Global Automakers Alarmed Over China’s Rare Earths Export Controls

Germany’s automotive industry group VDA joined other carmakers to sound the alarm that the recently introduced curbs and controls on China’s exports of rare earth elements and magnets could disrupt and even idle manufacturing lines.

“If the situation is not changed quickly, production delays and even production outages can no longer be ruled out,” Hildegard Mueller, head of VDA, told Reuters this week, in yet another warning from the automotive industry about the impact of China’s policy on the global automotive supply chains.

Last month, the Alliance for Automotive Innovation – which represents GM, Toyota, Volkswagen and other major car manufacturers – warned of production reductions and even shutdowns of assembly lines without access to magnets and to rare earths.

“Without reliable access to these elements and magnets, automotive suppliers will be unable to produce critical automotive components, including automatic transmissions, throttle bodies, alternators, various motors, sensors, seat belts, speakers, lights, motors, power steering, and cameras,” the alliance and the Vehicle Suppliers Association, MEMA, wrote in a letter to the Trump Administration carried by Reuters.

Electric vehicle production will also be affected by the Chinese export curbs. Indian Bajaj Auto, for example, last week warned that delays in supply of rare earth magnets could “seriously impact” its EV production next month.

Beijing has strengthened its dominance in the supply chains of critical minerals and rare earth elements despite a push by Western nations to reduce reliance on China.

The heavily concentrated supply of critical minerals in a handful of countries and China’s export controls are raising the risk of “painful disruptions” in the market, the International Energy Agency (IEA) warned last month in its annual report, Global Critical Minerals Outlook.

Despite well-supplied markets, export controls and rising supply concentration are raising the risks to the security of supply.

The IEA finds that currently, more than half of a broader group of energy-related minerals are subject to some form of export controls.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Novak: Russia Considers Complete Ban on Diesel Exports

    Russia is considering a full ban on diesel exports as authorities scramble to stabilize the domestic fuel market amid refinery disruptions, rising prices, and supply shortages linked to Ukrainian attacks…

    Tankers Emerge from Dark Mode amid Tentative Hormuz Reopening

    A growing number of oil tankers have been broadcasting their position and intention to pass through the Strait of Hormuz in recent hours, in a sign that a tentative recovery…

    Have You Seen?

    Tankers Emerge from Dark Mode amid Tentative Hormuz Reopening

    • June 24, 2026
    Tankers Emerge from Dark Mode amid Tentative Hormuz Reopening

    Novak: Russia Considers Complete Ban on Diesel Exports

    • June 24, 2026
    Novak: Russia Considers Complete Ban on Diesel Exports

    Europe’s Top Gas Distributor to Invest $14.8 Billion in AI-Backed Networks

    • June 24, 2026
    Europe’s Top Gas Distributor to Invest $14.8 Billion in AI-Backed Networks

    Trump Insists Iran Has Agreed to Nuclear Inspections

    • June 23, 2026
    Trump Insists Iran Has Agreed to Nuclear Inspections

    Will US and International Sanctions on Iran be Lifted?

    • June 23, 2026
    Will US and International Sanctions on Iran be Lifted?

    US Supreme Court Boosts Exxon’s Bid to Get Compensation from Cuba

    • June 23, 2026
    US Supreme Court Boosts Exxon’s Bid to Get Compensation from Cuba

    US Natural Gas Drops on Cooler Outlooks, New Pipeline Capacity

    • June 23, 2026
    US Natural Gas Drops on Cooler Outlooks, New Pipeline Capacity

    Trump Administration to Slash Oil-Drilling Bond Amount by 95%

    • June 23, 2026
    Trump Administration to Slash Oil-Drilling Bond Amount by 95%

    India Boosts U.S. LPG Imports to Record High

    • June 23, 2026
    India Boosts U.S. LPG Imports to Record High

    Iran Moves to Tap Key Asian Markets as U.S. Waives Oil Sanctions

    • June 23, 2026
    Iran Moves to Tap Key Asian Markets as U.S. Waives Oil Sanctions