Myanmar banned rare earth exports to China

Published: Dec 16, 2019 16:59
This is set to boost prices of medium-to-heavy rare earth products significantly in the new year

SHANGHAI, Dec 16 (SMM) – Myanmar has closed the border to China to suspend rare earth ore exports to the top rare earth processor, in view of the environmental damage and conflicts caused by Chinese miners’ unregulated operations, SMM learned.

The border will remain closed until mining operations are rectified, which grows concerns about supply of ion-type rare earth ores, feedstock for medium-to-heavy rare earth products.

This is set to boost prices of medium-to-heavy rare earth products significantly in the new year, when demand recovers from year-end cash flow pressure.

SMM assessed terbium oxide at 3,495 yuan/kg as of December 16, up 70 yuan/kg from the end of November. The price of dysprosium oxide rose 100 yuan/mt during the same period to 1,730 yuan/kg.

Myanmar’s latest move came after China in late September reopened the Tengchong Yunnan/Myanmar port, which has been the main boarder crossing point for rare earth ores and concentrates to end a four-month closure.

The previous ban on imports of rare earth ores to China through the Tengchong Yunnan/Myanmar port, starting from the middle of May after a six-month winding-down period agreed in late 2018, led to a jump in prices of medium-to-heavy rare earth products.

In June, prices of terbium oxide peaked 4,225 yuan/mt, up about 45% from lows seen at the start of the year, while prices of dysprosium oxide climbed more than 70% to a high of 2,000 yuan/kg.

China set its annual rare-earth mining quota in November, indicating an increase for light rare earths but no change to the quota for ion-type ores.

Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market communication, and relying on SMM‘s internal database model. They are for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

For any inquiries or to learn more information, please contact: lemonzhao@smm.cn
For more information on how to access our research reports, please contact:service.en@smm.cn
Related News
Policy Tailwinds Combined with Rising Expectations of Improving Demand, Rare Earth Permanent Magnets Concept Strengthened, Xiangdian Co. Hit Daily Limit [SMM Express]
May 22, 2026 19:36
Policy Tailwinds Combined with Rising Expectations of Improving Demand, Rare Earth Permanent Magnets Concept Strengthened, Xiangdian Co. Hit Daily Limit [SMM Express]
Read More
Policy Tailwinds Combined with Rising Expectations of Improving Demand, Rare Earth Permanent Magnets Concept Strengthened, Xiangdian Co. Hit Daily Limit [SMM Express]
Policy Tailwinds Combined with Rising Expectations of Improving Demand, Rare Earth Permanent Magnets Concept Strengthened, Xiangdian Co. Hit Daily Limit [SMM Express]
May 22, 2026 19:36
Rare Earth Export Prices Saw Slight Correction This Week as Geopolitical Tensions and Supply Chain Restructuring Accelerated [SMM Rare Earth Ex-China Weekly Review]
May 22, 2026 17:07
Rare Earth Export Prices Saw Slight Correction This Week as Geopolitical Tensions and Supply Chain Restructuring Accelerated [SMM Rare Earth Ex-China Weekly Review]
Read More
Rare Earth Export Prices Saw Slight Correction This Week as Geopolitical Tensions and Supply Chain Restructuring Accelerated [SMM Rare Earth Ex-China Weekly Review]
Rare Earth Export Prices Saw Slight Correction This Week as Geopolitical Tensions and Supply Chain Restructuring Accelerated [SMM Rare Earth Ex-China Weekly Review]
The ex-China rare earth market this week exhibited a trend of "falling prices amid tight supply," with Pr-Nd oxide and metal prices generally marked down by approximately $5-10/kg. However, due to export controls and tightening supply, the premium on Chinese products outside China remained significant. Meanwhile, geopolitical rivalry and supply chain restructuring accelerated, with G7 finance ministers calling for urgent reduction of dependence on China and the establishment of recycling quota systems. On the capital front, Greenland Resources spent $35 million to acquire the high-grade Sarfartoq project to strengthen its magnetic material rare earth portfolio. Australia's Arafura officially finalised the final investment decision for the Nolans project. Combined with Brazil's launch of an antitrust investigation and Germany's Heraeus divesting its recycling business, these developments underscored the urgency of global decoupling and localization efforts.
May 22, 2026 17:07
Terrafame Explores Scandium Recovery in Finland, Aiming for 2029 Production
May 22, 2026 09:09
Terrafame Explores Scandium Recovery in Finland, Aiming for 2029 Production
Read More
Terrafame Explores Scandium Recovery in Finland, Aiming for 2029 Production
Terrafame Explores Scandium Recovery in Finland, Aiming for 2029 Production
Finnish metals producer Terrafame launched a pre-feasibility study to evaluate scandium recovery from its nickel and zinc production process at Sotkamo in eastern Finland. The company already produces battery-grade nickel, cobalt, and copper, and recovers uranium as a by-product from the same polymetallic ore. Scandium production would also be extracted from these existing hydrometallurgy circuits. The study is expected to be completed by the end of 2026, with a potential production target of 2029. If successfully developed, the project would make Terrafame the only scandium producer in Europe.
May 22, 2026 09:09