Breaking China’s grip on rare-earths markets a ‘pipe dream’, Australia says

    • Much of Australia’s production capacity for lithium and rare earths lies in the country's western region.
    • Much of Australia’s production capacity for lithium and rare earths lies in the country's western region. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
    Published Tue, Nov 1, 2022 · 09:51 PM

    AUSTRALIA’S resources minister Madeleine King said it was a “pipe dream” that Western countries could soon end their reliance on China for rare earths and critical minerals, due to the Asian powerhouse’s existing grip on global markets. 

    “That’s a country that has seen this need coming and made the most of it,” she told Bloomberg News in an interview. Rare eaths and minerals are vital for the defence, aerospace and automotive industries.

    That won’t stop Australia and the US from working together to boost investment in these critical minerals in an attempt to break China’s monopoly on international supply chains, King said. It was Canberra’s aim to “make the most of the natural endowment we have of these resources, so that we can provide an alternative source of them from China”.

    Lithium and other critical minerals including cobalt, platinum and rare earths are used in the manufacturing of a wide range of products crucial for both national security and the fight against climate change. These include jet engines, solar panels and electric vehicles. Australia has some of the world’s largest reserves of these resources, and is among the biggest producers of critical minerals globally.

    Much of the country’s production capacity for lithium and rare earths is in Western Australia. Siriana Nair, the US consulate-general in the state capital Perth, said Australia and the US shared a “strong strategic interest” in securing critical mineral supply chains. 

    While she would not specify China as the target of growing cooperation between the US and Australia, she said having a single source of any critical resource was a “big drawback and a huge flaw”.

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    “I don’t think anybody in any country wants to have global supply chains dependent on kind of a single point of failure,” she said in a separate interview. “It’s just smart policy.”

    Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said “that countries with critical mineral resources should play a positive role in protecting the safety and stability of relevant industrial supply chains”.

    “No one should politicise, instrumentalise or weaponise the world economy,” he added at a regular press briefing in Beijing on Tuesday (Nov 1).

    King said some exploration was still underway in Australia for additional deposits, and the peak could still be five or 10 years away. “This is going to be an ongoing demand for a long time. So we need to get there and keep pumping it out.”

    Other recent developments had “focused the mind” on Australia’s critical-minerals development, she said, including the introduction of the Inflation Reduction Act in the US. Under the law, passed in August, the Biden administration will invest billions of dollars to boost critical mineral supply chains for the US and its allies.

    In June, Australian company Lynas Rare Earths was awarded a US$120 million contract by the US Defence Department to build a processing facility in America. Lynas is the only major company outside of China which produces and refines rare earths.

    Australia’s centre-left Labour government is not just keen to mine the minerals, but also wants to invest in domestic processing, with the eventual aim of potentially boosting green manufacturing domestically.

    King said Australia’s lithium processing capabilities were only just starting to reach their full production potential. “Before that, we were exporting like everyone else did that had this stuff direct into China,” she said. “So now we know we need to produce more of that here to secure supply chains for us and our partners.”

    However, unlike the US, King said Australia was not considering any direct investment in critical-mineral supply chains, instead preferring to provide loans to help build the country’s capability. She said the Australian government was also looking to “facilitate international investment” into critical-mineral supply chains.

    Asked whether Australia’s export of lithium and other green minerals could ever replace the lucrative commodity windfalls from iron ore and fossil fuels such as coal and gas, King said that was a “long way off”. Australia’s lithium exports for FY2022 are expected to be worth A$14 billion (S$12.8 billion), compared to more than A$300 billion for coal, gas and iron ore.

    “Those commodities will form the backbone of this economy in Australia for some time,” she said. “But the world will transform.” BLOOMBERG

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