Germany agrees new minerals strategy amid China spat
Berlin (AFP) Oct 20, 2010 Germany on Wednesday unveiled a new strategy to help firms in Europe's top economy obtain vital minerals, amid reports that China is curbing exports of rare earths crucial for high-tech industries. Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle said that securing a reliable supply of these minerals, used to produce goods from iPods to hybrid cars, was of "pivotal importance" for Germany as an industrial power. While individual companies are responsible for sourcing their own minerals, the government would back them up with foreign policy measures, Berlin vowed. "Part of the raw materials strategy is building up partnerships with selected countries," the German government said in a statement, without saying which nations were involved. Japan has accused China, which has cornered 95 percent of the rare earths market, of restricting shipments amid a bitter spat between Asia's top two economies sparked by a maritime incident in disputed waters six weeks ago. Beijing has cut rare earth exports by five to 10 percent a year since 2006 as demand and prices soar, but strongly denies making any fresh cuts. Earlier Wednesday, Chinese authorities lashed out at a report in the official China Daily, which cited a commerce ministry bureaucrat as saying Beijing would cut quotas by up to 30 percent next year. "China will continue to supply the world with rare earths," Beijing insisted. The New York Times has reported that the United States and Japan are considering filing a case against China at the World Trade Organisation. On a visit to Asia this month, Bruederle pledged to help Japan gain access to rare earths and said Berlin and Toyko would examine joint efforts to explore new sources for the minerals. And Chancellor Angela Merkel said in a speech last week that Europe must formulate a policy to ensure a steady supply of minerals. "In Central Asia, there is a broad spectrum of interesting deposits, including of rare earths which we need for things like electrical batteries," said the chancellor.
earlier related report The announcement follows a report by The New York Times in which three anonymous industry sources said China had quietly halted shipments of rare earths to the United States and Europe. China has been blocking shipments of the minerals to Japan for the last month due to a diplomatic dispute between the two countries. "The embargo is expanding" beyond Japan, one of the rare earth industry officials told the Times. The Chinese officials said the restrictions were imposed Monday after Zhang Guobao, vice chairman of China's National Development and Reform Commission, called a news conference Sunday to denounce U.S. trade actions. Zhang was responding to a U.S. trade representative's announcement Friday of an investigation into Beijing's green technology sector to determine whether government support is in violation of China's commitments to the World Trade Organization. That investigation includes whether Beijing's continued rare earth export quota cuts, as well as high export taxes on the minerals, are designed to force multinational corporations to manufacture more high-technology products in China. Beijing has already lowered rare earth export quotas this year by 40 percent from last year. China produces 97 percent of the world's supply of rare earths, crucial for green energy and high-tech components such as wind turbines, low-energy light bulbs, batteries for hybrid and electric cars, lasers, fiber-optic cables, cell phones and flat-screen monitors. The elements are also used for military applications, such as missiles. China Daily, the country's English-language newspaper, on Tuesday also quoted an unnamed official as saying the government would cut export quotas by as much as 30 percent in 2011. But Beijing said Wednesday that media reports about such plans to reduce quotas were "false" and "groundless." "China will continue to supply rare earth to the world," the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement to state-run news agency Xinhua. China has long maintained that environmental concerns are the reason for the cuts. "Strategic, environmental and economic considerations mean that the country [China] can't afford to continue shouldering the burden of supplying the world," Chao Ning, a foreign trade section chief with the Commerce Ministry, was quoted as saying in the China Daily article. Wang Baodong, a spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, told the Times that China was not imposing an embargo or attempting to use rare earths as a bargaining chip, saying he did not see any link between China's "reasonable" rare earth export control policy and the "irrational U.S. decision of protectionist nature to investigate China's clean energy industries."
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