Highlights
- Despite abundant rare earth deposits, the West struggles with processing infrastructure.
- The West relies heavily on China's technical expertise and facilities for processing.
- Rare earth element (REE) separation is capital-intensive and technically complex.
- Economic and strategic barriers currently constrain processing.
- Government investments and emerging technologies, such as deep-sea mining, may help address the processing bottleneck in the critical minerals supply chain.
Despite political rhetoric and media focus on mining and exploration, the true constraint in the Westโs rare earth supply chain lies in one overlooked fact: processing is the bottleneck. In a revealing July 4th report titled The Real Bottleneck in Western Rare Earth Processing Capabilitiesโ, John Zadeh underscores that while the U.S., Australia, and others hold valuable rare earth deposits, they still rely overwhelmingly on Chinaโs infrastructureโwhere over 85% of global REE separation occurs, per the U.S. Geological Survey (2024).
The problem isnโt geological. As Zadeh correctly explains, itโs economic, technical, and strategic. REE separation is capital-intensive (exceeding $100 million per facility), technically demanding (requiring over 1,000 solvent extraction stages for HREEs), and dominated by Chinese patents and workforce expertise. Even flagship U.S. companies, such as MP Materials, must still send materials overseas due to domestic capacity shortfalls.
Denver-based Energy Fuels (opens in a new tab), for instance, ships monazite to Estonia for processingโa workaround that highlights the Westโs continued reliance on external midstream solutions despite growing mining output. The situation reflects a โminerals resource curseโ of the 21st century: owning the ore but lacking the ability to capitalize on it industrially.
Zadehโs analysis also dives into Chinaโs decades-long strategic effortโfrom $20 billion in R&D to vertically integrated facilities like Baotouโand how Western environmental regulations add up to 30% in extra costs. Meanwhile, deep-sea mining, led by Japan, presents a potential breakthrough, though it faces ecological, legal, and economic uncertainties.
Key investor questions arise
- When will Western REE processing capacity reach critical scale?
- Can new public-private models close the knowledge and capital gap?
- Will deep-sea mining and recycling meaningfully compete with Chinaโs entrenched dominance?
With the U.S. Department of Defense earmarking $1.2 billion for rare earth development in FY2025 and the EU committing over $1 billion via its Critical Raw Materials Act, momentum is building. But as Zadeh concludes, โprocessingโnot miningโis the real frontier.โ
For retail investors, this signals a strategic opportunity: watch for REE processors, not just miners. Firms that crack the processing codeโor partner effectively with governmentsโwill define the next decade of critical mineral competitiveness.ย Rare Earth Exchangesย (REEx) would add to the list magnet and other rare earth-related component and assembly manufacturers as well as disruptive recycling technologies and methods.
REEx empowers investors with insight across the REE and critical mineral value chain. Learn more at www.rareearthxchanges.com (opens in a new tab).ย Visit theย REEx Forum,ย and for the worldโs top rare earth mines (and soon, processors, refiners, and magnet manufacturers), see theย REEx Projectsย Database.
Citing โby John Zadeh, Discovery Alert, July 4, 2025
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