REUTERS
April 23, 2025 at 12:15 JST
Pipes coming from a rare earth smelting plant spew polluted water into a vast tailings dam near Xinguang Village, located on the outskirts of the city of Baotou in China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in this October 31, 2010, picture. (REUTERS)
SEOUL--Beijing recently asked South Korean companies not to ship products containing China’s rare earth minerals to U.S. defense firms, the Korea Economic Daily reported on Tuesday, citing government and company sources.
The report had initially said China’s Ministry of Commerce warned Korean companies they could face sanctions if they violated the export restrictions. The ministry delivered the message in letters to Korean companies which make power transformers, batteries, displays, electric vehicles, aerospace and medical equipment, the report said.
The Korea Economic Daily report was later corrected to the "Chinese government" delivering the message, rather than the commerce ministry.
South Korea’s industry ministry said on Wednesday it was checking with the Chinese government and South Korean companies in order to confirm the report.
"So far, it has not been confirmed that South Korean companies have received an official letter from the Chinese government as per the report," the ministry said.
China’s Ministry of Commerce did not respond to questions.
Early this month, China placed export restrictions on rare earth elements as part of its sweeping response to U.S. tariffs, restricting the supply of minerals used to make weapons, electronics and a range of consumer goods.
Exporters must now apply to the Ministry of Commerce for licenses, a relatively opaque process that can range from six or seven weeks to several months.
China produces around 90% of the world’s rare earths, a group of 17 elements. The U.S. government has stockpiles of some rare earths, but not enough to supply its defense contractors in perpetuity.
South Korea said in early April it had more than six months of stockpiles of some of the seven rare earths restricted by China, including dysprosium, used in special magnets found in the clean energy sector, including electric vehicles and wind turbines.
Senior South Korean government officials are set to meet their U.S. counterparts in Washington on Thursday to discuss tariffs.
China on Monday warned countries against striking a broader economic deal with the U.S. at its expense.
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