The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Mongolia’s PM seeks UK air route to export rare materials

- In Ulaanbaata­r The Telegraph.

Nicola Smith

AsiA CorresPoNd­eNt

Asian nation’s landlocked position between Russia and China places it in a tricky geopolitic­al space BRITAIN can help break China’s strangleho­ld on one of the largest sources for rare earth materials in the world by setting up an air route out of Mongolia, the country’s prime minister has said.

Rare earths, which are materials used to power drones, electric vehicles and quantum computers, will be the “crude oil of the 21st century”, Oyun-Erdene

Luvsannams­rai told

Western powers are in a race against China, which extracts and refines the majority of rare earths, to secure as much of the precious materials for their own industries.

Mongolia sits between Russia and China but its Harvard-educated, reformist prime minister is keen to develop alliances with the West.

Last year, he signed an Open Skies agreement with the US to foster trade.

In order to ship its extensive deposits of rare earths, copper and uranium abroad, Mongolia relies on neighbouri­ng China for access to the port of Tianjin.

The prime minister said Britain, with which Mongolia feels a kinship because “both of our countries have a history of having empires”, could benefit from access to the materials by establishi­ng flight routes in and out of the country.

“We are in the process of studying... what transporta­tion will be used to export those commoditie­s to other countries and also we are looking for possibilit­ies to use air transporta­tion to export critical minerals,” said Mr

Oyun-Erdene. “There are also ways to transport those minerals to the UK, maybe through China [by sea] or maybe through air transporta­tion.

“We are ready to discuss with major countries, including the United Kingdom, on this issue and further cooperatio­n on how we can transport those minerals.”

Rare earth elements are used to generate cleaner, renewable energy, including wind turbine magnets and solar cells. They lie at the heart of the transition from fossil fuels to lowcarbon energy and will be vital in fighting climate change.

“I believe that critical minerals will be the crude oil of the 21st century,” said Mr Oyun-Erdene, talking in his office in the capital, Ulaanbaata­r.

“Critical minerals, including copper, will be the most important commodity in the future,” he said.

Mongolia is seen by democratic nations as a potential ally in the struggle for control of the trade. But the nation’s geography – sandwiched

‘Critical minerals such as copper will be the most important commodity in the future’

between authoritar­ian Russia and China, which are both on a diplomatic and military collision course with the West – puts it in a delicate position.

Its economy is dependent on oil and gas imports from Russia, while Beijing buys more than 90 per cent of its exports, including copper, minerals, coal and cashmere.

“We are focusing on having many more pillars in our economy and lessening our dependence on trade, energy and fuel on our two neighbours. In this context we have been cooperatin­g with our Western partners, like the United Kingdom, United States, Japan and the Republic of Korea,” said Mr Oyun-Erdene.

But he added that Mongolia did not want to be forced to pick sides wholly, comparing the country’s position in a possible new Cold War to that of “a child that gets stuck between the parents” when they decide to divorce.

Talks are already underway with the British Government to arrange an official visit to London, when cooperatio­n on critical minerals and potential transport assistance of exports would be raised, he said.

The prime minister held similar talks with the US government last year, when he met with Kamala Harris, the vice-president, and Lloyd Austin, the defence secretary.

The two countries brokered an

Open Skies agreement, aimed at boosting direct trade.

The UK has already shown much interest in cooperatin­g with Ulaanbaata­r on developing its critical minerals mining sector.

Demand for critical minerals, including rare earth elements, lithium and cobalt is expected to surge by as much as 600 per cent over the coming decade. A surge like that promises an economic boom for the country, which only emerged from a one-party socialist system in the 1990s.

Mongolia is in danger of being hamstrung by geopolitic­al events beyond its control. Its dependence on Russia for about 30 per cent of imports has made it vulnerable to economic coercion. It faces a tricky balance to maintain ties with Beijing and Moscow while diversifyi­ng its economy and pivoting towards the West.

On Ukraine, “the US, China, India, the UK must engage closer and make a bold step to find a solution for a ceasefire”, said Mr Oyun-Erdene.

“I fear if the world gets used to this kind of situation where we have ongoing war and we don’t have peace, that this will catalyse the possibilit­y for future wars.”

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Oyun-Erdene Luvsannams­rai, Mongolia’s prime minister, plans to lessen his country’s dependence on its near neighbours
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