of heightened awareness in the West regarding Chinese dominance in this field, leading
to the initiation of over 200 new projects outside of China in the subsequent years. The
surge in prices served as a catalyst for a new moment in the “collaboration between the
EU, the US, and Japan to find ways in which to innovate” (Kalantzakos, 2020, p. 4),
addressing their substantial dependence on these elements, and resulting in the most
significant increase in non-Chinese rare earth minerals, rising from 16.5 million in 2010
to 87.3 million in 2015 (Seaman, 2019, p. 16). Production started in mines (sometimes
re-started) in Australia, Vietnam, Brazil and even the United States, and the focus was
to diversify, innovate and recycle in order to end dependence on Chinese rare earth
minerals. In fact, during 2012, the United States reactivated Mountain Pass after a few
years of dormancy, even though initially, this reactivation was gradual and slow.
Currently, this mine in California accounts for 15 percent of the world's production of rare
earths and is used to supply magnets for "America's most advanced commercial and
military technology, from electric vehicles to Virginia-class attack submarines”
(Seligman, 2022). The new company that owns Mountain Pass, MP Materials, despite
some ups and downs in terms of stock closures, has recently been on Zacks.com's list of
the most searched stocks (Zacks Equity Research, 2023) and has been instrumental in
the efforts of the public and private sectors to increase the production of Rare Earth
Elements from its mine. In November 2022, MP Materials announced the second phase
of its production with the construction of a new facility in Fort Worth, Texas. The goal of
this new facility is to "convert the refined minerals from Mountain Pass into metals, alloys,
and magnets" (Seligman, 2022). The company's Chairman, James Litinsky, himself
mentions that "there has to be an American champion in this space" (Seligman, 2022),
sending a message to China that the competition cannot come to a halt.
In 2009, China tried to acquire a majority stake (51 percent) in Lynas, Australia's primary
rare earth mining corporation (Kalantzakos, 2020, p. 4). However, the Australian
government rejected the proposal, stressing the importance of keeping non-Chinese-
controlled rare earth resources accessible, and in 2011, this strategy was taken further,
when Japan stepped in to support Lynas, providing “a total of USD 250 million in loans
and equity in order to receive 8,500 tons of rare earth products over a period of ten
years” (Kalantzakos, 2020, p. 5). In 2012, “EU, Japan, and the US collectively filed
complaints with the World Trade Organisation (WTO)” (Kalantzakos, 2020, p. 4),
regarding Chinese export restrictions on rare earths and other elements like tungsten,
and in June of that year, the “U.S. formally requested the establishment of a Dispute
Settlement Board (DSB) process” (Chapman, 2017, p. 62). This meant that WTO was
called to solve this trade dispute between the Chinese export quotas and restrictions,
and the other several countries (lead by the US) complaining that this was China’s way
of leveraging and weaponizing international negotiations in its own favor. For America,
this was detrimental to “American workers and manufacturers across established and
emerging industrial sectors” (Chapman, 2017, p. 62), and something had to be done.
After two years of negotiations and processes, the final decision was that Chinese
practices “were inconsistent with its WTO accession commitments”, and that they
violated article 11 “of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which
prohibits trade restrictions besides duties, taxes, and other charges” (Chapman, 2017,
p. 62). The rare earths dispute between China and Japan underscored the potential
weaponization of these resources, intensifying global competition for them. Since then,