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You can fix rare earths for one White House ballroom

The Straits Times

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October 20, 2025

China’s dominance of the sector gives it a technological edge, but one that is not hard to erase.

- David Fickling

You can fix rare earths for one White House ballroom

Given the ability of the words “rare earths” to bring the leadership of the world’s largest economy to its knees, it’s tempting to think that establishing a supply chain to produce the minerals outside of China is a challenge on the scale of putting a man on the Moon.

In fact, that’s a vast overestimate. The amount of government spending needed to bulletproof most of the world’s supplies of the elements, essential for high-strength magnets used in military aircraft and munitions as well as electric cars and wind turbines, is tiny.

It’s probably on the order of a single White House ballroom — US$200 million (S$257 million) - or six hours of spending on artificial intelligence data centres by Silicon Valley’s hyperscalers (US$350 million). By some measures, governments might even turn a profit on the transaction.

What’s been missing until very recently is sustained attention and follow-through from officials in Europe and the US. Beijing’s latest export controls appear to have changed that for good. In thinking that rare earths were a geopolitical weapon equal to developed democracies’ hold over the semiconductor supply chain, China has vastly overplayed its hand.

That's because minerals processing is not rocket science. Nor is it the 3-nanometer chip design enabled by extreme ultraviolet lithography machines — a true moonshot innovation that’s involved decades, and tens of billions of dollars, of research and development (the machines themselves change hands for US$400 million apiece).

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