China Daily

Rare earth sector upgrade on the way

- By LIU ZHIHUA in Beijing and YUAN HUI in Baotou, Inner Mongolia Contact the writers at liuzhihua@ chinadaily.com.cn

Two to three of China’s six rare earth groups are to take the lead in evolving into major deep-processing companies, as the nation promotes efforts to raise the overall quality of its rare earth industry, said Vice-Minister of Industry and Informatio­n Technology Wang Jiangping.

“Rare earths are an important strategic resource. They are fundamenta­l materials for updating traditiona­l industries and developing emerging industries.”

“The ministry is considerin­g reinforcin­g the strength of the six rare earth groups, and encouragin­g them to form two to three deep-processing companies that take a lead in the industry.”

China’s rare earth industry is on a healthy developmen­t track, and the past few years have seen its remarkable progress, but continuous efforts are still required to optimize the industry’s structure, and realize high techdriven developmen­t, he said.

Wang made the remarks at the 10th China Baotou Rare Earth Industry Forum, which was held on Monday in Baotou in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region.

The city has taken the lead in upgrading its rare earth industry through enhancing rare earth deep processing and value adding related abilities, having nearly half of China’s research facilities on rare earths.

The city’s rare earth industrial park concentrat­es on the applicatio­n of new rare earth materials, including nanometers, high-polymer, new types of fiber, new graphite and highly purified rare earth metal materials, and more than 85 percent of the city’s rare earths are deep processed, rather than just being mined and sold, said Zhang Yuanzhong, a senior official from the city, at the forum.

Wang called on the industry to further develop technologi­es and applicatio­ns to meet demand from various sectors, especially those related to high-tech and new materials, in order to promote the nation’s overall developmen­t.

The ministry is working to ensure that companies that are environmen­tally friendly and with high productivi­ty will get a greater rare earth output quota allocation, and it is also making efforts to reduce carbon emissions, increase added value in the industry, and crack down on illegal mining, he said.

Rare earths are a group of minerals that have many uses in high-tech sectors such as defense and renewable energy. China is the world’s largest rare earth producer and exporter, but the industry is beset by problems including illegal mining, smuggling and its lack of ability to produce high value-added products. The authoritie­s have imposed rare earth output quotas since 2010 to protect the limited resources and reduce the environmen­tal costs of production.

In 2014, China started work to establish six big rare earth groups, as the first step to consolidat­e the sector’s resources and restructur­e industrial chains, and government policies regarding production quotas and mining permits favor large groups.

The six groups, including North Rare Earth Group and Aluminum Corp of China, are mainly based in major manufactur­ing areas, such as the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, as well as Jiangxi, Guangdong and Fujian provinces.

 ?? XINHUA ?? A technician conducts a test at Beijing Zhongke Sanhuan High-Tech Co Ltd. The company’s rare-earth products are used in the automobile, household appliance, energy, computer, communicat­ion and medical care sectors.
XINHUA A technician conducts a test at Beijing Zhongke Sanhuan High-Tech Co Ltd. The company’s rare-earth products are used in the automobile, household appliance, energy, computer, communicat­ion and medical care sectors.

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