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Can the U.S. Reduce Its Reliance on Imported Rare Earth Elements?

By and ·July 6, 2025
Climate Security Initiative, Scarborough, Maine and Elliott School of International Affairs, George Washington University

Graph of rare earth mining and refining capacity of key countries in 2023 and 2030

The Issue:

China is the world’s largest supplier and processor of rare earth elements, the minerals used in a broad range of key products that include fighter jets, drones, guided missiles, wind turbines, servers, computer chips, electric vehicle batteries and lasers. These elements have become a key area of contention in the trade friction between the United States and China. In April, China responded to U.S. tariffs by placing export restrictions on 7 rare earth elements as well as some rare earth magnets. Since the U.S. has almost no domestic capacity to process and refine rare earths into end-use components, and there are few alternatives for refined rare earth elements outside China, the restrictions threatened production delays and plant stoppages in American car manufacturing plants. Although negotiations resolved the impasse, dependence on China for these key components remains a vulnerability in the manufacturing supply chains for many military and high technology products. Building a domestic capacity to process rare earth elements in the United States will likely take a decade or more, even if tariffs tilt the playing field in favor of U.S.-based production.

Dependence on China for rare earth elements remains a vulnerability in the manufacturing supply chains for military and high technology products.

The Facts:

What this Means:

China will retain its dominance of the rare earth mineral supply chain in the near- to medium-term despite efforts to develop rare earth minerals elsewhere. While the United States has significantly ramped up rare earth mineral mining, it has not solved its vulnerabilities in refining or component manufacture. The time horizon to build out the U.S. supply chain remains at 15-20 years, and this is not made shorter by tariffs, a critical minerals deal with Ukraine, nor five executive orders focused on energy and mineral production – including one declaring a national energy emergency. The Defense Production Act represents an effort to subsidize development of the supply chain, but it is unclear whether this is well-targeted and adequate to significantly speed up refining and processing in the US. There are few, if any, short-cuts that can overcome the high capital requirements, regulatory complexity, significant environmental costs and public health risks associated with building a complete rare earth mineral supply chain. But resolving this will remain a priority for key national-security-relevant areas: computing, defense and the energy sector.

Topics:

China / Manufacturing / Trade
Written by The EconoFact Network. To contact with any questions or comments, please email contact@econofact.org.
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