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G7 Moves to Counter China's Dominance in Critical Minerals

Fareed Zakaria
By Fareed Zakaria
·5 min read

The G7 countries have formed a strategic alliance to reduce China's substantial hold on critical minerals, which are indispensable for various high-tech industries such as defense, automotive, and renewable energy. This collaborative effort seeks to diversify global supply chains, ensuring greater economic security and stability by lessening reliance on a single dominant supplier.

During their summit in Evian, France, G7 leaders issued a joint declaration outlining their commitment. Although China was not explicitly named, the declaration emphasized the urgent need to diversify critical mineral supplies due to their current high concentration. The leaders also voiced concerns about the use of non-market policies, economic coercion, and arbitrary export restrictions, which they believe undermine global economic resilience.

The alliance's objectives include working with partner nations to develop necessary processing and industrial capacities for diversifying critical mineral value chains. Western countries also plan to stockpile these vital resources in industrial or public sectors and share data on potential market disruptions or supply-demand imbalances among G7 members and like-minded nations. This proactive approach aims to safeguard against future economic vulnerabilities.

Despite significant Western investment in developing domestic supply chains, China has paradoxically increased its market share in critical minerals over recent years. According to a report by the International Energy Agency (IEA), China currently dominates the refining of 19 out of 20 analyzed minerals, holding an average market share of approximately 70%. The IEA has highlighted high supply chain concentration, price volatility, and by-product dependency as major risk areas.

China's strategic control extends to restricting global supply through export controls, further exacerbating concerns in an increasingly protectionist global environment. The rare earth supply chain exemplifies this dominance, with China holding a 59% share in mining, 91% in refining, and an overwhelming 94% in magnet manufacturing, as estimated by the IEA last year.

The United States, in conjunction with its allies, is actively exploring mechanisms to counteract China's influence on mineral pricing. One such proposal involves establishing a price floor to mitigate potential market manipulation by Beijing, which has been accused by the U.S. Congress' Select Committee on China of using its legal framework to control prices for its economic and national security interests. The report from November of the previous year noted that China's government, under the Chinese Communist Party, views minerals in geostrategic terms rather than as typical market commodities.

The newly formed G7 alliance faces a considerable undertaking in breaking China's comprehensive control over critical minerals, from extraction to refining. This effort will require substantial financial investment and coordinated international strategies to establish independent and resilient supply chains globally.

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