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China creates rare earth strategic reserves: report

Scientist guilty of selling trade secrets to China
Washington (AFP) Feb 7, 2011 - A federal jury on Monday convicted a former research scientist of stealing trade secrets from Dow Chemical Co. and selling them to companies in China, US prosecutors said. Wen Chyu Liu, a 74-year-old former Dow employee, allegedly traveled throughout China to market proprietary information about Dow's synthetic materials used in automobiles and housing construction. A federal jury in Baton Rouge, the capital of the southern state of Louisiana, convicted Liu, who also is known as David Liou, of one count of conspiracy to commit trade secret theft and one count of perjury.

He faces more than 10 years in prison. A sentencing date has not been scheduled. Evidence presented during the three-week trial showed that Liu conspired with at least four current and former employees, prosecutors said. He allegedly once bribed a then-employee with $50,000 to obtain information. Liu, a resident of Houston, Texas, came to the United States from China for postgraduate studies. He worked for Dow from 1965 to 1992. Dow Chemical is the largest agrochemical and biotechnology company in the United States. Liu also faces $500,000 in fines.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Feb 8, 2011
China is building up strategic reserves of rare earth metals in a move that could give it better control over the resource so indispensable to high tech products, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Storage facilities have been built in recent months in the northern region of Inner Mongolia with the capacity to hold more than the 39,813 tonnes of the metals China exported last year, the paper said.

But details of the strategic reserves have not been made public, it added on Monday.

China controls about 95 percent of the global trade for the 17 minerals that collectively make up the rare earth metals market.

The metals, prized for their special chemical or electromagnetic properties, are used in making mobile phones, batteries for hybrid cars, wind turbines, flat-screen televisions and other high tech products.

According to a report issued by the US Geological Survey in November, about 36 percent of the world's reserves of the metals are in China.

With the prices of rare earth metals rising on average by about 130 percent last year, mining companies in countries such as Australia have stepped up efforts to extract the minerals.

But according to the Wall Street Journal, a new mine could take a decade to develop, so the processing of rare earth elements will remain concentrated in China for years.

Last month, China brought 11 rare earth mines under state control as Beijing consolidated the industry -- a move analysts said could drive up prices of the elements.

In December, China also tightened control over the metals by slashing quotas for overseas shipments by some 35 percent for the first half of 2011, as well as hiking export taxes.

An association regrouping China's top 90 companies dealing in the extraction and processing of rare earth will also be formed and begin operating by May, a report in the Huaxia Times said late last month.

earlier related report
Africa's resources central to China: expert
Cape Town (AFP) Feb 8, 2011 - Africa's rich natural resources will remain key to China as the Asian giant grows at a more moderate but sustainable pace, an expert on the country told an African mining conference Tuesday.

"We feel that demand from China is something to rely upon," said Kobus van der Wath, managing director of consultancy Beijing Axis, adding that China's economic performance was not a "flash in the pan".

"If anything we will see a more moderate growth rate and therefore more moderate but certainly more sustainable demand."

China should be viewed as a broad player on the continent, where a lack of infrastructure and capital play to the its strengths, he said.

The world's second-biggest economy "comfortably" had outbound investments of more than $50 billion a year but there was greater appetite and ability to invest more, particularly in Africa, he said.

The "Chinese, although they are not new, are becoming a far more intensive player... and far more assertive in their global aspirations," van der Wath told delegates at the Investing in African Mining Indaba conference.

"Raw materials is a big focus for this global expansion and really Africa is also a very big focus."

"Africa will continue, and developing countries and resource hubs will continue, to be very very important in terms of focus," said van der Wath.

Africa drew 14 percent of China's investment last year, he said.



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