00:00:00
China dominates the global
supply of several critical
00:00:04
minerals, and for some years
the country has been
00:00:06
restricting exports slowly
at first.
00:00:10
Then quickly,
in April 2024,
00:00:13
the problem came to a head.
00:00:14
China all but completely cut
off access to several
00:00:18
crucial materials in its
trade dispute with the
00:00:20
United States. At the center
of it is a class of minerals
00:00:23
called rare earth elements.
00:00:25
They're used in a wide array
of products, anything from
00:00:27
airplanes to electronics,
even sports equipment.
00:00:30
It is hitting our defense
industry,
00:00:32
our semiconductor industry,
our automotive industry,
00:00:34
our medical industry.
00:00:36
There's really no major
industry that is being
00:00:39
spared the impact of it.
00:00:41
Within three weeks of China
cutting off access,
00:00:43
prices of rare earths shot
up 40%.
00:00:46
The auto industry was hit
especially hard.
00:00:48
It's just the latest in a
series of supply shortages.
00:00:51
Several vehicle plants in
Europe shut down.
00:00:54
Ford stopped making the
explorer at its Chicago
00:00:56
factory in May.
00:00:57
Car companies panicked.
00:00:59
You are not going to
manufacture a car without
00:01:02
rears.
00:01:02
They're all over the car.
00:01:04
On June 13th,
Beijing signaled a
00:01:07
willingness to ease its
restrictions.
00:01:09
That'll buy some time,
but insiders say it's a
00:01:12
patch.
00:01:12
We're not out of the woods
yet. There is a lot of
00:01:15
volatility in the US-China
relationship in between
00:01:18
tariffs and mineral
restrictions.
00:01:20
We've seen China ramp up
restrictions over two years.
00:01:23
Rare earths are just the
newest one.
00:01:25
The fact is, the frequency.
00:01:27
And severity of these crises
is is rapidly increased.
00:01:31
So how can the car industry
or any industry adjust to
00:01:35
this new reality?
00:01:36
Cnbc dove in to find out.
00:01:46
First, let's talk about what
rare earths even are.
00:01:49
They're a class of 17
elements found throughout
00:01:52
the Earth's crust. Located
in many places around the
00:01:54
world, they're called rare.
Not because they are rare.
00:01:57
Rather, because the process
to separate them from other
00:01:59
minerals is very complicated
and requires highly
00:02:02
specialized equipment.
00:02:03
This is what China
dominates.
00:02:05
Rare earth elements are used
in so many things,
00:02:08
among them wind turbines,
wireless technology,
00:02:11
microwaves, smartphones,
submarines,
00:02:14
military aircraft,
and yes,
00:02:16
cars. They're especially
useful for making high
00:02:19
strength, durable magnets,
which are essential to
00:02:22
motors.
00:02:23
What they do is they make
the magnets that are in
00:02:25
those motors more resistant
to heat and vibration,
00:02:29
right? Heat and vibration
kind of magnetized things
00:02:32
over time. And there's not
many things on Earth better
00:02:35
than a car at creating heat
vibration,
00:02:37
right? For these vehicles to
last a long time and be
00:02:40
reliable. You need these
materials.
00:02:43
The amount of rare earth
elements needed in a vehicle
00:02:45
only totals about 50 to
$200,
00:02:48
which is not that much
compared with the cost of
00:02:50
other materials,
and about 4 pounds of rare
00:02:52
earths. Seems like nothing
compared to the 920 pounds
00:02:56
found in an F-35.
00:02:58
The issue is if you don't
have rare earths,
00:03:00
you have no car,
even in a gas car,
00:03:03
you need them for all kinds
of things like filtering,
00:03:05
pollution from exhaust
sensors,
00:03:07
small electric motors,
even speakers.
00:03:10
Hybrids need all that and
even more.
00:03:13
And EVs need the most.
00:03:17
Up until about the mid
1990s,
00:03:19
the US led the world in rare
earth production.
00:03:21
However, there was a turning
point when the Clinton
00:03:23
administration closed the
Bureau of Mines in 1996.
00:03:27
We began seeing a lot of
advantages in everything
00:03:29
from uranium to rare earth
to other countries.
00:03:33
First among those countries
was China.
00:03:36
The Asian giant leads the
world in refining a host of
00:03:39
critical minerals,
including rare earths.
00:03:41
While it controls most of
the worlds rare earth mines.
00:03:44
Where it really dominates is
processing that is actually
00:03:47
separating the elements from
each other and other
00:03:50
minerals. It has a monopoly
on processing heavy rare
00:03:53
earths, which are the ones
the country has cut off
00:03:55
access to.
00:03:56
The real concern,
of course, is that this is a
00:03:59
material that has been
artificially concentrated in
00:04:03
one region. One country.
00:04:05
Similarly to semiconductors.
00:04:08
Here's one reason why.
00:04:09
In 2010, a Chinese fishing
boat crashed into two
00:04:12
Japanese Coast Guard
vessels.
00:04:14
Japanese authorities
arrested the captain.
00:04:16
China cut off Japan's rare
earths supply.
00:04:19
That was the first case of
modern weaponization of
00:04:22
these minerals.
00:04:23
China's ongoing trade
tensions with other
00:04:25
countries only exacerbated
the issue.
00:04:27
Since 2023, it's
increasingly restricted its
00:04:30
critical minerals exports.
00:04:32
These minerals were used for
an array of things,
00:04:34
including chipmaking,
defense and a lot of high
00:04:37
tech products. China even
banned the export of rare
00:04:40
earth refining equipment,
technology and IP.
00:04:43
We actually didn't even have
the technical know how on
00:04:46
how to do it.
00:04:47
There's a concern that
they're going to support
00:04:49
other countries military
defense,
00:04:53
but it's this slow building
of leverage.
00:04:55
It's not a limited supply,
and China wants to make sure
00:04:58
it can hold on to what it
needs,
00:05:02
what it already Has.
00:05:05
Still the news on full
export restrictions
00:05:07
announced on April 4th came
as a shock.
00:05:10
Automakers panicked.
00:05:11
Some reported their
factories could be idle
00:05:14
within a month.
00:05:15
Nobody had any time to react
to it,
00:05:17
right? I mean,
within a matter of weeks,
00:05:19
all of the material in the
pipeline is out and nobody
00:05:23
could see this coming. There
was only so much available
00:05:26
at any price.
00:05:29
In June, reports said the
Chinese government began
00:05:32
granting licenses to some
suppliers that serve the
00:05:35
Detroit automakers.
00:05:36
President Trump said the
shortage was over a done
00:05:39
deal.
00:05:40
So right now,
it looks like we might be
00:05:43
getting some easing in the
export controls.
00:05:46
So there'll be more
licenses,
00:05:48
but it's likely going to be
a one off.
00:05:51
The export licenses the
Chinese government is
00:05:53
issuing expire in six
months.
00:05:56
So for a lot of automotive
firms,
00:05:58
the immediate pain point is
addressed.
00:05:59
But whether this solution
holds six months,
00:06:02
a year, year and a half from
now is totally unclear.
00:06:05
The restrictions have also
created a supply bottleneck.
00:06:08
We're expecting those to
resume,
00:06:10
but they're not going to
they're not going to improve
00:06:12
overnight. We're expecting
that it's going to take
00:06:14
months for this,
for the flow of those
00:06:17
magnets to really resume,
because there are thousands
00:06:20
of license applications that
are still waiting to be
00:06:23
granted.
00:06:24
Dan Hirsh says the auto
industry is facing a
00:06:27
pattern. The last several
decades have been punctuated
00:06:30
by periods of intense
disruption.
00:06:32
They are getting more
frequent and more intense,
00:06:34
and are increasingly due to
shortages of critical parts
00:06:38
or materials produced in
just one region of the
00:06:40
world. In the 20 tens,
it was a tsunami that hit
00:06:44
Japan. A few years ago,
it was the Covid 19
00:06:46
pandemic, the chip shortage
and the war in Ukraine.
00:06:50
Now it's rare earths.
00:06:51
A couple of years or
possibly sooner.
00:06:54
It'll be something else that
that will be in shortage and
00:06:57
we will or will have not
learned our lessons from
00:07:00
this. They really do need to
take seriously,
00:07:03
map their supply chains,
really know or have the
00:07:06
systems to rapidly collect
and understand this
00:07:10
information about where
things are coming from,
00:07:12
who's supplying them.
00:07:14
The challenge is companies
guard sourcing information
00:07:17
tightly, considering it a
trade secret.
00:07:19
And as a result,
you know, it's hard to know
00:07:23
whether or not you will have
a problem when whether it's
00:07:26
this type of shortage or a
volcano goes off or an
00:07:29
earthquake or some other
type of political disaster.
00:07:34
To reduce reliance on China,
00:07:36
one obvious option is to
build up supply chains in
00:07:39
other countries,
including in the US,
00:07:41
which once led the world in
rare earths production.
00:07:44
The US is actually the
second biggest producer of
00:07:47
rare earths after China.
00:07:48
The difficulty is,
is that we never developed
00:07:51
processing capabilities.
00:07:53
When tariffs went into
effect in February 2020,
00:07:55
five, companies began
stockpiling heavy rare
00:07:58
earths. The US government
has also given over $400
00:08:02
million to companies with
operations here in America,
00:08:05
primarily EMP materials and
Lyness to build separation
00:08:09
capabilities for both light
and heavy rare earths,
00:08:12
and for a permanent magnet
manufacturing facility in
00:08:15
Texas. These assets are
designed to build the
00:08:18
domestic mine to magnet
supply chain for rare
00:08:21
earths.
00:08:22
Here, the hope is that if
China is restricting these
00:08:27
minerals, these exports so
much,
00:08:29
then maybe the price will
get to a point where there's
00:08:32
more political incentive and
there's more companies and
00:08:36
investors that are actually
willing to make everything
00:08:39
come together more quickly
for Western production of
00:08:44
these rare earths. But,
you know,
00:08:46
some people are still quite
skeptical.
00:08:48
To start, the global average
time frame for getting a
00:08:51
mine up and running is 18
years and it's 29in the US.
00:08:55
The business case for such
an operation is harder to
00:08:58
make when a single country
can flood the world market
00:09:00
with cheap product.
00:09:02
And DPR oxide is below $60 a
kilogram if it stays at this
00:09:07
price point by 2030.
00:09:09
There are only eight
projects in the world
00:09:10
outside of China that will
break even on direct
00:09:13
production costs.
00:09:15
So by doing it,
by flooding the market and
00:09:18
for them, often backed by
the government,
00:09:21
they are able to put Western
producers who have a
00:09:24
fiduciary responsibility to
their shareholders out of
00:09:27
business.
00:09:28
That said, there are other
sources of rare earths
00:09:30
around the world. Australia,
00:09:32
Vietnam and Saudi Arabia.
00:09:34
Australia is a really big
one.
00:09:36
Not only do they have rare
earths,
00:09:37
they're building their own
separation capabilities.
00:09:40
The second country we're
looking at is Saudi Arabia.
00:09:43
One of Saudi Arabia's key
advantages are they actually
00:09:46
have a big deposit of heavy
rare earths,
00:09:48
which are much rarer,
and which we have a lower
00:09:51
concentration of here in the
United States.
00:09:53
Companies outside China can
also try innovating their
00:09:56
way out. One path is
recycling.
00:09:58
There is an abundance of
scrap that contains still
00:10:00
usable material.
00:10:01
In September 2024,
the US Department of Defense
00:10:04
invested $4.2 million in
Rare Earth Salts,
00:10:08
a startup that aims to
extract the oxides from
00:10:10
domestic recycled products
such as fluorescent light
00:10:13
bulbs. But extracting
materials from something as
00:10:16
complex as a smartphone is
difficult to do,
00:10:19
and once it is done,
if it can be done
00:10:21
economically, a lot of those
materials could be corroded
00:10:24
or unusable.
00:10:25
I think the concern is,
is that supply enough to
00:10:29
offset the overall shortage?
00:10:31
And generally,
I think the answer is no.
00:10:33
Another path is to rely less
on rare earths altogether.
00:10:37
Tesla has reduced its use of
rare earths in its EVs by
00:10:40
25%. Toyota has magnet
motors with less rare earths
00:10:44
content, and supplier ZF has
entirely magnet free ones.
00:10:48
That's the wonder of
technology.
00:10:50
And science is there's lots
of different ways to make
00:10:54
some of these things.
00:10:55
Minnesota based nylon is
making magnets that use no
00:10:59
rare earths. Investors
include GM,
00:11:01
Stellantis, and Volvo.
00:11:03
We already had very good
demand from customers for
00:11:07
our technology after the
export controls were put in
00:11:10
place by China,
we saw a step change in
00:11:13
interest both from customers
and investors in Iran.
00:11:17
Rountree says Nippon magnets
aren't beholden to the same
00:11:20
kinds of shortages.
00:11:21
Magnets have made out of
iron and nitrogen,
00:11:23
which you can basically mean
you can stand up a plant
00:11:26
anywhere in the world.
00:11:27
The company is building a
plant in Minnesota,
00:11:29
scheduled to open sometime
between 2026 and 2027.
00:11:33
A second large scale
facility is scheduled for
00:11:36
2029.
00:11:37
That 10,000 ton factory will
be able to supply,
00:11:39
you know, magnets that will
build millions of EVs here
00:11:43
in North America.
00:11:44
And we need to. We're happy
to build plants beyond that.
00:11:47
But in the next five years,
again,
00:11:49
it's going to be one of
those situations where we'll
00:11:51
have allied supply. We're
going to leverage innovation
00:11:53
to need less rare earths.
00:11:55
And that's, you know,
one of America's great
00:11:57
strong points.