US, Australia To Discuss China's Rare Earths Dominance
November 06 2010 - 11:23PM
Dow Jones News
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she will use a
weekend visit to Australia to discuss China's policy on key
materials called rare-earth metals.
China earlier this year curtailed export quotas of the metals,
used by high-tech companies, auto makers, and in military
equipment, citing the environmental hazards rare earths have
caused, as well as efforts to quell smuggling.
China currently controls around 97% of the world's supply of the
metals, raising fears about its ability to control the market.
Clinton, who is in Australia until Monday for defense and
security talks as part of a seven-nation Asia-Pacific tour, said
the U.S. and Australia "need to discuss in depth is the supply of
rare-earth minerals throughout the world."
"The slow-down, or the potential of the supply coming from
China, which is about 97% of the currently available supply of
rare-earth minerals, raised questions in many of our minds that it
is not--whether it is China or anyone else--wise to be so dependent
upon a single source for elements that are critical to many of the
most advanced civilian and military technology that countries like
Australia and the U.S. produce and utilize," Clinton told reporters
late Saturday.
Last year Canberra blocked plans by China Non-Ferrous Metal
Mining (Group) Co. to invest A$252 million in Lynas Corp. (LYSDY,
LYC.AU), an Australian miner of rare-earth metals.
Australia's Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd has just returned from a
week-long visit to China. Clinton said she is eager to discuss his
"current thinking" on China matters, including rare earths.
Because the issue has "direct military and defense" importance,
the two countries need to work together "to ensure that there is a
broad-based global supply of these critical minerals," Clinton
added.
-By Rachel Pannett, Dow Jones Newswires; 61-2-6208-0901;
rachel.pannett@dowjones.com
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