Those of us living in the United States are once again getting an education about the importance of rare earth elements for the production of consumer electronics, electric vehicles, wind turbines, and military equipment such as night-vision goggles. The reason for this education is a Chinese threat to retaliate in the ongoing trade war with the Trump administration by restricting exports of rare earths.
Clockwise from Top Center: Praseodymium, Cerium, Lanthanum, Neodymium, Samarium, and Gadolinium. |
It's not an empty threat. The last time the Chinese restricted exports in 2010 prices skyrocketed on the world market. Back then the Chinese produced more than 90 percent of the world's supply. Ostensibly, the Chinese were reserving these critical metals to bolster domestic manufacturers by forcing production of devices requiring the metals to occur in China. The Chinese eventually relented in the face of an adverse ruling from the World Trade Organization.
To understand this threat in context, first, it is important to know that rare earths are not rare in the earth's crust. Some of the most important are as plentiful as zinc and chromium. However, rare earth elements do not occur in concentrated deposits nearly so often as zinc, chromium and other plentiful metals. That means that rare earths are expensive to mine.Second, only 36 percent of the known reserves are in China. Vietnam, Russia and Brazil have the largest deposits outside of China. But higher prices would probably be needed to spur development of those deposits on a larger scale. This point is not lost on the Chinese.
The Mountain Pass Rare Earth Mine in California had been a leading source of rare earths for many years but was closed due to low prices in 2002. Expanding low-cost Chinese production was a main culprit.The mine was later sold and then revived in the wake of the Chinese export restrictions that began in 2010. Investors put $1.25 billion into new infrastructure for mining and processing. The mine operated in the red for years despite high rare earth prices.
After the Chinese eased export restrictions on rare earths in 2015, prices plummeted. Within months the Mountain Pass mined was closed. The company controlling the mine declared bankruptcy. Two years later the mine was sold to new owners for a mere $20.5 million.
Even though the Chinese share of world production has been cut to just 80 percent in 2017, that number is deceptive. The new owners of the Mountain Pass mine include a Chinese rare earth mining company. Strangely, a recent report touting the importance of the mine to American domestic supply failed to mention the minority stake that a Chinese company holds.
Not only are rare earths difficult to mine, they also produce nasty wastes when processed. The Malaysian government is insisting on the removal of 451,000 tons of radioactive water at the main processing facility of Australian rare earth miner Lynas Corporation. The government is threatening to pull the operating license of the facility. Lynas is the largest producer of rare earths outside of China.
The expansion of rare earth mining and processing in countries that enforce environmental rules implies that costs will be higher than those for Chinese companies, which have ignored environmental concerns and rules in the past.
If the Chinese export restrictions go into effect in retaliation for U.S. tariffs, there will certainly be short-term pain for a broad array of manufacturers everywhere as rare earth metal prices rise. To be effective, of course, the export restrictions would have to be worldwide; otherwise, shipments to other countries would simply be rerouted to the United States.
If the Chinese do curtail exports, expect many stories about how plentiful rare earths are—in the crust of the Earth, that is, which is not very relevant—and how much of world's reserves lie outside China which is more relevant.
Also expect a kind of amnesia to grip reporters and the public alike. The last time Chinese dominance in rare earths was eroded by their own actions, the government devastated new competitors when it eased export restrictions and prices plummeted. What makes people believe that this time it will be different, that the Chinese will forget how successfully they undermined their rare earth competitors previously by flooding the market?
My conclusion from all of this is that any government serious about securing a consistent, uninterruptible supply of rare earth metals will be forced to subsidize their production—either by guaranteeing high prices in long-term contracts or by nationalizing production by buying out existing mines and processing facilities or setting up its own.
Of course, rare earth deposits are not evenly distributed throughout the world. So, there might be a need for governments to create a multilateral organization for mining and processing.
Some say that the free market will solve the problem. That might work if we had a free market in rare earth metals. We don't. China continues to control a huge share of the market by controlling what happens in the industry within its borders (and perhaps beyond as we've seen with the Mountain Pass mine).
The only way to fight that is with a mechanism that guarantees supplies regardless of what the Chinese do.
Photo Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture
Kurt Cobb is a freelance writer and communications consultant who writes frequently about energy and environment. His work has appeared in The Christian Science Monitor, Resilience, Common Dreams, Le Monde Diplomatique, Oilprice.com, OilVoice, TalkMarkets, Investing.com, Business Insider and many other places. He is the author of an oil-themed novel entitled Prelude and has a widely followed blog called Resource Insights. He is currently a fellow of the Arthur Morgan Institute for Community Solutions. He can be contacted at kurtcobb2001@yahoo.com.
Thousands of tons of this material are mined in the United States, as the article notes, and exported to China for extraction and refining, which is a toxic process that normally pollutes, and China has less rigorous environmental laws that we do. Extraction with low environmental impact would drive up the cost, and much of it comes back to the USA in products.
ReplyDeleteOne solution is to make the conscious choice of keeping the rare earths we mine here, and paying the cost of environmentally compliant refining, this might alienate the Chinese partial owners, but since a higher price is more palatable, there would be buyers. We could sell the product to the Chinese for manufacture into finished products (although we may price above the world market price), or we could take other steps with might make domestic manufacture more attractive. This stuff is refined somewhere, and if they are doing it on the cheap, there's an environmental bill waiting to come due, as the article notes, in Malaysia. I don't see how that is possible, over the short term, but it is still possible as Chinese labor costs continue to rise. The immediate block to all this is that the current administration does not think in these terms. Dropping out of trade agreement as turning trade into a nationalist battlefield destroys any international influence we might have wielded to alter this.
So... all the hoopla is about mining minerals that we don't actually need... while we create endless amounts of more pollution... and were only really "concerned" about the prices we'll have to pay...
ReplyDeleteHumans are really truly stupid. So is the media. The emphasis is always on what we can have, not the real price we're all having to pay... for generations and generations (should we survive our stupidity that long, doubtful).
Screw the free market. It's definitely a huge part of the problem of our rampant, ongoing stupidity.
Humans do not "need" rare earth minerals. We got along just fine without them. But that is a conversation and direction nobody is willing to consider (more stupidity).
There are a variety of rare earths, some more valuable than others. The Mountain Pass mine doesn't produce significant amounts of some of the ones we need. Also, if we aren't going to have the Chinese process the ore, we'll have to learn how to do it ourselves, and this is going to take some time. Australia also has some significant sources of rare earths (Alkane Corp. being one), but I don't believe that they are in production yet.
ReplyDeleteIf we want to guarantee availability, we'll need to guarantee to buy a certain amount/month and a certain number of years for purchases from "friendly" sources for each type of rare earth, and put the purchases in the nation's strategic metals inventory. This would allow someone to take the necessary risks, assuming the return was high enough. And if it isn't, perhaps the US should buy, equip, and operate necessary mines and refineries (an ugly thought, given as they did this for uranium ore processing, and look at that mess).