Highlights
- The NYT investigation accurately traces China's six-decade engineered rise to rare-earth control, but understates the decisive factor: processing and separation chemistry, not mining, is the true source of geopolitical power.
- China's monopoly on ultrapure dysprosium processing for AI chipsโproduced at a single Wuxi refineryโrepresents specification-grade control that takes years of iterative chemistry to replicate, not just emergency subsidies.
- Western industrial policy gaps, environmental regulations, and short-term ROI demands hollowed out U.S. separation and magnet capacity decades before Xi weaponized rare earthsโa conclusion mainstream media largely avoids stating directly.
The New York Times published (opens in a new tab) a sweeping year-end investigation by Keith Bradsher on December 31, 2025, tracing Chinaโs six-decade rise to rare-earth dominanceโfrom Deng Xiaopingโs early interest in Baotou to Xi Jinpingโs modern export controls. It is richly reported, historically grounded, and largely accurate. But for investors and policymakers in the rare-earth supply chain, the piece still understates the decisive factor: processing, not mining, is the true source of power.
Table of Contents
The Long Game China Actually Played
The article correctly shows that Chinaโs advantage was engineered, not accidental. Military funding, state planning, tolerance for pollution, and sustained investment in separation chemistry created a domestic ecosystem that others abandoned. The account of Xu Guangxianโs solvent-extraction breakthrough, later industrialized at scale, aligns with established technical history. Likewise, the Magnequench episode is accurately portrayed as a pivotal transfer of magnet-making know-how that the U.S. never replaced.
Where the Story Sharpens โ and Where It Softens
The Times is right to frame rare earths as a geoeconomic weapon, especially after Chinaโs 2010 Japan embargo and the 2025 dysprosium export halt. But it leans too heavily on headline concentration numbers (e.g., โ90% controlโ) without separating ore, separation, metals, alloys, and magnetsโeach with different competitive realities. China does not โownโ rare earths geologically; it owns the middle of the value chain, where capital intensity, tacit knowledge, and regulatory friction keep rivals out.
The Dysprosium Detail That Matters
The reporting on the Wuxi refineryโthe worldโs sole producer of ultrapure dysprosium for advanced AI chipsโis the most important revelation. This is not about volume; itโs about specification-grade control. Investors should note: breakthroughs here take years of iterative chemistry, not emergency subsidies. When Beijing restricts exports or equipment, it is protecting process knowledge, not just the product.
Whatโs Implied, Not Said
The article gestures at Western neglectโclosed programs, lost expertiseโbut stops short of the uncomfortable conclusion: industrial policy gaps, not Chinese malice, created todayโs chokepoints. Environmental rules, short-term ROI demands, and offshoring hollowed out separation and magnet capacity long before Xi weaponized it.ย
Why have elite media institutions given American political and corporate elites a pass over the past few decades?
Bottom Line for REEx Readers
The New York Times gets the history right and the warning mostly right. What it still underplays is that rare-earth leverage lives in processing mastery and human capital, not in mines. Why does mainstream media continue to parrot the same incomplete policy direction? Until the U.S. and its allies rebuild separation chemistry, metallization, and magnet ecosystemsโat commercial scaleโrare earths will remain strategic pressure points, not commodities.
Source: Bradsher, K. (2025). Inside Chinaโs Six-Decade Campaign to Dominate Rare Earths. The New York Times.
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