China National Nuclear Resources Development Co., Ltd. and other parties. The filing itself gives very few operational details, so any conclusion beyond that should be treated cautiously. Still, the involvement of a state-linked nuclear resources group is notable for Western readers because it may signal closer coordination between rare earth development and strategically important Chinese resource networks. That is an inference, not something explicitly stated in the filing.
Alloys First, Then Magnets
The second resolution authorizes (as Rare Earth Exchangesโข reported earlier) a joint venture with Ningbo Funeng Rare Earth New Materials to build a rare earth metal alloy production line. Market reports tied to the company disclosure say the project is designed for 10,000 tons per year and that Northern Rare Earth would be the controlling shareholder of the venture.
The third resolution approves a separate joint venture with Ningbo Shuoteng New Materials to build a cerium-containing NdFeB magnetic materials project. Reports linked to the announcement say the project is planned at 10,000 tons per year, with the first phase centered on 5,000 tons per year of cerium-containing NdFeB magnetic materials.
Why the West Should Pay Attention
The broader significance is not that China is opening a new mine. It is one of its most important rare earth companies that is continuing to invest in the stages that matter most commercially: resource partnerships, alloying, and magnet materials. The United States and Europe often focus on upstream mining, but these announcements are a reminder that downstream processing and magnet manufacturing remain the harder bottlenecks to replicate outside China.
Source Disclosure: This item is based on Chinese corporate disclosures and related financial-media reporting involving a state-linked enterprise. Readers should verify the information through independent reporting, follow-up filings, and project-level disclosures before drawing firm conclusions.
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