Highlights
- A 2025 study analyzes Iran's push to build domestic rare earth and lithium industries as part of its 'resistance economy' doctrine, linking critical minerals to energy sovereignty and survival under sanctions.
- Despite pilot-scale successes, Iran faces two structural barriers:
- China's monopoly over processing capacity
- U.S. sanctions that restrict access to equipment, capital, and technology needed for industrial scaling
- The research reveals a strategic paradoxโIran may need Chinese investment and expertise to scale its critical minerals sector, potentially trading import dependency for Chinese control over its value chain.
A 2025 study (opens in a new tab) by Ilya D. Baskakov (opens in a new tab), junior research fellow at the Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences (INION RAN), argues that Iranโs push to build rare earth metals and lithium industries is becoming a core national-security projectโtied to energy sovereignty, high-tech development, and survival under sanctions. Published in Outlines of Global Transformations: Politics, Economics, Law (Vol. 18, No. 3), the paper traces Iranโs early exploration and pilot-scale efforts, then tests a hard reality: Chinaโs dominance over rare earth processing and the continued impact of U.S. sanctions may determine whether Iranโs ambitions become a real industrial base or remain a strategic aspiration.
Table of Contents
Why This Matters, in Plain English
Rare earths and lithium are not abstract โminingโ stories. They are key inputs for modern life: electric motors, wind turbines, electronics, batteries, aerospace components, and advanced defense systems. But โhaving the rocksโ is not enough. The strategic bottleneck is processingโturning ore or concentrates into usable oxides, metals, alloys, and eventually magnets and battery chemicals.
Baskakovโs study highlights a core constraint shaping Iranโs options: China has built a dominant position in global rare earth supply chainsโespecially processingโmaking most countries dependent on Chinese capacity even when minerals are mined elsewhere. Iranโs development path, the author argues, is further complicated by sanctions that restrict financing, equipment, and technology imports.
Study Methods: What Baskakov Did
This is a qualitative political-economy study. Baskakov synthesizes Iranian policy concepts (โresistance economyโ), trade statistics, public reporting on projects and pilot initiatives, and prior academic literature. He tracks the evolution of Iranโs rare earth and lithium sectors from the mid-2010s through early 2024, with attention to three forces:
- domestic scientific and technical capacity,
- opportunities for international partnership, and
- U.S. sanctions pressure on Iranโs mining and metallurgical industries.
Key Findings: Iranโs Progress and the Roadblocks
1) Iranโs policy framework is designed for self-sufficiency.
Baskakov frames Iranโs industrial strategy through the doctrine of the โresistance economy,โ launched in the 2010s to reduce vulnerability to external pressure. In this view, rare earths and lithium are not just commoditiesโthey are inputs required to build an innovation economy, reduce dependence on oil revenues, and keep strategic industries functioning under sanctions.
2) Iran has made visible stepsโbut mostly at an early scale.
The study compiles multiple indications of progress: exploration campaigns, pilot projects, and announcements of successful extraction and concentrate production. Iran has reportedly produced a 99%-pure โmischmetalโ alloy in 2016 (a mix of rare earth elements used for alloys and manufacturing), launched pilot extraction projects, and pursued recovery from iron ore, phosphates, and industrial residues. The paper also notes Iranโs ongoing reliance on imported rare earths, historically sourced through partners including China, the UAE, and Turkey.
3) Chinaโs processing monopoly defines the playing field.
A central themeโhighly relevant to REEx readersโis that processing and value-added steps are where power concentrates. Baskakov emphasizes that Chinaโs cost advantages and industrial scale helped it dominate rare earth value chains. Even if Iran expands extraction, it will still face the question: can it process competitively, under sanctions, without becoming dependent on Chinese technology and investment?
4) Sanctions pressure remains a structural constraint.
Baskakov details how U.S. sanctions targeting metals, mining, manufacturing, and related sectors constrain Iranโs access to modern equipment, capital, and international partnerships. The paper argues that sanctions donโt just reduce exports; they slow industrial learning and the creation of durable processing infrastructure.
Implications: What This Means for Investors and Policymakers
For Iran, the strategic logic is clear: if access to critical materials is securitized globally, then domestic supply and processing become national security tools. For the global supply chain, Iranโs case reinforces a broader point: Chinaโs dominance in processing means many โnewโ resource stories are not true diversification unless they build downstream capacity outside China.
If Iran succeeds, it could become a regional critical minerals node linking Eurasian markets. If it fails, it will remain a price-takerโdependent on external processors and vulnerable to sanctions shocks.
Limitations and Controversial Issues
The study relies heavily on public statements, reported project milestones, and secondary sources rather than audited industrial production data. Some resource claimsโparticularly lithium reserve estimatesโremain contested and may require independent verification of grade, concentration, and economic recoverability. A second controversy is strategic: Iran may need Chinese investment and know-how to scale, which could trade one dependency (imports) for another (Chinese processing and capital)โa tension the paper implicitly surfaces.
Conclusion
Baskakovโs paper is best read as a strategic map of Iranโs intentions and constraints, not proof of imminent industrial-scale output. Iranโs rare earth and lithium ambitions align with its โresistance economyโ doctrine and its drive for energy and technological sovereignty. But Chinaโs processing dominance and U.S. sanctions pressure form a tight corridor: Iran can move forward, yet scaling competitively will likely require outside technology and capital, raising uncomfortable questions about who ultimately controls the value chain.
Citation: Baskakov, I. D. (2025). Development of Rare Earth Metals and Lithium Industries in Iran as a Factor of National Energy and Technological Security. Outlines of Global Transformations: Politics, Economics, Law, Vol. 18, No. 3, pp. 150โ165. DOI: 10.31249/kgt/2025.03.09.
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