Posted on 10/03/2020 6:40:30 AM PDT by cba123
(ATF) China has responded angrily to a US executive order to look into the country's dependence on rare earths from China. Reuters reported the order announced Wednesday could lead to tariffs, quotas or other possible import restrictions, according to the executive order released on Wednesday.
In China the news was met with irritation. Tencent news, for instance, said the US had entered a state of national emergency.
China does lead exports and has the top position in production of the group of elements that are is a vital material for the manufacture of technology products from mobile phones to military hardware.
In the tit-for-tat trade war, China is holding back exports or rare earths and the US, EU, Australia and others are re-opening old mines and exploring for new deposits. Rare earths are actually plentiful but difficult to get to Chinas are cheaper because they are more accessible.
(Excerpt) Read more at asiatimesfinancial.com ...
Okay, take their stuff, we have the weapons.
If the Anti-American Cabal behind Biden wins the November 2d election, they’ll sign the mine over to China.
You think entirely too correct. You’re frickin’ scary.
Cheaper to mine our own.
Try this one on for size. Why not hold a tribunal for war crimes committed by the Taliban. Sentence them to hard labor, mining rare earth minerals.
The 17 rare-earth elements are cerium (Ce), dysprosium (Dy), erbium (Er), europium (Eu), gadolinium (Gd), holmium (Ho), lanthanum (La), lutetium (Lu), neodymium (Nd), praseodymium (Pr), promethium (Pm), samarium (Sm), scandium (Sc), terbium (Tb), thulium (Tm), ytterbium (Yb), and yttrium (Y).
We have rare Earth metals, We also have an EPA that Clinton, Bush, and Obama forbid to allow mining those minerals to appease the Chinese.
Trump changed that.
True. No easy to reduce the dependence on PRC China. PRC started to use rare earth supply as a bargaining power in GWB era. It has taken America, EU, Japan, South Korea.....10+years to look for the alternative ways.
I like how you think.
China tried to corner the market some years back...it was why they were in Africa attempting to bankrupt African countries in exchange for ‘loans’ to help build African infrastructure. Africans were so stupid they thought taking help from China was the same as taking help from the United States... we help to help. Chinese help to gain control. Commies are thugs... here and there and everywhere.
China must have been laughing at what fools we are.
—
China, Indonesia, and Europe during the Kosovo War featuring the Albanian witch Albright.
You know, Japan has invested big money in Vietnam for at least 10 years on rare earth mines but still cant reduce the dependence on PRC supply.
And Vietnam cant afford the risk of offending mighty PRC China on rare earth supplying dispute.
Well that's good to know. Don't have to rely on totalitarian China
It *is* a blackmail item. China won’t sell any rare earths unless the product created with them is then manufactured in China.
GWB and Obama governments didnt mind the dependence on PRC. It gave PRC China 10 years to consolidate the dominant position of global rare earths supply.
Yes, the name you are both looking for is Richard Blum.
Washington DC was awash with money because of China. It’s no wonder the corrupt Deep State hates Trump for putting American first...
We don’t buy elites ‘speeches’ for $10,000 a minute,
we don’t buy tables at their wives ‘charity’ events,
we don’t hire them at outrageous salaries for everything from foundations, to institutes,
to chairs at Ivies...
Deep State people are dirty - the world knows it. China plays our ‘elites’ for money, access, and and our secrets. They love China, they love war in the Middle East and they hate Trump.
It seems that significant research grants picked up towards about 2016 and has been increasing. Some of work has progressed from the lab to continuous pilot plant. I didnt delve much into to details of the pilot plant unit operations but it seemed like selective precipitation was being looked at. I can think of a few other technologies that could also play a role.
The above refers to handling liquid solutions. The big gorilla though is dealing with tailings directly in terms of extraction. The materials handling is going to be very capital intensive and with high operating costs. Ouch... The obvious way to reduce the costs is to do the tailing extraction in situ within a coal tailings pond. I have no info on how this angle is being looked at but I can see some significant environmental negatives that could be difficult to handle economically.
Whatever promising techs may emerge from the existing R&D tracks with coal tailings would likely transfer over to addressing low level nuclear waste issues scattered across the western US. This is from mine tailings at defunct mining and milling operations and from the sole active low level uranium mill in operation in northwest New Mexico.
I hope the Universities involved now have a separate technology licensing organization that can get their R&D program into private industry to work up the commercial aspects of this. Ive had mainly negative experiences when the academics try to push into or micromanage too far into the commercial development.
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