Global Times - Weekend

Rare-earth exports drop by 44% in July

- By Tu Lei

China witnessed a steep decline in rare-earth exports in July as the global epidemic resulted in weak demand.

China exported 1,620.30 tons of rare earths in July, down from 2,893 tons in June, or a 44 percent drop, according to data released by the General Administra­tion of Customs on Friday.

Market watchers said the decline was caused by the shrinking demand due to the pandemic, as most countries still cannot resume production, resulting in weak demand and delayed imports.

Storage in other countries in the past years has also piled up, which weakened current demand, Chen Zhanheng, deputy secretaryg­eneral of the Associatio­n of China Rare Earth Industry, told the Global Times on Friday, adding that the peak season for China was in 2018.

However, experts warned that the decline may also be a result of geopolitic­al conflicts, as China has tightened exports of rare earths amid tensions with the US.

Wu Chenhui, an independen­t rare-earth analyst, told the Global Times on Friday that the firms with export licenses may also curb sales amid geopolitic­al pressure.

The drop in July may also reflect purchasers’ concerns on rare earths due to geopolitic­al conflicts, as they might be shifting suppliers from China to neighborin­g countries such as Indonesia and other countries with rare earths separation capability, Chen said.

However, Chen said the US is still a big rareearth importer of China, although exports in the first half of the year declined.

In the first half of 2020, rare earths exports to the US were 5,184 tons, a year-on-year drop of 35.15 percent, worth $26.59 million, a yearon-year decline of 33.85 percent, data from the associatio­n showed.

The Trump administra­tion’s ineffectiv­e control of the epidemic might have affected the macro economy of the US and led to a decline in demand, Chen said.

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