Thursday 21 October 2010

BBC News - Row over exotic minerals that make modern life tick

21 October 2010 Last updated at 11:10

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Row over exotic minerals that make modern life tick

By Olivia Lang BBC News
Mini magnets made from chemically processed rare earths are shown in Beijing China has been reducing export quotas of rare earths for several years

They might not dominate headlines like diamonds or oil, but rare earths are some of the world's most valued resources.

These metals are crucial to almost every 21st Century household, and used globally to make high-tech products, from weapons, to flat-screen TVs and mobile phones.

What's more, China produces 97% of them.

But with much of the world's economy depending on these metals, a report that China is curtailing its exports to Europe and the US by almost a third next year has rattled manufacturers and policymakers.

China denies the recent claim, but has previously stated that it will restrict exports to protect supplies and prevent mines being over-exploited, while also meeting an increase in domestic demand.

Governments are now increasingly worried about shortages, while Japan has said it will need to consider stockpiling. Meanwhile, prices are soaring.

'Stranglehold'

The 17 elements known as rare earth minerals - numbers 57 to 71, as well as a couple of others, on the periodic table - are found outside China, but most of the mines in other countries have long closed down.

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The world's rare earths

  • Found in high concentrations in the world's crust, but difficult and costly to extract
  • Used for green technology, such as battery-charged cars and wind turbines; in laptop computers, flat-screen TVs and mobile phones; for lasers; and for medical equipment, such as MRI scans
  • Demand has risen dramatically over recent years
  • They include: Scandium; Yttrium; Lanthanum; Cerium; Praseodymium; Neodymium; Promethium; Samarium; Europium; Gadolinium; Terbium; Dysprosium; Holmium; Erbium; Thulium; Ytterbium; Lutetium

Until the mid-1980s, the US dominated production, but then China entered the market. Soon, China had cornered it; as Deng Xiaoping said in 1992, "Arabia has oil, China has rare earth".

China has been tightening export quotas since 2006, sparking increasing concern about its ability to disrupt supply chains.

The issue re-entered the spotlight in September, after the arrest by Japan of a Chinese fisherman in disputed waters initiated a row between the two countries.

Japan, whose firms account for 56% of China's rare earth exports, claimed that China then restricted earth metal supplies in response.

Wind-power generators are seen near the San Andreas Fault on July 2, 2006 near Palm Springs, California Rare earths are used for wind turbines and other green technologies

In a New York Times op-ed last month, economist Paul Krugman wrote: "On one side, the affair highlights the fecklessness of US policymakers, who did nothing while an unreliable regime acquired a stranglehold on key materials."

"On the other side, the incident shows a Chinese government that is dangerously trigger-happy, willing to wage economic warfare on the slightest provocation," he added.

But China has said it was not a policy decision, but rather the choices of individual companies expressing condemnation of Japan.

In any case, that restriction, and now the 30% reduction claim (which the US is set to investigate), has sent the future of these metals to the top of policy agendas - with observers now questioning whether the world can continue to rely so much on China.

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Start Quote

The Chinese definitely feel they have total control of it - just like the Middle East had control over oil”

End Quote Professor Animesh Jha University of Leeds, UK
'Stick but no carrots'

The consequences of a squeeze on rare earths would be considerable across the developed world, says Professor Animesh Jha from the University of Leeds.

"The Chinese definitely feel they have total control of it - just like the Middle East had control over oil," he says.

He says it is about asserting political as well as economic power - as the Japan incident demonstrates. And, in his opinion, the reason for China's rumoured restrictions to the US and Europe are not disconnected from the US and Chinese row over currency.

"It upsets the trade balance, they are holding the stick but no carrots. They want to say, 'We are not going to buck our currency up and we want to be tough'."

But, then again, why shouldn't China use its own resources for its own interests, asks Jack Lifton, director of Technology Metals Research.

In this undated photo, chunks of chemically processed rare earths are shown in Beijing China's commerce ministry has warned that reserves are falling

"I don't see what my right is to someone else's property. They are on Chinese soil. The Chinese are saying, 'You have the resources. Go mine them and use them for yourselves'."

Besides, he says, China is not preventing other countries buying the end product: "I don't see this as a surprise. China has openly said it does not want to be a raw material supplier, it has always said it wants to manufacture goods."

But, he says, China will use it to its political advantage if it can, like with Japan - and other countries have been slow to wake up to this.

"It hasn't sunk in to the Western elite that they can't tell China what to do," he adds.

'Run dry'
Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

It hasn't sunk in to the Western elite that they can't tell China what to do”

End Quote Jack Lifton Technology Metals Research LLC

The issue underlines the importance of sourcing rare earths from non-Chinese minerals, says Professor Jha, who believes other countries should have done more work on alternative sources already.

"It's very dangerous to rely on limited resources from politically unsafe places. I don't think we should be held hostage to China," he says.

But where else would manufacturers source them?

According to its commerce ministry, reserves in China - most of which come from mines in Chinese Inner Mongolia - dropped by 37% between 1996 and 2003, suggesting future supply could run dry.

But, according to Professor Jha, there are extensive deposits elsewhere which can be tapped into. More than one third of rare earths are found outside of China.

Mines are being developed in California and Australia, which Mr Lifton says should reassure the world of business.

"Both mines are very large and can supply the world indefinitely," he says.

"This crisis is literally on a countdown clock. At one point the Chinese won't have leverage as others come into production."

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