Highlights
- Sojitz Corporation has begun importing dysprosium and terbium from Lynas Rare Earths, marking the world's only operational heavy rare earth supply chain outside China's control.
- Japan has secured exclusive rights to Lynas' heavy rare earth production through decades of strategic investment via JARE, a joint venture between Sojitz and JOGMEC, ensuring supply for its automotive and robotics industries.
- The U.S. and Europe now face intensified competition for HRE independence as Japan locks up the sole non-Chinese source, with MP Materials' capabilities still years away from commercial viability.
In a largely overlooked yet geopolitically consequential development last month, Sojitz Corporation (opens in a new tab) confirmed late last month it has begun importing heavy rare earths (HREs)โspecifically dysprosium (Dy) and terbium (Tb)โfrom Lynas Rare Earths Ltd. in Australia. While MP Materials is building a facility to process SEG (samariumโeuropiumโgadolinium) under its Phase 1 award with the U.S. Department of Defenseโand has signaled that Dy/Tb extraction may eventually be possibleโthe capability remains unproven and likely some years away.
Americaโs heavy rare earth resources are substantial, but the infrastructure, chemistry, and throughput needed to turn them into usable Dy/Tb are still in early development. For now, Lynas remains the only operational non-Chinese source of commercial heavy rare earths, and the Japanese have much of that product locked up via Sojitz Corporation.
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This is not just another materials shipment. It marks the only commercial heavy rare earth supply chain outside the Peopleโs Republic of China, the sole producer for nearly three decades.
Sojitzโs announcement confirms that Lynas has now begun exporting HREs mined at Mt. Weld (Australia) and separated/refined in Malaysia, bringing online the first alternative to Chinaโs near-total monopoly over materials essential for high-temperature NdFeB magnets. This is history in the making for anyone tracking magnet metals, industrial policy, Western supply-chain resilienceโand the narrowing options for countries seeking Dy/Tb independence.
Why Heavy Rare Earths Matter More Than Ever
Heavy rare earthsโespecially Dy and Tbโare the thermal backbone of high-performance permanent magnets used in EV traction motors, industrial automation, aerospace platforms, and defense systems. Without them, magnets demagnetize when exposed to heat.
China has long controlled ~98โ100% of global HRE separation, and recent geopolitical friction has only highlighted the fragility of this arrangement. Lynasโ industrial-scale move disrupts that landscape.
For Japanโa nation whose automotive and robotics industries depend on reliable magnet-grade oxidesโthis diversification is not optional. It is existential.
A Partnership Decades in the Making
Sojitzโs involvement with Lynas stretches back to the 1960s through its predecessor, Nissho Iwai, and deepened in 2011 through an exclusive distribution agreement in Japan.
Most importantly:
- JAREโa joint special-purpose vehicle between Sojitz and JOGMECโhas pumped equity and loans into Lynas for over a decade.
- A dedicated 2023 agreement secured Japanese rights to dysprosium and terbium, triggering Lynasโ acceleration of HRE production capacity.
The October 2025 import is the strategic payoff.
Whatโs Accurateโand What Investors Should Watch
The Sojitz release is factually sound: the Dy/Tb supply from Mt. Weld ore represents the worldโs only operating non-Chinese heavy rare earth pipeline.
However, investors should note the following:
- โIndustrial-scale productionโ from Lynas remains in early ramp-up; volumes are not disclosed.
- Malaysiaโs regulatory environment continues to evolveโan external risk that could impact HRE throughput.
- Japanโs deepening financial stake underscores confidence, but also the lack of Western alternatives, reinforcing Lynasโ geopolitical importance rather than pure commercial optionality.
No misinformation detectedโjust understated geopolitical significance.
Why This Matters for the Rest of the World
For the United States and Europeโboth scrambling to establish magnet metal independenceโthis serves as a reminder:
There is still only one free-world material-heavy rare earth supply chain, and Japan just secured first rights.
If Washington and Brussels want HRE resilience by 2030, they are now competing with an entrenched Japanese anchor tenant. Lynas just became more strategic than ever. The pressure is now on MP Materials to deliver in a tight timeline.
ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโข โ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.
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