
US rare earth pricing system is poised to challenge China's dominance
The West has struggled to weaken China's grip on 90 per cent of the supply of rare earths, in part because low prices set in China have removed the incentive for investment elsewhere.
Miners in the West have long called for a separate pricing system to help them compete in supplying the rare earths group of 17 metals needed to make super-strong magnets of strategic importance. They are used in military applications such as drone and fighter jets, as well as to power motors in EVs and wind turbines.
Under a deal made public last week, the
US Department of Defense
will guarantee a minimum price for its sole domestic rare earth miner
MP Materials
, at nearly twice the current market level.
Las Vegas-based MP already produces mined and processed rare earths and said it expects to start commercial magnet production at its Texas facility around the end of this year.
Analysts say the pricing deal, which takes effect immediately, should have global implications - positive for producers, but may increase costs for consumers, such as automakers and in turn their customers.
"This benchmark is now a new centre of gravity in the industry that will pull prices up," said Ryan Castilloux, managing director of consultancy Adamas Intelligence.
The DoD will pay MP the difference between $110 per kilogram for the two most-popular rare earths and the market price, currently set by China, but if the price rises above $110, the DoD will get 30 per cent of additional profits.
Castilloux said other indirect beneficiaries of the pricing system may include companies, such as Belgian chemicals group Solvay, which launched an expansion in April.
"It will give Solvay and others the impetus to command a similar price level. It will give them a floor to stand on, you could say," Castilloux added.
While Solvay declined to comment, other rare earth miners, developers and their shareholders welcomed the news.
Aclara Resources is developing rare earths mines in Chile and Brazil, as well as planning a separation plant in the United States. Alvaro Castellon, the company's strategy and development manager, told Reuters the deal added "new strategic paths" for the company.
MP's gradual output increase
MP Materials, which suffered a net loss of $65.4 million last year largely because of China's low pricing, will build up magnet production at its Texas plant initially to 1,000 metric tons a year, later expanding to 3,000 tons a year.
Under last Thursday's deal, the DoD will become its largest shareholder with a 15 per cent stake and MP will construct a second rare earth magnet manufacturing facility in the US, eventually adding 7,000 tons per year. In total, production would be 10,000 tons a year - equalling US consumption of magnets in 2024.
That does not include, however, the 30,000 tons imported by the United States already installed in assembled products, Adamas consultancy said.
It predicts global demand for rare earth permanent magnets will more than double over the next decade to about 607,000 tons, with the US seeing the strongest percentage annual growth rate in coming years at 17 per cent.
The world's reliance upon China for much of this demand was brought into focus by China's curbs on its exports as trade negotiations continue between the United States and China.
So far Western governments have had little success in trying to help their own industries to compete.
Attempts to agree stronger pricing have been confined to piecemeal deals that set premiums for magnets.
Dominic Raab, a former deputy prime minister and former foreign secretary for the United Kingdom, said he was not surprised the Trump administration had concluded that tax breaks alone would not create the level of investment required.
"The next step is, can they scale it up?" asked Raab, now head of global affairs at Appian Capital Advisory, a private equity firm that invests in mining projects.
The $110 level for neodymium and praseodymium, or NdPr, guaranteed by the DoD is slightly above a $75-to-$105 per kg range that consultancy Project Blue reckons would be needed to support enough production to meet demand in coming years. It compares to a current level of about $63.
David Merriman of Project Blue said it was unclear how commercial industrial consumers would respond to higher prices and whether it would make them invest in rare earths as they have more diverse supply sources.
"Major non-government backed consumers are less likely to follow this same investment pattern, however, as they are not so clearly aligned to a particular regional supply route," he said.
A spokesperson for German auto giant Volkswagen declined to comment on pricing when asked about the DoD floor level but said, "We welcome all efforts to strengthen long-term stability and diversification in global supply chains for critical materials."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NDTV
19 minutes ago
- NDTV
Fake Call Centre Scammed Foreigners, Busted. Assets Attached By Enforcement Directorate
New Delhi: The Patna zonal office of the Enforcement Directorate (ED) has provisionally attached movable and immovable properties worth approximately Rs 2.83 crore under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002. The attachment is linked to a transnational cyber fraud racket involving fake call centres operated by Sagar Yadav and his Kolkata-based companies - Scrapix Consultancy Services Pvt Ltd and Casanovus Reality Pvt Ltd. The attached assets include land parcels, flats, and fixed deposits, acquired using proceeds of crime generated through cyber fraud targeting foreign nationals. The investigation was initiated following a tip-off received by the ED from the National Central Bureau (NCB)-India (CBI), which had been alerted by NCB-Ireland. The case involved fraud committed on an Irish national, Carmel Fox, and was registered under the "cross-border Implication" category as per Section 2(1)(ra) of the PMLA. The ED's probe revealed that the accused had been running fake call centres to defraud international victims. The illicit funds were funneled into India through channels like Western Union, Moneygram, Rewire, Remitly, and even cryptocurrencies. These funds were then laundered through peer-to-peer lending platforms including Lenden Club, Lendbox, and Liquiloans. Two immovable properties bought in the names of Scrapix Consultancy and Casanovus Reality worth Rs 2.67 crore, along with fixed deposits of Rs 15.75 lakh have been placed under provisional attachment. So far, the ED has arrested seven individuals including mastermind Sagar Yadav and has filed one prosecution complaint and two supplementary complaints against him, his companies, and associates. Further investigation is ongoing.


Time of India
19 minutes ago
- Time of India
Delhi HC reserves order on Turkish firm Celebi's plea against revocation of security clearance, ETInfra
Advt The Delhi high court on Friday reserved its order on a plea filed by another Turkish-based Celebi company, namely Celebi Ground Handling India Private Limited, against Centre's decision to revoke its security clearance A different bench of the high court on July 7 dismissed the pleas by Turkish-based firms -- Celebi Airport Services India Pvt Ltd and Celebi Delhi Cargo Terminal Management India Pvt Ltd -- challenging the revocation of their security clearance by aviation watchdog Bureau of Civil Aviation Safety (BCAS) on May 15, saying there are "compelling national security considerations" Tejas Karia on Friday reserved the order after company's lawyer submitted that the petition was filed on July 4 after a coordinate bench reserved its judgement in a similar case involving the associated counsel said on Friday that the July 7 verdict directly applied to the present case as well, and urged the judge to pass a similar revoked the security clearance, days after Turkey backed Pakistan and condemned India's strikes on terror camps in the neighbouring court on July 7 underlined the necessity to eliminate the possibility of espionage or dual use of logistics capabilities which would be highly detrimental to the security of the country, especially in the event of an external conflict.


Indian Express
19 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Decode Politics: Why a court order has upset Congress govt's applecart in Himachal
In an unusual expression of helplessness Thursday, Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu said the state High Court 'does not listen to my government' and said he may approach the Supreme Court. Sukhu's complaint was regarding the felling of fruit-laden trees across approximately 3,000 bighas — about 243 hectares — of 'encroached' forest land. On July 2, the High Court had directed state-wide removal of all apple trees and orchards that had come up on forest land. The Himachal government tried arguing that the court order put at risk livelihoods, especially in a state that relies heavily on fruit production. Himachal Pradesh's forest cover spans from the Shivalik foothills to the Pir Panjal ranges, totalling 37,033 sq km. As per an affidavit submitted to the National Green Tribunal (NGT) in February 2025 Himachal's Principal Chief Conservator of Forests, the IFS officer Sameer Rastogi, there were 18,374 cases of encroachment on 5,689 hectares of forest land across the state. The affidavit, which did not talk about the nature of the encroachments, said 9,903 – or nearly half – of the encroachments had been removed, reclaiming 3,097 hectares. However, action against removal of encroachments has been sporadic at best, and runs into resistance by local communities which have been profiting by using the land to cultivate fruit. The ongoing clearing of encroached land stems from two complaints, filed back in 2014 and 2015 and later converted into Public Interest Litigations (PILs). On July 2, a Division Bench of Justices Vivek Singh Thakur and Bipin C Negi ruled that 'fruit-bearing trees are not forest species' and directed the Forest Department to plant native forest species like deodar, chir, and kail after clearing the encroached areas. The Division Bench further said, 'The needful be done at a war footing. The ongoing monsoon is a conducive period to plant forest species. The cost of removal — cutting, removal of stumps and plantation of forest species — can be recovered from the encroachers.' Many of the felled trees were three to four decades old, farmers have pointed out, with the yields now destroyed just before harvesting. 'These trees were at their peak bearing stage. It takes 7 to 10 years for a new orchard to reach this maturity,' says a Chaithla-based orchardist, who saw trees over two bighas flattened. Noted horticulturist Deepak Singha, who has hailed the High Court decision to evict the encroached forest land, cautioned that small farmers could bear the brunt of the drive. 'Big farmers who have encroached hundreds of bighas of forest land have become rich, but the small apple growers live hand to mouth. The government should come up with a policy for these growers,' Singha said. Environment activist Guman Singh said he was 'not in favour of cutting down any kind of tree, be it forest species or fruit species'. Himachal's economy rests on apple farming to a large extent, with the fruit accounting for 49% of the total area under fruit crops. Apples make up 85% of the state's fruit economy, which is valued at around Rs 4,000 crore. With harvest season only weeks away, the tree-felling and the damage to their yields have left apple farmers distressed. According to state government data, available in an affidavit submitted to the High Court, '3,659 apple and other fruit-bearing trees had been felled on encroached forest land till July 15'. This included land in Chaithla (2,456 trees felled), Rohru (713) and Kotgarh (490) – the three towns which constitute the main region for apple cultivation in Himachal. As the Sukhu government tries to assess the overall impact of the drive on production this season, the CPI(M) is mobilising the smaller farmers, who own less than five bighas and whose land is among that cleared, in protest. Rakesh Singha, a senior CPI (M) leader and former MLA from Theog, has led multiple meetings under various farmer fronts. While refraining from commenting directly on the High Court order, the CPI (M) has accused the state government of not having a policy to protect the interests of small fruit growers. BJP MLA from Chopal (Shimla) and party spokesperson Balbir Singh Verma has said Sukhu's claim of going to the Supreme Court is 'merely political'. He pointed out that in January 2025, the High Court had offered the state the option to take possession of the fruit trees growing on encroached land. At the time, the government, through the Advocate General, expressed its inability to do so, claiming that its Forest and Revenue Departments were not in a position to manage or harvest fruit from such land. This, Verma argued, effectively paved the way for court-ordered felling. The BJP leader said the Congress government will have to pay a heavy price. The state is due to see panchayat elections next year.