China bans export of key minerals to U.S. as trade frictions escalate

Date:

By Amy Lv and Tony Munroe

(Reuters) -China has banned exports to the U.S. of items related to the minerals gallium, germanium and antimony that have potential military applications, its commerce ministry said on Tuesday, a day after Washington’s latest crackdown on China’s chip sector.

Beijing’s directive on so-called dual-use items with both military and civilian use, which cites national security concerns and takes immediate effect, also requires stricter review of end-usage for graphite items shipped to the U.S.

“In principle, the export of gallium, germanium, antimony, and superhard materials to the United States shall not be permitted,” the ministry said.

The curbs strengthen enforcement of existing limits on exports of the critical minerals that Beijing began rolling out last year, but apply only to the U.S., in the latest escalation of trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies ahead of President-elect Donald Trump taking office.

However, there have been no Chinese shipments of wrought and unwrought germanium or gallium to the U.S. this year through October, although it was the fourth and fifth-largest market for the minerals, respectively, a year earlier, Chinese customs data show.

Gallium and germanium are used in semiconductors, while germanium is also used in infrared technology, fibre optic cables and solar cells.

Similarly, China’s overall October shipments of antimony products plunged by 97% from September after Beijing’s move to limit its exports took effect.

China accounted last year for 48% of globally mined antimony, which is used in ammunition, infrared missiles, nuclear weapons and night vision goggles, as well as in batteries and photovoltaic equipment.

This year, China has accounted for 59.2% of refined germanium output and 98.8% of refined gallium production, according to consultancy Project Blue.

“The move is a considerable escalation of tensions in supply chains where access to raw material units is already tight in the West,” said Project Blue co-founder Jack Bedder.

Prices of antimony trioxide in Rotterdam had soared by 228% since the beginning of the year to $39,000 a metric ton on Nov. 28, data from information provider Argus showed.

“Everyone will dig in their backyard to find antimony. Many countries will try to find antimony deposits,” said a minor metals trader in Europe, declining to be named.

China’s announcement comes after the U.S. launched its third crackdown in three years on China’s semiconductor industry on Monday, curbing exports to 140 companies, including chip equipment maker Naura Technology Group.

Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related

Eagles QB Jalen Hurts leaves game vs. Commanders for concussion evaluation, replaced by Kenny Pickett

Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts left Sunday's game against...

Evergreen investor lessons: Key takeaways from 2024

A lot of stuff happened in 2024.While it may...

Watch Tiger Woods’ son Charlie makes astonishing hole-in-one at PNC Championship

Tiger Woods’ 15-year-old son Charlie allowed his father to...

“It’s not a title”: Arteta plays down Arsenal’s new all-time record

Arteta’s side already narrowly missed out on the chance...