Here’s a concise update on the latest U.S. competition with China over rare earths:
- The topic remains tightly linked to China’s dominance in rare earth supply chains and processing capacity, with repeated discussions about how the U.S. can diversify sources and boost domestic production. This has been a consistent thread in policy and industry reporting through 2024–2025 and into 2026.
- Recent coverage highlights U.S. policy responses such as funding for domestic mining, processing, and potential alliances with partner nations to reduce reliance on China, as well as ongoing tensions over export controls that can influence global supply dynamics.
- Market and geopolitical analysis suggest the U.S. goal is long-term resilience (often described as a “China plus one” strategy): accelerate domestic capability while engaging allied producers to create more diversified supply lines.
- Notable public signals include discussions of export-control adjustments and potential trade negotiations that could temporarily ease certain shipment bottlenecks, though structural dominance by China in processing and refining remains a key constraint.
If you’d like, I can narrow to a specific aspect (policy actions, market impact, or regional partners) or pull the very latest headlines from particular outlets.
Sources
Watch the recording and read the key takeaways of a conversation moderated by Lizzi C. Lee with Paul Triolo and Pascale Massot on the role of rare earths in U.S.-China trade and tech tensions.
asiasociety.orgWhat starts with rare earth restrictions will grow into a long era of 'lawfare,' and the U.S. economy is not yet fully prepared to challenge China.
www.cnbc.comAs part of a deal between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping Presidents, China agreed to postpone the implementation of its latest round rare earth export controls. However, earlier restrictions on these critical minerals which have disrupted global trade still remain. Export restrictions imposed this year, which allowed Beijing to cut foreign customers who depended on Chinese supplies, have transformed rare earths from an obscure element into China's strongest negotiating tool. Trump and Xi held a...
energynews.oedigital.comRestrictions by China on the export of rare earth minerals could have detrimental impacts on the U.S.defense industry, according to Sen. Todd Young, an Indiana Republican and member of the Senate intelligence and finance committees.
www.washingtontimes.comFor a moment it looked like the relationship between China and the US was showing signs of improvement.
news.sky.comChina extended its lead in the race to dominate the rare earth supply chain.
www.semafor.com