New Study Links Rising Global Tensions to China’s Rare Earth Magnet Export Strategy

May 3, 2025

Highlights

  • China controls over 90% of global rare earth permanent magnet production, using geopolitical tensions to manipulate market exports.
  • A 1% rise in global geopolitical tension correlates with a 3.8-ton increase in China's rare earth permanent magnet exports.
  • Global demand for NdFeB magnets is projected to grow 7.5% annually through 2040, driven by electric vehicles and wind turbine industries.

A groundbreaking study published in Energy Economics (opens in a new tab) has confirmed what many in the rare earth industry long suspected: global geopolitical risk directly influences Chinaโ€™s export behavior of rare earth permanent magnets (REPMs), a critical component in electric vehicles (EVs) and offshore wind turbines.

Authored by economists Lisa Depraiter, Stรฉphane Goutte, and Thomas Porcher all from France, the peer-reviewed study uses Chinaโ€™s customs data from 2017 to 2024 and multiple regression models to uncover a striking correlation: a 1% rise in global geopolitical tension is associated with a 3.8-ton increase in China's REPM exports, with a noticeable four-month lag. More surprisingly, the study finds this effect is even more pronounced when tensions rise in the U.S. and Australiaโ€”Chinaโ€™s key rivals in the rare earth upstream sector.

โ€œThis isnโ€™t just about demand catching up with the energy transition,โ€ says lead author Depraiter. โ€œItโ€™s also about how China responds strategically when its competitors are disrupted.โ€

Chinaโ€™s Market Muscle on Full Display

China currently controls over 90% of global REPM productionโ€”a chokehold that extends from mine to magnet. While the rest of the world slowly builds alternative supply chains, China continues to expand capacity, tweak quotas, and adjust pricing to defend its dominant position.

The study argues that China may be leveraging geopolitical shocksโ€”like Russiaโ€™s invasion of Ukraine or U.S.โ€“China trade disputesโ€”to flood the market with exports, undercut emerging rivals, and maintain long-term dominance. This tactic echoes prior behavior during the 2010 โ€œRare Earth Crisisโ€ and the subsequent takedown of Molycorp, once Americaโ€™s flagship REE producer.

Demand Explosion and Lack of Transparency

The timing couldnโ€™t be more critical. Global demand for NdFeB magnets, the most powerful REPMs, is expected to grow 7.5% annually through 2040, with EVs and wind turbines leading the charge. Yet the REPM market remains opaque, unregulated, and largely cornered.

โ€œUnlike copper or aluminum, rare earths arenโ€™t traded on transparent exchanges,โ€ notes the study. โ€œChina's ability to adjust supply and pricing in an unregulated over-the-counter market introduces enormous volatility and strategic risk.โ€

Implications for Western Policy

The findings support recent U.S. and EU efforts to diversify REE supply chains through initiatives like the Mineral Security Partnership (MSP) and domestic processing incentives under the Defense Production Act. But they also underscore a harsh reality: building capacity takes time, and China isnโ€™t standing still.

โ€œAustralia, the U.S., and others are making strides,โ€ said Porcher. โ€œBut until the West can build vertically integrated mine-to-magnet supply chains, it remains vulnerableโ€”not just to shortages, but to economic sabotage via pricing and export strategy.โ€

Whatโ€™s Next? Regulation, Recycling, and Resilience

The authors recommend greater investment in REE recycling, the development of regulated rare earth trading platforms to improve price discovery, and accelerated support for magnet substitutes like ferrite and superconductors. Still, they caution that many such technologies remain in early stages.

With climate goals demanding hundreds of gigawatts of new offshore wind and tens of millions of EVs, the pressure to secure rare earth supply is mounting. โ€œREPMs are the Achillesโ€™ heel of the energy transition,โ€ the authors conclude. โ€œAnd right now, China has its foot on it.โ€

Search
Recent Reex News

Africa's Critical Minerals Moment: Geology Is Destiny - But Processing Is Power

Great Powers Era 2.0: Energy Vulnerability, Rare Earth Leverage, and the Iran Variable

Rare Earth Pricing Reality Check: In a Geopolitical Market, Every Number Is Conditional

Rare Earth Recycling Isnโ€™t Automatically โ€œGreenerโ€: New Review Finds NiMH Battery REE Recovery Can Show Higher Reported COโ‚‚โ€”But Comparisons Are Not One-to-One

REEx Research Brief: When Oil Volatility Meets Rare Earth Shipmentsโ€”Chinaโ€™s Export Lever Moves in Cycles

By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Straight Into Your Inbox

Straight Into Your Inbox

Receive a Daily News Update Intended to Help You Keep Pace With the Rapidly Evolving REE Market.

Fantastic! Thanks for subscribing, you won't regret it.

Straight Into Your Inbox

Straight Into Your Inbox

Receive a Daily News Update Intended to Help You Keep Pace With the Rapidly Evolving REE Market.

Fantastic! Thanks for subscribing, you won't regret it.