Rare Earth Leverage Back on the Table? U.S.-China Drone Tension Mounts

Dec 23, 2025

Highlights

  • Following the U.S. FCC decision to ban foreign drones, China may be preparing to squeeze rare earth supply with carbonate prices reportedly surging to nearly double recent norms of $5,000-$9,000/ton.
  • Rare earth carbonates are essential precursors for magnets, motors, and sensors used in aerospace, defense, EVs, and electronicsโ€”making them a powerful geopolitical leverage point China controls.
  • The move mirrors 2025's yttrium oxide price surge of 4,400% in Europe, signaling that drone sovereignty without materials sovereignty leaves Western supply chains vulnerable to Chinese retaliation.

Tensions between Washington and Beijing just jumped another notchโ€”and this time the rare earths market is listening closely. Following the Trump administrationโ€“backed FCC decision to effectively shut the U.S. drone market to foreign-made systems and critical components, China has fired back diplomatically. Are markets signaling concern that Beijingโ€™s real response may come elsewhere: critical minerals or rare earth elements? Rare Earth Exchanges was among the first, if not the first, to scoop the move by the Trump administration.

Chatter across at least some cohorts of the rare earth network suggests China may be preparing to squeeze upstream supply. Rumblings of rare earth carbonate prices being pushed up markedlyโ€”could this be true?)โ€”nearly double recent norms according to one sourceโ€”surfaced. But we cannot be certain. ย If confirmed, this would mark a sharp escalation from the $5,000โ€“$9,000/ton range that characterized mixed rare earth carbonates for some time. Note Rare Earth Exchangesโ„ข needs a broader sampling for any definitive statements.

Why Carbonates Matter

Rare earth carbonates are not niche byproductsโ€”they are essential precursor materials used to produce oxides, metals, and alloys that underpin magnets, motors, sensors, and guidance systems. Any disruption here ripples rapidly through aerospace, defense, EVs, wind turbines, and advanced electronics.

In short, carbonates are leverage.

A Familiar Playbook, Higher Stakes

China controls the majority of global rare earth processing capacity. History shows that when geopolitical pressure rises, export controls, licensing delays, or โ€œmarket-basedโ€ price spikes often follow.

The pattern is already visible in 2025:

  • Yttrium oxide prices in Europe surged over 4,400% after Chinese export controls in April, threatening jet engines and semiconductor supply chains.
  • NdPr oxide prices hit multi-year highs after trade friction and supply realignment following MP Materialsโ€™ shipment halt to China.
  • Western governments and OEMs are now racingโ€”againโ€”to fund non-Chinese projects, from U.S. separation facilities to African and Australian developments.

A carbonate price shock would amplify all of this at once.

Drones Today, Magnets Tomorrow

The FCCโ€™s drone ruling is not just about airframes. Motors, power electronics, controllers, and communications systems all rely on rare earthsโ€”especially magnet materials. By closing the U.S. market to Chinese drone supply chains, Washington has directly challenged one of Beijingโ€™s most successful high-tech export sectors.

If rare earth carbonate prices spike, it would be a clear signal: China reminding the world where real chokepoints still sit.

The Strategic Question

Is this retaliationโ€”or preemption? Or a false alarm?

Whether or not China formally announces new restrictions, price action alone could possibly achieve strategic goals depending on myriad unfolding dynamics: squeezing Western manufacturers, testing political resolve, and reinforcing the cost of decoupling. On the other hand ,the Trump administration may understand what Rare Earth Exchanges has been elaborating on: Chinaโ€™s over-production crises and lack of adequate markets in the short run could become more acute.

For the West, the message is blunt. Drone sovereignty without materials sovereignty is incomplete. As technology bans widen, will rare earth leverage become moreโ€”not lessโ€”powerful?

This is no longer a hypothetical. The market is already whispering but weโ€™ll have to wait and see what unfolds.

ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโ„ข โ€“ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.

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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.

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