Highlights
- MERICS warns Europe is losing influence in U.S.-China negotiations over rare earth and critical minerals trade.
- Beijing and Washington manage supply chain stability through direct bilateral channels without European participation.
- China's export controls on gallium, germanium, graphite, and permanent magnets hit European manufacturers hard.
- The Busan truce between Trump and Xi excluded Europe from negotiations despite its dependence on Chinese processing.
- The report warns that European complacency is dangerousโwithout accelerating its own magnet and midstream capacity, Europe risks becoming a price-taker in a market controlled by Beijing and Washington, not Brussels.
Is there a shrinking stage for Europeโs mineral future? MERICSโ new Top China Risks 2026 (opens in a new tab) report lands with a quiet but unmistakable alarm bell: Europe is losing its seat at the table in the U.S.โChina rivalry that increasingly shapes the rare earth and critical minerals order. The report notes that when President Donald Trump and Chinaโs Xi Jinping met in Busan on October 30, they agreed to a 12-month pause on parts of Chinaโs new rare earth export controls, but the deal was strictly bilateral. Europe benefited from the de-escalation, MERICS stresses, but it did not help negotiate it.
Table of Contents
Program Head
For investors mapping supply-chain risk, that is the central point: Beijing and Washington are now managing critical-mineral stability through direct channels, often without European participation, while European industry absorbs the downstream consequences.

The recent report was authored by program head Helena Legarda (opens in a new tab), lead analyst Rebecca Arcesati (opens in a new tab), senior analyst Daria Impiombato (opens in a new tab) and analyst Andreas Mischer (opens in a new tab).
The Magnet That Shows Who Matters
The report highlights Chinaโs rare earth and technology-metal export restrictions as a case study. Controls rolled out in April and October 2025โcovering rare earth elements, gallium, germanium, graphite and permanent magnetsโwere formally framed as responses to U.S. tariffs, yet they hit European manufacturers just as hard.
Even the Busan truce, which suspended the second wave of controls for one year, came with a catch: earlier April restrictions and licensing requirements remain in place. MERICS is on firm ground here. Its depiction of China using export controls as a geoeconomic leverโtightening to signal displeasure, loosening to stabilize key bilateral relationshipsโis consistent with the legal texts and trade data weโve been tracking at Rare Earth Exchanges.
Where the Story Stingsโand Where Itโs Subtle
MERICS goes further, arguing that Europe is at risk of becoming a spectator in what it bluntly calls an emerging โG2โ world. That may be uncomfortable, but it is largely supported by Europeโs structural dependence on Chinese rare earth magnets, Chinese midstream processing, and Chinese-controlled semiconductor inputs.
The only place the narrative arguably underplays reality is on Europeโs own efforts: projects in Estonia, Norway, and France do exist and matter, but they are small against the scale of Chinaโs refining base. The report is clearestโand most accurateโon one key point: Beijingโs export controls are designed to keep technology value chains in China and to prevent the emergence of competing supply chains. That is not a passing tactic; it is a long-term industrial strategy.
The Investor Takeaway: Complacency Is the Enemy
The real danger MERICS flags is not just exclusion from high-level talks, but European complacency about being excluded. There is an earth market that punishes passivity. If Europe does not accelerate its own magnet, midstream and semiconductor capacity, it drifts into the role of price-taker in a market whose rules are increasingly written in Beijing and Washington, not in Brussels.
About MERICS
The Mercator Institute for China Studies (opens in a new tab) (MERICS) is a Berlin-based, non-profit think tank founded in 2013 by the German foundation Stiftung Mercator. It is now one of Europeโs leading research centers on contemporary China, focusing on the political, economic, technological and geopolitical dimensions of Chinaโs rise and their impact on Europe.
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