China’s Exports of Rare Earths Jump Despite Shipment Controls

Despite export controls and curbs on some rare earth elements, China’s overall rare earth exports jumped by 23% in May compared to April, Chinese customs data showed on Monday.

The exports for May, the second month following Chinese restrictions imposed in early April, were at their highest monthly level in a year.

The data doesn’t distinguish among the various rare earth minerals, so it’s too early to say how much the export curbs hit the elements that are part of the restrictions. Details will be available later in June.

However, exports of magnets already showed a significant decline, rippling through supply chains globally. Chinese exports of magnets halved in April from a month earlier.

At the beginning of April, China, which dominates the global rare earth and critical minerals supply chain, announced it would curb its exports of dysprosium, gadolinium, scandium, terbium, samarium, yttrium, and lutetium. These so-called “heavy” and “medium” rare earth elements are mostly used in automotive applications, including rotors and motors and transmission in electric vehicles and hybrids, as well as in the defense industry in parts of jets, missiles, and drones.

Last week, 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 rare earth minerals.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Japanese Shipping Companies Hold Back Despite Hormuz Deal

    Japanese shipping companies that own vessels stuck near the Strait of Hormuz are in no rush to test the veracity of news that the U.S. and Iran had agreed to…

    Australian Regulator Clears LNG Strike

    The Australian Fair Work Commission has denied Inpex a request to stop a strike at the Ichthys facility that would affect production and exports at the 9.2-million-ton facility. According to…

    Have You Seen?

    Vance Says He Hopes to Release Text of Agreement to Halt War in Iran This Week

    • June 15, 2026
    Vance Says He Hopes to Release Text of Agreement to Halt War in Iran This Week

    Russian sanctions drive China’s expanding role in helium trade

    • June 15, 2026
    Russian sanctions drive China’s expanding role in helium trade

    LNG Tanker Heads for Hormuz Amid News of Reopening

    • June 15, 2026
    LNG Tanker Heads for Hormuz Amid News of Reopening

    Australian Regulator Clears LNG Strike

    • June 15, 2026
    Australian Regulator Clears LNG Strike

    Japanese Shipping Companies Hold Back Despite Hormuz Deal

    • June 15, 2026
    Japanese Shipping Companies Hold Back Despite Hormuz Deal

    India’s Solar Capacity Set for 22% Annual Growth Through 2035

    • June 15, 2026
    India’s Solar Capacity Set for 22% Annual Growth Through 2035

    China’s Return to the Oil Market Could Boost Inflation

    • June 15, 2026
    China’s Return to the Oil Market Could Boost Inflation

    90% of Global Businesses Expect to Electrify Operations by 2035

    • June 15, 2026
    90% of Global Businesses Expect to Electrify Operations by 2035

    Circularity Fuels completes end-to-end conversion of biogas into SAF

    • June 15, 2026
    Circularity Fuels completes end-to-end conversion of biogas into SAF

    Google-backed Arizona project to deploy 19MW CO2 battery

    • June 15, 2026
    Google-backed Arizona project to deploy 19MW CO2 battery