China's Rare Earth Export Curbs Threaten $6.5 Trillion Global Economic Activity, IEA Warns

July 16, 2026
China's Rare Earth Export Curbs Threaten $6.5 Trillion Global Economic Activity, IEA Warns
  • The IEA warns that fully implementing China's rare earth export restrictions could jeopardize about $6.5 trillion in downstream production across autos, high-tech, defense, and energy sectors outside China.

  • In addition to rare earths, China’s planned but postponed graphite export controls could disrupt roughly $300 billion of downstream production outside China, given China accounts for the majority of global processed graphite output.

  • The IEA notes that China’s rare earth export controls could affect up to $6.5 trillion in annual global economic activity outside China, with around $4.2 trillion impacting IEA member countries directly.

  • The piece emphasizes ongoing updates and urges readers to verify information, presenting a cautious, forward-looking view on mineral security and strategic stockpiling as economic insurance.

  • Tim Gould, the IEA’s chief economist, praised strategic reserve systems in Japan and South Korea and stressed the importance of diversifying supply chains.

  • Shifting to diversified sourcing is likely to raise near-term production costs for manufacturers as they move away from the most cost-efficient, geopolitically concentrated supplies.

  • The IEA calls for proactive, multilateral measures to build resilience in critical mineral supply chains amid ongoing geopolitical tensions.

  • The report highlights how a small volume of key minerals underpins large portions of the global economy and exposes the vulnerability of concentrated supply chains.

  • It notes vulnerabilities in global supply chains due to concentrated sources of critical minerals and their relatively small production volumes driving large economic value.

  • Western governments are pursuing alternative critical mineral supply chains, with public financing for new projects rising to $65 billion between 2023 and 2025, more than fourfold from earlier levels.

  • Public financing for new critical mineral projects reached about $65 billion in 2023–2025, signaling a concerted effort to diversify away from China.

  • Officials advocate building and coordinating alternative supply chains with free-world allies to mitigate reliance on China’s rare earths.

Summary based on 7 sources


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