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After the U.S. and China pause tariffs, rare mineral exports are now in the spotlight for future trade deals

Paolo Confino
By
Paolo Confino
Paolo Confino
Reporter
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Paolo Confino
By
Paolo Confino
Paolo Confino
Reporter
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May 12, 2025, 3:29 PM ET
Crane loading a container of rare earth minerals at a Chinese port
China placed additional export controls on its rare earth minerals as retaliation for the U.S.'s tariffs on its products. STR/AFP via Getty Images
  • The U.S. wants to maintain access to China’s rare earth minerals. While China sees its dominance of the market as a way to apply major pressure on the U.S. as the two negotiate a broader trade deal. 

The U.S. and China reached a détente on what had been an escalating trade war. On Sunday, at the end of this weekend’s trade summit in Geneva, both sides agreed to pause the tariffs they had placed on one another.

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The U.S.’s tariffs on Chinese imports will be 30%, down from 145%, while China lowered its tariffs on U.S. goods from 125% to 10%, according to a joint statement. The agreement foreshadows the possibility of a future, much broader trade deal in the future. Both sides said there was a “mechanism” in place for them to facilitate more talks. One of the key questions still left to address is China’s export controls on its rare-earth minerals. China’s outsize role in the global rare-earths market, and the U.S.’s desire to maintain a steady flow of the minerals, make the issue one of the most sensitive parts of the deal.

As the leading exporter of rare-earth minerals, China holds massive influence in the global market for these critical materials. “Dominating this sector is probably one of their most important sources of leverage over the U.S. and over the world,” said Dexter Roberts, nonresident Senior Fellow at the Atlantic Council, a think tank based in Washington, D.C. 

For that reason, China will be unlikely to relent on its export controls. 

“Now that they punished the U.S. with rare earth [export controls], they’re not going to take away this economic part of their economic arsenal,” Roberts said. 

Many of those minerals are key ingredients in advanced manufacturing of products like electric-vehicle batteries, smartphones, and for military applications such as missiles and radar systems. The fact that rare-earth minerals are used in the defense technologies means the exports have national-security implications for both countries, only adding to the complexity and urgency of finding a solution that suits both sides. 

After the White House announced its global tariff policy on April 2, China ratcheted up its export controls on rare earths as retaliation. Included in those new policies was a requirement that foreign countries would have to apply for licenses to purchase rare-earth minerals.   

While it does have a tense relationship with the U.S. at the moment, China does not want to close it off entirely from the rare-earth minerals market, according to Jeorg Wuttke, partner at the advisory firm DGA-Albright Stonebridge Group and an expert in Chinese trade.

“The Chinese don’t want to cut off the U.S., but they want to threaten it,” he said. 

Rare earths represent big business for Chinese firms. In 2024, its total exports of rare-earth minerals rose 6% to 55,431 metric tons, according to Reuters. Though, because they are commodities with fluctuating prices, the value of those exports fell 36% to $488 million. 

During the height of the U.S.-China trade dispute last month, production came to a virtual standstill. The trade war both hit China’s rare-earth industry on two fronts, making it both more expensive for foreign buyers and requiring them to get government approval for any purchases they did make. 

Despite the mounting frustrations between the two countries, China is wary of giving off the appearance of politicizing its rare-earths business because doing so could put off the rest of the world from doing business with it, Wuttke said. 

“The Chinese are very aware of the fact they want to come across as reliable supplies to American companies,” Wuttke said. “As much as they dislike American policies, they still want to be engaged with U.S. companies.”

Part of China’s additional export controls included a policy that required companies to apply for a license to purchase rare-earth minerals. One of the first companies to apply for such a license was Tesla, which uses them to make batteries for its cars, among other things. There are some indications that as relations thaw, U.S. companies will receive expedited approvals during the process, according to Reuters. 

Others, however, see China as being unbothered about applying significant pressure to the U.S. over rare earths. 

“I don’t think China’s really worried that if they play too much hardball, they’re suddenly no longer going to be relevant in the rare-earth market,” said Dexter Roberts. “I don’t believe that.”

The U.S. has begun looking for other sources of rare-earth minerals—namely in Greenland and Ukraine. The U.S. does also have its own deposits of rare-earth minerals, but they are not mined to the extent they are in China. Mining these elements is expensive and bad for the environment, making it difficult work to undertake. Any effort by the U.S. to diversify its supply chains away from China would be considered a medium- or long-term goal. Agreements over minerals with allies would also take years to negotiate and then implement. And the construction of any new entirely new mines takes, on average, 18 years for them to become operational, according to S&P Global.  

That means the most likely outcome is further reconciliation—however uneasy—with China. Experts said a deal with China over rare earths could be on the horizon. 

“They could announce something on rare earths in the coming days,” Roberts said. “I wouldn’t be surprised.”

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About the Author
Paolo Confino
By Paolo ConfinoReporter

Paolo Confino is a former reporter on Fortune’s global news desk where he covers each day’s most important stories.

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