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Rare earths an important strategic resource: President Xi

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Rare earths an important strategic resource: Xi

Source:Global Times Published: 2019/5/22 22:19:51

d7c87a69-b59c-4da5-b468-393049bcaaeb.jpeg


Chinese President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, learns about the production process and operation of the JL MAG Rare-Earth Co. Ltd. as well as the development of the rare earth industry in the city of Ganzhou in east China's Jiangxi Province on May 20, 2019. Xi Jinping visited Jiangxi Province Monday on an inspection tour. (Xinhua/Ju Peng)

Rare-earth minerals are important strategic yet non-renewable resources, and efforts are needed to ramp up scientific and technological innovation for there to be increased added value in the sector, Chinese President Xi Jinping said while visiting a major rare-earth company in East China's Jiangxi Province, the Xinhua News Agency reported on Wednesday.

It was the latest hint that the world's No.1 producer of rare-earth elements is giving the minerals a place of prominence amid escalating trade tensions with the US.

There needs to be a push to continuously improve extraction and utilization techniques, extend the industry chain, raise the added value, and enhance environmental protection of relevant projects to achieve green, sustainable development, Xi said during his visit to JL MAG Rare-Earth Co in Ganzhou, as part of his inspection tour in Jiangxi that ran from Monday to Wednesday, according to Xinhua.

Rare-earth development in Ganzhou, a major rare-earth production area in China, has been hampered by environmental constraints, said Chen Zhanheng, deputy secretary-general of the Association of China Rare Earth Industry.

Chen noted that the president's comments, which addressed varied concerns over rare-earth development, will give a boost to the sector in Ganzhou in particular.

"Measures are expected in the pipeline to push for China's rare-earth upgrade," Chen told the Global Times.

While the nation's rare-earth advantage has thus far centered around the lower end of the industry chain, there are growing signs that the minerals have been increasingly used in fields including white goods appliances, wind power generation and industrial robots, as China is gradually moving up the value chain, he explained.

In a statement posted Wednesday on the website of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the ministry's raw materials industry department stated the opportunity provided by Xi's visit to the Jiangxi rare-earth company needs to be grasped to firmly push ahead with the sector's stable operation.

The news about the president's visit on Monday sparked a rally in Chinese rare-earth shares the same day. Rare-earth stocks have since extended their rally, with shares of JL MAG Rare-Earth Co having surged nearly 30 percent this week as of Wednesday's market close.

Details of Xi's visit and his comments weren't disclosed until Wednesday. In the hall of the rare-earth company, Xi earnestly listened to an explanation of its production and operations, and the development of the rare-earth sector in Ganzhou. He got detailed insights into the distribution, extraction techniques, and applications of the country's rare-earth resources and measures taken to protect the environment over the course of production and processing, according to the Xinhua report.

Technological innovation is the lifeblood of a company, Xi said, and only by possessing indigenous intellectual property and core technology will products with core competitiveness be produced and invincible success be achieved amid stiff competition.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1151111.shtml
 
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Rare earths an important strategic resource: Xi

Source:Global Times Published: 2019/5/22 22:19:51

d7c87a69-b59c-4da5-b468-393049bcaaeb.jpeg


Chinese President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, learns about the production process and operation of the JL MAG Rare-Earth Co. Ltd. as well as the development of the rare earth industry in the city of Ganzhou in east China's Jiangxi Province on May 20, 2019. Xi Jinping visited Jiangxi Province Monday on an inspection tour. (Xinhua/Ju Peng)

Rare-earth minerals are important strategic yet non-renewable resources, and efforts are needed to ramp up scientific and technological innovation for there to be increased added value in the sector, Chinese President Xi Jinping said while visiting a major rare-earth company in East China's Jiangxi Province, the Xinhua News Agency reported on Wednesday.

It was the latest hint that the world's No.1 producer of rare-earth elements is giving the minerals a place of prominence amid escalating trade tensions with the US.

There needs to be a push to continuously improve extraction and utilization techniques, extend the industry chain, raise the added value, and enhance environmental protection of relevant projects to achieve green, sustainable development, Xi said during his visit to JL MAG Rare-Earth Co in Ganzhou, as part of his inspection tour in Jiangxi that ran from Monday to Wednesday, according to Xinhua.

Rare-earth development in Ganzhou, a major rare-earth production area in China, has been hampered by environmental constraints, said Chen Zhanheng, deputy secretary-general of the Association of China Rare Earth Industry.

Chen noted that the president's comments, which addressed varied concerns over rare-earth development, will give a boost to the sector in Ganzhou in particular.

"Measures are expected in the pipeline to push for China's rare-earth upgrade," Chen told the Global Times.

While the nation's rare-earth advantage has thus far centered around the lower end of the industry chain, there are growing signs that the minerals have been increasingly used in fields including white goods appliances, wind power generation and industrial robots, as China is gradually moving up the value chain, he explained.

In a statement posted Wednesday on the website of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the ministry's raw materials industry department stated the opportunity provided by Xi's visit to the Jiangxi rare-earth company needs to be grasped to firmly push ahead with the sector's stable operation.

The news about the president's visit on Monday sparked a rally in Chinese rare-earth shares the same day. Rare-earth stocks have since extended their rally, with shares of JL MAG Rare-Earth Co having surged nearly 30 percent this week as of Wednesday's market close.

Details of Xi's visit and his comments weren't disclosed until Wednesday. In the hall of the rare-earth company, Xi earnestly listened to an explanation of its production and operations, and the development of the rare-earth sector in Ganzhou. He got detailed insights into the distribution, extraction techniques, and applications of the country's rare-earth resources and measures taken to protect the environment over the course of production and processing, according to the Xinhua report.

Technological innovation is the lifeblood of a company, Xi said, and only by possessing indigenous intellectual property and core technology will products with core competitiveness be produced and invincible success be achieved amid stiff competition.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1151111.shtml


Do it!

You will soon realize that this so called weapon is a dud!

So stop talking and take the plunge, and stop supplying to the US.
 
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Let them take on the costs of getting their operations off the ground.

Then lower prices again.

The same move that was pulled on Molycorp back in 2015, effectively bankrupting them and closing the Mountain Pass mine in California. It probably won't work again because of the likelihood that if China imposes restrictions on REE exports, the Mountain Pass mine would be nationalized by executive order.

The mountain pass mine is the key to the US strategic supply of REEs, it is the single largest accessible source in world at the moment and capable of meeting US industrial needs. It reopened this year and is currently producing 4,700 tons per year but can scale up production to meet US demands in about 18-24 months.
 
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Doubt it. If it were that easy it'd be done by now.

It won't be easy, but if import restrictions were imposed production can be scaled up particularly if the mine were nationalized.

China has outmaneuvered the US for several decades now with REEs. It's amazing how they have slipped up continuously allowing China to corner the market, and through the acquisition of US firms gain control of the technology for extraction. It's taken awhile for the US mining industry develop new tech to extract REEs, and avoid the environmentally damaging effects it causes. These are just some of the barriers that the US has had to overcome in restarting Mountain Pass Mine.
 
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The same move that was pulled on Molycorp back in 2015, effectively bankrupting them and closing the Mountain Pass mine in California. It probably won't work again because of the likelihood that if China imposes restrictions on REE exports, the Mountain Pass mine would be nationalized by executive order.

The mountain pass mine is the key to the US strategic supply of REEs, it is the single largest accessible source in world at the moment and capable of meeting US industrial needs. It reopened this year and is currently producing 4,700 tons per year but can scale up production to meet US demands in about 18-24 months.
did u read the article in the other thread?

even the Mountain pass mine has to send its yield to China for refining TODAY.

thanks

lol guess what?

even America's sole remaining rare earths mine is partly owned by the Chinese:

Affiliates of two U.S. investment fund advisors, JHL Capital Group LLC and QVT Financial LP and Shenghe Resources Holding Co., a Chinese minority shareholder, acquired Mountain Pass in July 2017 with the goal of reviving America’s rare earth industry.[10] The venture does business under the name MP Materials (www.mpmaterials.com).[11] MP Materials resumed mining and refining operations in January 2018.[12]

https://www.wsj.com/articles/mountain-pass-mine-approved-for-sale-to-jhl-qvt-shenghe-1498255593/

So China/Chinese companies owns most of the world's

1)rare earths

2)copper https://business.financialpost.com/...hoard-has-miners-grappling-with-demand-enigma
China is an enigma': Country is now hoarding 80% of the world’s copper stockpiles

3)cobalt https://www.afr.com/business/mining...he-next-industrial-revolution-20190515-p51ngs


4)Lithium

5)Steel production

6)Tungsten
 
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The same move that was pulled on Molycorp back in 2015, effectively bankrupting them and closing the Mountain Pass mine in California. It probably won't work again because of the likelihood that if China imposes restrictions on REE exports, the Mountain Pass mine would be nationalized by executive order.

The mountain pass mine is the key to the US strategic supply of REEs, it is the single largest accessible source in world at the moment and capable of meeting US industrial needs. It reopened this year and is currently producing 4,700 tons per year but can scale up production to meet US demands in about 18-24 months.

Yeah, but that's US raw Earth material. They can do it, so why not? Let's them do it. But, this is Chinese Raw Earth Material. China has a responsibility to conserve their supply of RE Material. For their future.

So I agree that China Government needs to conserve this RE Material and shouldn't export them to anywhere. Use it only for domestic needs. Go to hell with the American needs. As they have their own mine, after all.
 
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Do it!

You will soon realize that this so called weapon is a dud!

So stop talking and take the plunge, and stop supplying to the US.
Sword is more frightening when it is put on your throat than the immediate cut. Isn't it? China will ban rare earth export to America when the proper time comes. And it will work. America can not find other rare earth materials suppliers to replace China.
 
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Yeah, but that's US raw Earth material. They can do it, so why not? Let's them do it. But, this is Chinese Raw Earth Material. China has a responsibility to conserve their supply of RE Material. For their future.

So I agree that China Government needs to conserve this RE Material and shouldn't export them to anywhere. Use it only for domestic needs. Go to hell with the American needs. As they have their own mine, after all.

China not only produces more than it requires, it also processes raw REEs sourced from other nations. Restricting export supply, particularly during the present trade tensions, would quite obviously be in retaliation for US tariffs and other actions. Last time they restricted supply they tried to pretend it was for environmental purposes but were called out on it by the WTO.

Of course China would be within its rights to restrict supply, and yes it would have an effect on US and global manufacturing. Its one of China's trump cards, they probably should use it. But it's not the silver bullet many believe it to be, it will be part of the on-going trade war that isn't going to finish anytime soon.
 
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