Highlights
- Ursula von der Leyen warns that Europe must break free from Chinese dominance of critical raw materials.
- Beijing is tightening export licensing on rare earths and magnets.
- Europe is 90% dependent on China for rare-earth magnets.
- The narrative oversimplifies the mining vs. refining stages and downplays Europeโs own policy inertia.
- Geopolitical supply-chain risk creates investment opportunities.
- Europeโs Critical Raw Materials Act accelerates funding and permitting for non-Chinese rare-earth projects.
When Ursula von der Leyen stepped to the microphone in Berlin and declared that Europe must break free from Chinese domination of critical raw materials, she was doing more than diplomacy. She was sounding an alarm bell for the entire rare-earth supply chain. Her message: Europe knows how deeply it relies on China, and itโs ready to act.
The recent declaration was picked up by multiple media including EURACTIV (opens in a new tab).
Table of Contents
Solid Ground: What Holds Up
There is no question that China has tightened its grip on rare-earth exports. In April 2025 Beijing imposed licensing requirements on seven specific rare-earth elements and magnets used by high-tech and defense industries. European manufacturers directly warned that production lines were at risk of stalling. And yes: Europe is heavily dependent on China, both for mined ore and especially for mid- and downstream processing claims.
These points underwrite von der Leyenโs urgency and the narrative of supply-chain vulnerability.
Time ย to free of ChinaโUrsula von der Leyen

Cloudy Skies: Where the Narrative Warps
But letโs sharpen the lens. The reporting frames Europe as โ90% dependentโ on China for rare-earth magnets and implies that Chinese export curbs are unilateral leverage tools. While dependency is real, framing Chinaโs control as both total and immediately weaponized leans into fear-hyperbole. For instance, Chinaโs export curbs were not outright bansโthey are licensing regimes.
Moreover, the narrative around โChina dominating 90%+ of global rare-earth marketsโ is flagged by analysts as an oversimplification: mining, refining, and magnet manufacturing differ, and several jurisdictions are ramping up.
Finally, there is a subtle bias: the article emphasizes China as the threat but glosses over internal European policy inertia, permitting delays, and the long lead times to build real non-Chinese supply chains. The tone tilts toward crisis without equal time on what Europe can deliver.
Why This Matters for Investors in Rare Earths
For investors in the critical minerals arena, this story is a red flag and an opportunity. The red flag: supply-chain bottlenecks and geopolitical risk are now front-page news. The opportunity: policy reactions (like Europeโs Critical Raw Materials Act) mean funding, permitting acceleration, and strategic projects outside China will take flight.
In short: the dependency is real, the vulnerability is tangibleโand the momentum to diversify supply chains is accelerating. Companies and investors who anticipate where the โnext Chinaโ for magnet production or rare-earth separation will be stand to gain.
Final Word of Wisdom
Europeโs headline warns that for high-tech and defense industries, rare earths are no longer background inventoryโthey are strategic fulcrums. The โwe must go alternativeโ message is true. But the rush to portray China as omnipotent is a distraction from the far harder task: building real industrial capability, throughput, and value-chain resilience beyond the headlines. For investors: watch both the geopolitics and the pragmatics.
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We’ll see. So far, the EU as an organization has done little regarding niche RE. It has been France with JOGMEC that we have seen movement (UK if you think ex EU with its recycling moves). EU has spent too much time crying wolf. You would expect they have to make a move here to avoid the laughingstock image. GLTA – REI