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My name is Luo Xi, are you, oh well written
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Officials from the United States, European Union and Japan will gather in Washington next month to find ways of cutting demand for raw materials whose supplies China is limiting, a U.S. official said on Thursday.
China produces more than 95 percent of global rare earth minerals -- used to make fiber optic cables and wind turbines among other high-tech goods -- and its efforts to limit production, citing resource depletion and environmental degradation, have alarmed its overseas customers.
Adding to tensions, Chinese state media on Tuesday announced plans to halt production at three major mines.
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This year's export quota was set at 30,184 tonnes, down about 40 percent in just two years, with annual output also capped at 93,800 tonnes.
Traditionally, China has struggled to impose its will on the sector, where illegal private production and overseas trade has remained rampant. According to figures from the China Rare Earth Society, 2010 output exceeded production quotas by 40 percent.
"That isn't very likely this year," Li told Reuters. "This year the government is controlling things very strictly. The scope of the inspections will definitely be stronger this year."
Currently almost half of China's total capacity now stands idle as inspection teams scour the country to enforce the quotas and industry consolidation targets, as well as new environmental regulations.
China has maintained that previous production and export levels were not sustainable in the long term, and had a devastating impact on its environment.
...it is clear the quotas were also designed to encourage foreign consumers of Chinese rare earth to move to China, said Michael Silver, chief executive of American Elements.
"There is roughly a 40 percent difference in the cost of rare earths if you're buying on an export basis, due to the cost of the quota and the export tax," he told Reuters. "A company that moves here gets an incredible benefit."
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Molycorp Inc, the largest U.S. producer of rare-earth metals, is set to announce its finding of a new rare-earth deposit at a conference in Washington on Tuesday, the New York Times said.
The new ore deposit, which is of heavier variety, is on land near Mountain Pass, California, near the Nevada border, where the company has been mining since the early 1950s and has regulatory approval to continue mining and refining for decades.
Molycorp's Chief Executive Mark Smith told NY Times in a telephone interview that the company might be able to begin producing heavy rare earths in a little over a year from now.
Smith told the newspaper that the ore is near the surface and would require very little strip mining.
Rare earths -- both the "light" and "heavy" varieties -- are used to produce a range of green-energy technologies, including compact fluorescent light bulbs and hybrid-electric vehicles.
Molycorp currently produces rare-earth products from stockpiled concentrate. The company is in the process of a $781 million expansion and modernization of its Mountain Pass mine and processing facilities in California.
Rare-earth oxide and metal prices have spiked as China, which produces some 95 percent of the world's supply, has repeatedly clamped down on exports.
Molycorp could not immediately be reached for comment by Reuters outside regular U.S. business hours.
Of the 244 companies hoping to produce the rare earth metals essential to a wide range of high-tech industries, less than 4 percent will prove profitable, the strategic metals consultant told Reuters in an interview on Friday.
His work today is principally as a due-diligence consultant for institutional investors, looking into opportunities where rare and technology metals availability are a factor in determining the probability of commercial success of a metals-related venture.
China announced a cut Tuesday in its rare earths export quota as it tries to shore up sagging prices... a 27 percent reduction from the quota for the first half of 2011.
Despite production and expor curbs, rare earths prices in China have tumbled as U.S. and European economic woes dent demand for its exports.
Surging demand has prompted ccompanies in Canada, California, India, Malaysia, Russia and other other countries to develop rare earths mines, some of which are expected to start producing by 2015.
Hehe... Pop Canada 34+ mil, pop CA 37+ mil, so CA def country-SIZED... Curious to know now what percent of China RE production is exported anyway.Kingfish said:I didn't know California was a country; maybe they meant the Republic of California![]()
http://rareearthinvestingnews.com/5772/china-increases-rare-earth-export-quota-2012-price/China Increases Rare Earth Export Quota for First Half of 2012
The Chinese Ministry of Commerce announced its rare earth export quota for the first half of 2012 on Tuesday. The quota, which is the first increased in six years, is set at 10,546 tonnes. The Ministry also announced its decision to classify the rare earth minerals into two categories: heavy and light rare earths. The change, which has been much anticipated by analysts, may prove to be a positive step for end users as the two groups have vastly different demand levels.
The Ministry of Commerce stated that the export quota for 2012 would remain flat, in order to boost demand while keeping supplies stable. While the total export quota numbers seem to have been cut, the numbers are slightly misleading.
BEIJING | Sun Apr 8, 2012 8:42am EDT
China on Sunday set up a rare earth industry association, state media reported, in a move to speed up consolidation of its sprawling industry that has drawn fire for what overseas trade partners call unfair export quotas.
The association, with 155 members across the country, will report to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, which regulates rare earth production, the official Xinhua news agency said.
Baotou Steel Rare Earth in Inner Mongolia, Rising Nonferrous in Guangdong and China Minmetals are among 13 heavyweight members, Xinhua said.
Su Bo, an industry vice minister, said Beijing wanted to shake up the industry by phasing out small smelters, giving big players a greater stake in the supply of rare earth metals and boosting environmental protection.
"China will continue to clean up the rare earth industry, expand rare earth environmental controls, strengthen environmental checks, and implement stricter rare earth environmental policies," Su said.
Xinhua said the long-awaited body would promote international exchanges and help Chinese companies to handle trade disputes. China's rare earth export quota is managed by China's Ministry of Commerce.
The European Union, the United States and Japan complained to the World Trade Organization last month that China is illegally choking off exports of rare earths to hold down prices for its domestic manufacturers and pressure international firms to move operations to China.
China accounts for about 97 percent of world output of the 17 rare earth metals crucial for the defense, electronics and renewable-energy industries and used in a range of products such as the iPhone, disk drives and wind turbines.
Beijing has said its export curbs are necessary to control environmental problems caused by rare earth mining and to preserve supplies of an exhaustible natural resource.