China says rare earth controls lawful, will cooperate with US on 'reasonable' concerns

China agreed to address concerns around shortages of ‌rare earths such as yttrium and scandium as well as other critical minerals during the leaders' ‌summit in Beijing last week, the White House said on Sunday. In response to questions about that statement, China's Ministry of Commerce said both sides had discussed the issue and would study and resolve "each other's reasonable and ⁠lawful concerns." "The Chinese ​government imposes export ⁠controls on rare earths and other critical minerals in accordance with laws and regulations, and reviews applications for compliant, ⁠civilian licenses," the statement added.


Reuters | Updated: 20-05-2026 12:57 IST | Created: 20-05-2026 12:57 IST
China says rare earth controls lawful, will cooperate with US on 'reasonable' concerns

China will work with ​the U.S. on "reasonable" concerns regarding its rare ​earth export controls, the Ministry of ‌Commerce said ​on Wednesday, in a statement that defended its restrictions as legitimate and lawful. Introduced in April 2025 in retaliation for U.S. President Donald ‌Trump's so-called Liberation Day tariffs, Beijing's controls continue to restrict exports of certain rare earths and other minerals, an issue U.S. officials have repeatedly acknowledged. China agreed to address concerns around shortages of ‌rare earths such as yttrium and scandium as well as other critical minerals during the leaders' ‌summit in Beijing last week, the White House said on Sunday.

In response to questions about that statement, China's Ministry of Commerce said both sides had discussed the issue and would study and resolve "each other's reasonable and ⁠lawful concerns." "The Chinese ​government imposes export ⁠controls on rare earths and other critical minerals in accordance with laws and regulations, and reviews applications for compliant, ⁠civilian licenses," the statement added. Issued days apart, the two statements reflect a new status quo where Washington appears ​to tacitly accept the export restrictions. In contrast, six months ago after the leaders' summit ⁠in Busan, the White House said they would be dismantled.

ANOTHER YTTRIUM SHIPMENT Shortages have been most acute for ⁠yttrium, ​which is used to protect turbine blades in aircraft engines or power plants from extreme heat. The rare earth issue was highlighted in Sunday's White House statement and a separate interview ⁠with U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer. Chinese customs data also released on Wednesday showed a 10-metric-ton export ⁠of yttrium oxide ⁠to the U.S. in April, versus 60 tons in March. Shipments averaged about 30 tons a month over the 13 months before controls were imposed ‌versus 8 ‌tons since.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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