Spelling Whizz

Exchange

Tax

Cars

German

China rejects EU condemnation over rare earth controls


China rejects EU condemnation over rare earth controls

BEIJING: China urged the European Parliament to stop politicising trade and economic issues and applying double standards on export controls, its mission to the European Union said on Friday.

Read more: Rare earths: China’s trump card in trade war with US

The remarks were in response to a motion approved by EU lawmakers on Thursday condemning Beijing over its export restrictions on rare earths.

China is willing to strengthen communication with the European side to properly resolve trade frictions, and rare earth exports should not be an issue between China and the EU, the Chinese mission said in a statement.

DESIGNED TO FORCE CONCESSIONS

Earlier on Thursday, the European Parliament condemned China over its export restrictions on rare
earths and insisted the European Union must reject any attempts by Beijing to use the restrictions to force concessions from the bloc.

Two weeks before an EU-China summit at which rare earths are set to be a key topic, EU lawmakers backed a motion saying that China’s action was unjustified and had coercive intent and that its “quasi-monopolistic position” gave it enormous leverage.

The European Parliament approved the motion by 523 in favour to 75 against, with 14 abstentions. The motion is non-binding but influential, since the parliament is the EU’s only directly elected institution.

China, which mines about 60 per cent of the world’s rare earths and makes 90 per cent of rare earth magnets used in everything from automobiles to home appliances, imposed restrictions in early
April requiring exporters to obtain licenses from Beijing.

The parliamentary motion urged China to lift the restrictions, imposed in the midst of a trade war with the
United States, while noting that Beijing had established “green lanes” to simplify the process for European companies.

Read more: Trump touts ‘done’ US-China deal on rare earths, Chinese students

China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi downplayed European worries in Berlin last week, saying it was standard practice to control exports of goods that could have a military use, but that Europe’s needs could be met if applications were submitted.

The EU lawmakers also called on the European Union to back up its 2030 targets for domestic mining and processing critical mineral projects with a specific budget, and to assess minimum required levels of strategic stocks of rare earths.

You May Also Like