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China-Japan-Koreas
China ready to play Rare Earth cards.
2019-06-01
[Twitter]

Woo hoo! More suppliers soon to be coming on line to replace the sudden lack.

Posted by:3dc

#14  China Canuck-grabbing seems a LOT like Iran 1979
Posted by: Frank G   2019-06-01 21:42  

#13   Ask OPEC how well that worked out.

We seen dis movie before. Doncha just love the ending!

This is China trying to push back now that the US and others are standing up against Huawei. Snatching up Canadian nationals in China is another theater in the same war. We've seen recent articles from the ChiCom media beating the war drums, so I guess salami-slicing is no longer the grand strategy.
Posted by: SteveS   2019-06-01 19:38  

#12  Ask OPEC how well that worked out.
Posted by: bbrewer126   2019-06-01 19:13  

#11  You can always clean up the tailings. It just costs more. China doesn't care about polluting themselves, and the whores that be US industry were happy to reduce costs and outsource this problem.

It is a cost issue. Pay more, get out from under the PRC's thumb.

The same thing goes for semiconductor processing and its cousin solar panels. Start throttling the PRC, we are being hung by the rope we sell them.
Posted by: Whiskey Mike   2019-06-01 16:45  

#10  Sounds like we need a "National Security" finding, like for the fence. I'd hate to see the producers skate on actual enviro protections to the limits practicable - We gotta live here. China's practices are horrendous
Posted by: Frank G   2019-06-01 16:24  

#9  The world's largest mine is on the CA/Nevada border. Unfortunately it is about 2 miles into CA. The CA EPA and CA state gov refuse to consider it's operation under any conditions.
Why? It's icky.
Posted by: 3dc   2019-06-01 15:33  

#8  It seems the Chinese have been in dispute with the Japanese over this same issue...

Japan / China the rare earth minerals story – discovery

...but there may be alternatives...

Japan finds huge deposit of rare-earth minerals - TomoNews
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2019-06-01 12:48  

#7  Mine Afghanistan.
Posted by: Woodrow   2019-06-01 10:16  

#6  We used to process rare earths here, before China stepped up. The problem is that the process produces a lot of nasty pollutants, as I understand it, which the entire world was just as happy to let China marinate in instead.
Posted by: trailing wife   2019-06-01 10:06  

#5  ..and once the production moves, it ain't going back. We get rolling here, it can be classified as a strategic industry, thanks to the Chinese action.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2019-06-01 08:11  

#4  Although it will likely be a little painful at first, I encourage this little spat. We do have rare earth metals we just haven't been mining them recently for economic reasons. We really should have reliable, domestic sources of these things.
Posted by: Beau   2019-06-01 07:25  

#3  
Posted by: Frank G   2019-06-01 06:26  

#2  Australian rare-earth ore processor wants to build a plant in the US
Posted by: Skidmark   2019-06-01 04:15  

#1  China's Rare Earth Metals Aren't the Trade War Weapon Beijing Makes Them Out to Be
Posted by: Cratle Sholutch3187   2019-06-01 01:41  

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