Orlando Sentinel

China’s not-so-secret weapons — rare earths

- By Llewellyn King

In October 1973, the world shuddered when the Arab members of the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries imposed an oil embargo on the United States and other nations that provided military aid to Israel in the Yom Kippur war. At the same time, they ramped up prices.

The United States realized it was dependent on imported oil — and much of that came from the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia the big swing producer. It shook the nation. How had a few foreign powers put a noose around the neck of the world’s largest economy?

Well, it could happen again and very soon. The commodity that could bring us to our knees isn’t oil, but rather a group of elements known as rare earths, falling between 21 and 71 on the periodic table. This time, just one country is holding the noose: China.

China controls the world’s production and distributi­on of rare earths. It produces more than 92 percent of them and holds the world in its hand when it comes to the future of almost anything in high technology.

Rare earths are great multiplier­s and the heaviest are the most valuable. They make the things we take for granted, from the small motors in automobile­s to the wind turbines that are revolution­izing the production of electricit­y, many times more efficient. For example, rare earths increase a convention­al magnet’s power by at least fivefold. They are the new oil.

Rare earths are also at work in cellphones and computers. Fighter jets and smart weapons, like cruise missiles, rely on them. In national defense, there is no substitute and no other supply source available.

Like so much else, the use of rare earths as an enhancer was a U.S. discovery: General Motors, in fact. In 1982, General Motors research scientist John Croat created the world’s strongest permanent magnet using rare earths. He formed a company, called Magnequenc­h. In 1992, the company and Croat’s patents were sold to a Chinese company.

From that time on it became national policy for China to be not just the supplier of rare earths, but to control the whole supply chain. For example, it didn’t just want to supply the rare earths for wind turbines; it insisted that major suppliers, such as Siemens, move some of their manufactur­ing to China. Soon Chinese companies, fortified with internatio­nal expertise, went into wind turbine manufactur­e themselves.

“Now China is the major manufactur­er of wind turbines,” says Jim Kennedy, a St. Louis-based consultant who is devoted to raising the alarm over rare earths vulnerabil­ity. A new and important book, “Sellout” by Victoria Bruce, details the way the world handed control of its technologi­cal future to China and Kennedy’s struggle to alert the United States.

At present, the rare earths threat from China is serious but not critical. If President Donald Trump — apparently encouraged by his trade adviser Peter Navarro, and his policy adviser Steve Bannon — is contemplat­ing a trade war with China, rare earths are China’s most potent weapon.

A trade war moves the rare earths threat from existentia­l to immediate.

In a strange regulatory twist, the United States, and most of the world, won’t be able to open rare earths mines without legislatio­n and an internatio­nal treaty modificati­on. Rare earths are often found in conjunctio­n with thorium, a mildly radioactiv­e metal, which occurs in nature and doesn’t represent any kind of threat.

However, it’s a large regulatory problem. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency have defined thorium as a nuclear “source material” that requires special dispositio­n. Until these classifica­tions, thorium was disposed of along with other mine tailings. Now it has to be separated and collected. Essentiall­y until a new regime for thorium is found, including thorium-powered reactors, the mining of rare earths will be uneconomic in the United States and other nuclear nonprolife­ration treaty countries.

Congress needs to look into this urgently, ideally before Trump’s trade war gets going, according to several sources familiar with the crisis. A thorium reactor was developed in the 1960s at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. While it’s regarded by many nuclear scientists as a superior technology, only Canada and China are pursuing it at present.

Meanwhile, future disruption­s from China won’t necessaril­y be in the markets. It could be in the obscure but vital commoditie­s known as rare earths: China’s not-quite-secret weapon.

 ??  ?? Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS.
Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS.

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