Highlights
- China could retaliate against Japan over Taiwan remarks through rare earth restrictions.
- The 2025 market is more diversified than 2010.
- Japan has reduced dependence on rare earth materials from 80-90% to 50% through:
- Australian suppliers
- Vietnamese suppliers
- Indian suppliers
- Recycling initiatives
- Beijing's likely approach includes:
- Regulatory pressure
- Export licensing constraints
- Price manipulation
- A full export ban would disrupt China's own EV and robotics industries.
- Myanmar's Kachin State controls the world's #1 heavy rare earth deposits (dysprosium/terbium).
- Chinese traders dominate border flows in Kachin State, making it the true chokepoint for Japan's magnet supply.
Todayโs Hankyoreh report (opens in a new tab) suggests China might weaponize rare earth exports against Japan in retaliation for Tokyoโs remarks on Taiwan. Itโs an alarming scenarioโwith historical precedentโbut requires sober analysis.
Table of Contents
China halted rare earth exports to Japan in 2010 after the Senkaku/Diaoyu maritime clash, crippling Japanese manufacturers and prompting Tokyo to diversify its supply. Today, Japanโs dependence on China has dropped from 80โ90% to roughly 50%, a significant reduction. This fact is accurate and meaningful.
Where the article overreaches is implying that Beijing can simply โban rare earth exportsโ again with immediate effect, the global market in 2025 is more diversified, more transparent, and less easily cornered than in 2010โthough still vulnerable. Japan has supplies from Australia, Vietnam, India, and a growing suite of long-term contracts, including magnet recycling initiatives.
Still, the threat is not idle. Beijing retains leverage in midstream separation and downstream magnet production, where Japan still interacts heavily with Chinese pricing and processing flows.
The Levers Beijing Actually Pullsโand the Ones It Doesnโt
The article hints at a full-blown export ban as Chinaโs โnuclear option.โ But in rare earths, China rarely uses blunt force. It prefers:
- Regulatory pressure on Japanese automakers operating inside China.
- Tariff-based โprecision retaliation.โ
- Tightened export licensing rather than outright bans.
- Price manipulation via production quotas and trading exchanges.
These subtler tools destabilize rivals without destabilizing markets China itself depends on.
The Hankyoreh report correctly notes Beijingโs track recordโe.g., Lotte Martโs 2017 suspension in retaliation against South Koreaโs THAAD deploymentโbut applies the analogy too literally. Retail pressure is easy. Rare earth disruption risks blowback into Chinaโs own EV and robotics industries.
Beijing is calculated, not reckless.
Whatโs Missing: The Global Heavy Rare Earth Wildcard
Here is the most notable omission:
China doesnโt need to ban Japanese access to rare earths if it controls the upstream supply Japan indirectly relies on.
And the most important upstream source is Myanmarโs Kachin State, home to the worldโs most productive heavy rare earth depositsโcontrolled not by any government, but by the Kachin Independence Army (KIA). Well, indirectly, China has a profound presence and influence in this region.
On Rare Earth Exchangesโ Heavy Rare Earth Element Project Rankings, the Kachin operations hold the #1 global position, reflecting their unmatched dysprosium and terbium output. If China wanted to pressure Japan, it could throttle imports from these Kachin mines, where Chinese traders already dominate border flows into Yunnan refineries.
This realityโwell-documented in numerous REEx investigationsโis entirely absent from the Hankyoreh article. Without Kachinโs clays, Chinaโs HREE supply shrinks dramatically. Without Chinaโs refineries, Japanโs magnet makers face an instant deficit.
The true chokepoint is not Beijingโs customs officeโ
it is the conflict-ridden hills of Kachin.
Investor Takeaway: Tensions Rise, but Leverage Is More Nuanced Than Headlines Suggest
The article is accurate in its description of rising ChinaโJapan tensions, but speculative when forecasting a rare earth export ban. Beijing has tools, but the global market has changed. Japan is less exposed, China is more integrated, and the true fulcrum of heavy rare earths sits far from Tokyo or Beijing.
Investors should watch:
- Chinaโs export licensing patterns
- Japanโs magnet recycling capacity
- Stability (or instability) in Kachin State
- Chinaโs ongoing consolidation of refineries and trading houses
The more volatile geopolitics becomes, the more important supply chain fundamentals grow.
ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโข โ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.
0 Comments