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Quad tightens rare-earth cooperation to counter China

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My Comment: The QUAD is more than a military-minded alliance. I'm keen to follow this grouping and its future.


Quad tightens rare-earth cooperation to counter China
Japan, India, Australia and US to collaborate in tech, funding and rule-making
https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%252Fimages%252F7%252F5%252F9%252F3%252F32933957-1-eng-GB%252Fraree2re2.jpg

Yoshihide Suga, Joe Biden, Scott Morrison and Narendra Modi -- the leaders of the Quad nations -- are stepping up their efforts to counter China. (Source photos by Reuters and AFP/Jiji)
Nikkei staff writersMarch 11, 2021 18:00 JST

TOKYO -- The U.S., Australia, Japan, and India are on the verge of joining hands to build a rare-earth procurement chain to counter the dominance China plays in supplying these crucial elements to makers of everything from smartphones to high-performance motors to EV batteries.

China currently produces nearly 60% of the world's rare earths, and its market power has posed supply concerns. The Quadrilateral Security Dialogue nations intend to counter this by cooperating in funding new production technologies and development projects. They also intend to lead the way in drafting international rules.

The Quad leaders on Friday are expected to confirm their intentions to reduce their dependence on China-produced rare earths. During an online meeting, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, U.S. President Joe Biden, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi are also expected to share their concern over China's maritime advances.

In addition, they are likely to agree to cooperate in supplying COVID-19 vaccines to developing countries.
Big tech companies rely on China-produced rare earths like neodymium, essential for electric vehicles, and lithium, used in batteries.

The metals are also essential for wind turbines and other "decarbonization" infrastructure.
The world's No. 2 economy has a near-monopoly on the separation and purification of rare earths, processes that create concerns regarding environment and soil damage.

It has less control in mining these elements. The U.S. exports domestically produced rare-earth ores to China, then imports 80% of its refined rare earth supplies from China.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, China in 2020 accounted for 58% of the globe's rare-earth production, down from around 90% some four years ago as the U.S. and Australia have gradually boosted their own production.

China has positioned rare earths as strategic resources and has used its near-monopoly as a diplomatic bargaining chip. In 2010, supplies of Chinese rare earths to Japan came to a halt after Tokyo nationalized the Senkaku Islands. Japan says its sovereignty over the East China Sea islets is not under dispute, but China, which claims the islands and calls them Daoiyu, reacted angrily.

When China halted rare earth shipments, prices of some of the metals skyrocketed nearly ninefold.

And it appears China is not finished engaging in rare earth diplomacy; it recently announced it is considering limits on exports.
U.S. President Joe Biden on Feb. 24 signed an executive order mandating a 100-day review of critical product supply chains, with a focus on those for computer chips, large capacity batteries, active pharmaceutical ingredients as well as critical minerals and strategic materials. This last category includes rare earths.

As for their rare-earth efforts, the Quad nations will first develop refining technologies. Rare-earth veins often contain radioactive materials, and a large amount of radioactive waste is produced in the refining process, which is what China dominates.

Partially due to its lax environmental restrictions, China has built up a price advantage in the rare earth market. As a result, the Quad countries will focus on coming up with low-cost, low-radioactive-waste refinement technologies.
The four partners also plan to arrange for government-affiliated financial institutions to provide syndicated loans to the mining and refining businesses.

The U.S. government is already supporting plans to process Australian ores in the U.S., and Japan is weighing whether to take part in this arrangement.

The International Energy Agency, meanwhile, intends to establish rules to stop China's export controls. India is not a member of the IEA, but in January, at the behest of Japan, the U.S. and Australia, New Delhi and the IEA entered into a Strategic Partnership, strengthening their collaboration across a range of vital areas.

The IEA will call on European countries to join the discussion. It plans to create a framework of making member countries report on their rare-earth stockpiles and to tighten international monitoring.

According to data from the U.S. Geological Survey, the U.S. accounted for 16% of global rare earth production in 2020. Australia accounted for 7%, and India 1%.

While India accounts for 6% of the world's rare-earth reserves, Japan is one of the biggest rare-earth consumers. If the Quad nations can collaborate all along the chain, from production to consumption, their influence in the critical sector will rise.
Quad nations have additional incentives. Australia and China have been locking horns over trade and security, while India and China have been facing off in the disputed Himalayan border region. These clashes have prompted the four partners to deepen their military and economic cooperation.

 
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So, with some carefully planned muscle man diplomacy, tinpot dictator managed to lose more than 30% of the market monopoly on one of the most critical export commodity.
Talk about undermining oneself.
 
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So, with some carefully planned muscle man diplomacy, tinpot dictator managed to lose more than 30% of the market monopoly on one of the most critical export commodity.
Talk about undermining oneself.

That rare-earth collaboration WHEN it comes to fruition will be a major dent to the Chinese economy.
 
.
My Comment: The QUAD is more than a military-minded alliance. I'm keen to follow this grouping and its future.


Quad tightens rare-earth cooperation to counter China
Japan, India, Australia and US to collaborate in tech, funding and rule-making
https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%252Fimages%252F7%252F5%252F9%252F3%252F32933957-1-eng-GB%252Fraree2re2.jpg

Yoshihide Suga, Joe Biden, Scott Morrison and Narendra Modi -- the leaders of the Quad nations -- are stepping up their efforts to counter China. (Source photos by Reuters and AFP/Jiji)
Nikkei staff writersMarch 11, 2021 18:00 JST

TOKYO -- The U.S., Australia, Japan, and India are on the verge of joining hands to build a rare-earth procurement chain to counter the dominance China plays in supplying these crucial elements to makers of everything from smartphones to high-performance motors to EV batteries.

China currently produces nearly 60% of the world's rare earths, and its market power has posed supply concerns. The Quadrilateral Security Dialogue nations intend to counter this by cooperating in funding new production technologies and development projects. They also intend to lead the way in drafting international rules.

The Quad leaders on Friday are expected to confirm their intentions to reduce their dependence on China-produced rare earths. During an online meeting, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, U.S. President Joe Biden, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi are also expected to share their concern over China's maritime advances.

In addition, they are likely to agree to cooperate in supplying COVID-19 vaccines to developing countries.
Big tech companies rely on China-produced rare earths like neodymium, essential for electric vehicles, and lithium, used in batteries.

The metals are also essential for wind turbines and other "decarbonization" infrastructure.
The world's No. 2 economy has a near-monopoly on the separation and purification of rare earths, processes that create concerns regarding environment and soil damage.

It has less control in mining these elements. The U.S. exports domestically produced rare-earth ores to China, then imports 80% of its refined rare earth supplies from China.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, China in 2020 accounted for 58% of the globe's rare-earth production, down from around 90% some four years ago as the U.S. and Australia have gradually boosted their own production.

China has positioned rare earths as strategic resources and has used its near-monopoly as a diplomatic bargaining chip. In 2010, supplies of Chinese rare earths to Japan came to a halt after Tokyo nationalized the Senkaku Islands. Japan says its sovereignty over the East China Sea islets is not under dispute, but China, which claims the islands and calls them Daoiyu, reacted angrily.

When China halted rare earth shipments, prices of some of the metals skyrocketed nearly ninefold.

And it appears China is not finished engaging in rare earth diplomacy; it recently announced it is considering limits on exports.
U.S. President Joe Biden on Feb. 24 signed an executive order mandating a 100-day review of critical product supply chains, with a focus on those for computer chips, large capacity batteries, active pharmaceutical ingredients as well as critical minerals and strategic materials. This last category includes rare earths.

As for their rare-earth efforts, the Quad nations will first develop refining technologies. Rare-earth veins often contain radioactive materials, and a large amount of radioactive waste is produced in the refining process, which is what China dominates.

Partially due to its lax environmental restrictions, China has built up a price advantage in the rare earth market. As a result, the Quad countries will focus on coming up with low-cost, low-radioactive-waste refinement technologies.
The four partners also plan to arrange for government-affiliated financial institutions to provide syndicated loans to the mining and refining businesses.

The U.S. government is already supporting plans to process Australian ores in the U.S., and Japan is weighing whether to take part in this arrangement.

The International Energy Agency, meanwhile, intends to establish rules to stop China's export controls. India is not a member of the IEA, but in January, at the behest of Japan, the U.S. and Australia, New Delhi and the IEA entered into a Strategic Partnership, strengthening their collaboration across a range of vital areas.

The IEA will call on European countries to join the discussion. It plans to create a framework of making member countries report on their rare-earth stockpiles and to tighten international monitoring.

According to data from the U.S. Geological Survey, the U.S. accounted for 16% of global rare earth production in 2020. Australia accounted for 7%, and India 1%.

While India accounts for 6% of the world's rare-earth reserves, Japan is one of the biggest rare-earth consumers. If the Quad nations can collaborate all along the chain, from production to consumption, their influence in the critical sector will rise.
Quad nations have additional incentives. Australia and China have been locking horns over trade and security, while India and China have been facing off in the disputed Himalayan border region. These clashes have prompted the four partners to deepen their military and economic cooperation.

So, with some carefully planned muscle man diplomacy, tinpot dictator managed to lose more than 30% of the market monopoly on one of the most critical export commodity.
Talk about undermining oneself.


How does one control things that they do not have :lol:

1615569244230.png

So, with some carefully planned muscle man diplomacy, tinpot dictator managed to lose more than 30% of the market monopoly on one of the most critical export commodity.
Talk about undermining oneself.

That rare-earth collaboration WHEN it comes to fruition will be a major dent to the Chinese economy.

Dreams are free. :lol:
 
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How does one control things that they do not have :lol:

View attachment 723994




Dreams are free. :lol:

I agree dreams are free and so is the space between some people's ears. Lower production does not necessarily mean there is a lack of rare-earth materials in that country. It means they have not chosen to take the environmental risk to increase more production.

Had you read the article instead of rushing to be a Chinese spokesperson here, you would have read

1. They acknowledged China has 60% of the market
2. The Quad is looking at creating a safer /environmentally cleaner way to extract rare-earth
3. looking to create a competing market where they and other like-minded countries buy from their supply chain
 
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So, with some carefully planned muscle man diplomacy, tinpot dictator managed to lose more than 30% of the market monopoly on one of the most critical export commodity.
Talk about undermining oneself.
That's the "price" (if one can even call it that) of being powerful and independent. It's nothing the weak and servile will ever have to worry about.
 
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That's the "price" (if one can even call it that) of being powerful and independent. It's nothing the weak and servile will ever have to worry about.
That's called stretching your legs before you sit and arrogance which will be your bane.
 
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How does one control things that they do not have :lol:
Please read more, Rare Earth Minerals are not "Rare", they are abundant but the process of extraction is not environment friendly. China doesn't care about the environment so, countries shut down their mines let China pollute it's rivers and kill it's citizen and ecology while no research was done on improving the extraction process. Now, that more countries are extracting REMs, the Chinese monopoly is fading.

China used to control 95% of the supply of REM, they exerted pressure on Japan and Japan dumped them that reduced their supply to 90%, then the Chinese controlled supply to the US, they began to source from other countries, and within 3-4 years, China effectively lost 35+% market share of supply.:lol: Your masters as as stupid as its monkeys.
 
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How does one control things that they do not have :lol:

View attachment 723994




Dreams are free. :lol:

Please read more, Rare Earth Minerals are not "Rare", they are abundant but the process of extraction is not environment friendly. China doesn't care about the environment so, countries shut down their mines let China pollute it's rivers and kill it's citizen and ecology while no research was done on improving the extraction process. Now, that more countries are extracting REMs, the Chinese monopoly is fading.

China used to control 95% of the supply of REM, they exerted pressure on Japan and Japan dumped them that reduced their supply to 90%, then the Chinese controlled supply to the US, they began to source from other countries, and within 3-4 years, China effectively lost 35+% market share of supply.:lol: Your masters as as stupid as its monkeys.

 
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The quad is going to save the world LOL Look at them all. Clowns freaked out by the rise of China. China haunts them day and night. China this China that. A circus group that is obsessed by China. Conspiracy theories rife.
 
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China and its fans would put up a brave face with respect to QUAD. Anyone with decent analytical capabilities knows that QUAD is not a joke. It appears that China has finally taken on more than that it can chew.
 
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China and its fans would put up a brave face with respect to QUAD. Anyone with decent analytical capabilities knows that QUAD is not a joke. It appears that China has finally taken on more than that it can chew.

Blah blah blah. Cry rivers. It won't make a difference. You hold your daylight therapy sessions. What do you think you can possibly do against China? LOL at quad. What a stupid name. The four of you are just cheerleaders. American cheerleaders.
 
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The Quad would unravel once India is at the receiving end of racism during Quad cooperative measures...India should be wary of China but should not just sing to the tunes of the West
 
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