China’s rare earths are flowing again, but not freely
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Electric cars at Volkswagen's production line in Emden, northern Germany, in February 2025.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
- Rare earth magnet exports from China resume, easing shutdown threats for European automotive suppliers, though hundreds of licences are still pending.
- The US Treasury Secretary stated magnet shipments to the US from China would be expedited to companies with regular prior shipments.
- Some US magnet makers report extended delays in receiving licences, while European firms receive a "bare minimum" to avoid stoppages.
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BERLIN/BEIJING - The threat of mass shutdowns across the automotive supply chain is fading as Chinese rare earth magnets begin to flow, though automakers and suppliers say production plans still face uncertainties and a continued risk of shortages.
European suppliers have received enough licences to avoid the widespread disruptions predicted earlier this month but hundreds of permits remain pending, said Mr Nils Poel, head of market affairs at supplier association CLEPA.
The rate of issuance is “accelerating” and has risen to 60 per cent from 25 per cent, he said, but cases where the end users are based in the United States, or where products move through third countries like India, are taking longer or not being prioritised.
“Overall, the feeling is that we probably will still have production in July and that the impact will be manageable,” he said.
“Maybe here and there a production line will be affected, but we have avoided that for the moment.”
Volkswagen said in a statement to Reuters its supply of rare earth components was stable, while rival Stellantis said it had addressed its immediate production concerns.
China restricted exports of seven rare earths and related magnets in April
Three months later there remains huge uncertainty about how it intends to police its opaque and complex export licensing system.
Since the restrictions were imposed, rare earth magnet exports from China have fallen roughly 75 per cent,
From ‘full panic’ to ‘bare minimum’
The White House said on June 26 it had signed a deal with China
Neither party detailed any changes to the existing export licensing system.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in an interview with Fox Business Network on June 27 that, under the agreement announced on June 26, rare earth shipments to the US from China would be expedited to all companies that have previously received them on a regular basis.
“I am confident now... the magnets will flow,” Mr Bessent said. “This is a de-escalation.”
Two weeks ago the car industry was in a “full panic”,
China is approving the “bare minimum” of critical licences for European firms to avoid production stoppages, a European official told Reuters, also speaking on condition of anonymity.
US magnet maker Dexter Magnetic Technologies, which has defence clients, among others, has received just five of 180 licences since April, chief executive officer Kash Mishra told Reuters, adding those were intended for non-defence sectors.
“It’s an extended delay,” he said. “It’s 45 days trying to get the paperwork right for the supplier, and then it’s 45 more days or so before any licences are granted.” REUTERS

