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Factbox-What critical minerals are on China's export control list now?

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on February 4, 2025

4 min read

· Last updated: January 26, 2026

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Image depicting critical minerals on China's export control list - Global Banking & Finance Review
This image illustrates the critical minerals recently added to China's export control list, highlighting the significance of rare earth elements in global markets and energy transition. Essential for various sectors, these minerals are crucial for technology and defense.
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By Tony Munroe and Lewis Jackson BEIJING, 4 FEBRUARY(Reuters) - China announced sweeping export controls on Tuesday targeting five metals used across defence, clean energy and other industries,

China's New Export Controls on Critical Minerals Explained

By Ashitha Shivaprasad, Amy Lv and Alessandro Parodi

BENGALURU/BEIJING (Reuters) -China on Thursday expanded its export controls over rare earths and related technology in a move to further tighten its grip and dominance on the critical minerals key to the energy transition.

Five more medium to heavy rare earth elements - holmium, erbium, thulium, europium and ytterbium - and related material will be added from November 8, China's commerce ministry said.

The rare earths will join over twenty elements and related materials already listed, in each case forcing exporters to apply to Beijing for licences before selling overseas. China has also separately banned exports of gallium, germanium and antimony to the United States.

Below is a summary of all Beijing's mineral export restrictions since 2023:

RARE EARTHS

China produces around 90% of the world's rare earths, a group of 17 elements with small but crucial uses in sectors like clean energy, defence and automotives.

China first placed seven of the elements and related material on an export control list in April before adding the further five on Thursday.

The five new elements play small but crucial roles in fiber-optics, nuclear power and other sectors.

While rare earths are common in the Earth's crust, China has mastered the technically difficult and environmentally-harmful refining process, comparatively cheaply.

China has spent years tightening its control over the rare earths sector. In December 2023, Beijing banned the export of technology to make rare earth magnets, adding it to an existing ban on refining technology. On Thursday, it added dozens more machines and material used in mining and refining to the control list.

Domestic production is tightly controlled by a system of quotas that are only granted to state-owned miners.

TUNGSTEN, INDIUM, BISMUTH, TELLURIUM AND MOLYBDENUM

China imposed export controls on five other metals used in defence, clean energy and other industries - tungsten, indium, bismuth, tellurium and molybdenum - in early February, shortly after U.S. President Donald Trump's first 10% tariff on Chinese goods took effect.

Licences are now required to export 20-related products. However the curbs stopped short of outright bans and were narrowly targeted in the cases of some metals, like molybdenum.

BATTERY, LITHIUM AND GALLIUM PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY

China in January proposed to restrict the export of some technology used to make cutting-edge battery components and process critical minerals lithium and gallium. The controls were imposed in July.

At least one company has stopped exporting products on the list since the proposal was floated.

On Thursday, China widened those controls to include more lithium battery-related items and equipment used to manufacture certain lithium-ion batteries.

ANTIMONY, GALLIUM, GERMANIUM

Beijing banned the export of antimony, gallium and germanium to the U.S. in late 2024 in response to a fresh crackdown on China's chip sector from Washington.

The outright ban only applies to the U.S., although over the previous 18-months China had steadily introduced export licensing regimes for the three metals.

In the case of antimony, a strategic metal used in flame retardants, solar power equipment and munitions, exports to big buyers like Japan, India and South Korea had barely restarted three months after export licences were introduced.

China dominates the supply chain for the three metals and mines or refines between half and 90% of global supply of those minerals.

GRAPHITE

Beijing on Thursday widened existing export controls on graphite to include some synthetic graphite materials, effective from November 8.

In October 2023, China said it would require export permits for three types of "highly sensitive" graphite products to protect national security.

China is the world's top graphite producer and exporter, and also refines more than 90% of the world's graphite into a material that is used in virtually all EV batteries.

(Reporting by Tony Munroe, Lewis Jackson, Amy Lv, Ashitha Shivaprasad and Alessandro Parodi. Editing by Louise Heavens, Chizu Nomiyama and Mark Potter)

Key Takeaways

  • China expands export controls on rare earths and graphite.
  • New restrictions include holmium, erbium, thulium, europium, and ytterbium.
  • China dominates the global supply of critical minerals.
  • Export bans target the U.S. and require licenses for other countries.
  • China's control impacts clean energy and defense sectors.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main topic?
The article discusses China's expanded export controls on critical minerals, including rare earths and graphite.
Why is China imposing these controls?
China aims to tighten its grip on critical minerals crucial for energy, defense, and technology sectors.
How does this affect global supply chains?
China's dominance in mineral supply and new controls could disrupt global industries reliant on these materials.

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