Why the West Can’t Escape China’s Rare Earth Dominance – Yet

Nov 8, 2025

Highlights

  • Dr. Marina Yue Zhang argues China's rare earth supremacy rests on three interlocking advantages:
    • Control over heavy rare-earth resources
    • Monopoly on separation technology
    • A complete mine-to-magnet industrial ecosystem the West cannot replicate for at least a decade
  • China's one-year 'pause' on export controls is tactical power projection, not concessionโ€”buying Beijing time while Western supply chains face a 10-15 year buildout timeline that favors incumbent scale and process know-how.
  • REEx agrees true Western resilience is 5-10 years away and recommends:
    • Focused, subsidized China-free chains for defense and critical applications
    • Accelerated recycling and dysprosium/terbium thrifting to compete on unit costs

Dr. Marina Yue Zhang, (opens in a new tab) an academic and author specializing in the intersection of technology, innovation, and geopolitics, argues in The Diplomat (November 8, 2025) that the West remains structurally unable to escape Chinaโ€™s rare-earth dominanceโ€”at least for now.

Zhang, a scholar affiliated with the University of Technology Sydney and author of Demystifying Chinaโ€™s Innovation Machine (Oxford University Press, 2022), contends that Beijingโ€™s supremacy is no accident of geology but the product of a forty-year industrial fortress built through patient state investment, environmental tolerance, and technical mastery.

Her central thesis: the West misreads Chinaโ€™s one-year โ€œpauseโ€ on rare-earth export controls as concession when it is, in reality, a calculated exercise of powerโ€”a tactical slowdown that buys Beijing time while reinforcing its three enduring advantages: control over heavy rare-earth resources, a monopoly on separation technology, and a complete mine-to-magnet industrial ecosystem that the United States and Europe are still at least a decade away from replicating.

Three Locks, One Fortress

Zhangโ€™s core thesis: Chinaโ€™s lead isnโ€™t geology; itโ€™s an industrial fortress built over 40 years. She argues three mutually reinforcing โ€œlocksโ€ keep the West dependent:

  • Resource Lock: Economic access to heavy rare earths (Dy/Tb) via ion-adsorption clays (and Myanmar flows) beats Western hard-rock costs.
  • Technology Lock: Decades of solvent-extraction know-how, process IP, and talent now restricted for exportโ€”hard to copy, slower to qualify.
  • Ecosystem Lock: A complete mine-to-magnet-to-markets chainโ€”and the worldโ€™s biggest domestic demandโ€”creates scale the West canโ€™t match quickly.

The โ€œPauseโ€ That Wasnโ€™t a Retreat

Zhang reads the Busan โ€œpauseโ€ on export escalation as tactical, not capitulation: Stage-1 licensing stays in place; Stage-2 threats were merely holstered to win tariff relief. Her argument: time asymmetry. Mine-to-magnet buildouts take 10โ€“15 years; Chinaโ€™s โ€œgrubbyโ€ chokepoints endure longer than high-tech export controls.

Where REEx Agreesโ€”and Pushes Further

REEx has been on record: true resilience is 5โ€“10 years awayโ€”and only with sustained policy, CapEx, and customer offtakes. See: Roadmap to Western Rare Earth Independenceโ€”with the Meter Running (RareEarthExchanges.com). Our supply-chain view aligns with Zhangโ€™s locks, especially around HREE bottlenecks and process know-how.

Whatโ€™s Solid, Whatโ€™s Speculative

Well-supported: Chinaโ€™s dominance in HREE supply, export-control leverage, scale economics, and the multi-year runway Western projects require.

Speculative edges: Precise shares for Myanmar inputs can swing; the implied inevitability of Western cost gaps ignores recycling gains, thrifting (GBD), and policy-backed offtakes now accelerating in North America.

Investor Lens: Compete Narrowly, Not Everywhere

Zhang urges targeted, China-free chains for defense and gridโ€”permanently subsidized if needed. REEx concurs: focus on assured access (not autarky), ruthless unit-cost clarity, and rapid qualification for Dy/Tb-bearing products. The scoreboard today still favors Chinaโ€”but U.S. policy velocity and market activity are finally moving metal, not just memos.

Summary

This piece distills Marina Yue Zhangโ€™s Diplomat argumentโ€”Chinaโ€™s rare earth dominance endures via resource, technology, and ecosystem โ€œlocksโ€โ€”and juxtaposes it with REExโ€™s stance that Western resilience is 5โ€“10 years away. We flag whatโ€™s fact-based vs. speculative, and translate it into investable takeaways: build narrow, subsidized, assured-access chains for critical uses while scaling recycling and Dy/Tb thrifting.

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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.

1 Comment

  1. Christopher Burke

    A compelling analysis. What stands out most is the reminder that rare earth dominance is not simply a matter of resources, but of accumulated industrial capability the โ€œfortressโ€ China has spent four decades building. The Busan pause makes far more sense when seen through that lens. Not concession, but strategic patience while Beijing manages its own vulnerabilities. For countries in the Indo-Pacific and in resource-rich regions such Africa, this reinforces the urgency of building selective, resilient supply chains rather than chasing full duplication. The challenge is to identify where targeted cooperation, long-term investment and shared standards can meaningfully reduce exposure to single points of failure. This is a long game and Zhang captures that reality with real clarity.

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