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Northern Rare Earth |
Northern Rare Earth (NRE), one of China’s leading light rare earth producers, has announced plans to build a rare earth oxide production plant in Baotou, Inner Mongolia. The project, which will be developed in partnership with Changting Golden Dragon, a subsidiary of Xiamen Tungsten, represents a significant step in expanding China’s rare earth separation and processing capacity.
Rare Earth Oxide Project Details
The 457 million yuan ($62.6 million) investment will establish a 5,000 metric ton per year (t/yr) rare earth oxide production line in Baotou’s Kundulun Economic and Technological Development Zone. NRE will hold a 51% stake, while Changting Golden Dragon will own the remaining 49%.
While specific launch dates remain undisclosed, the project aligns with China’s broader strategy of enhancing domestic rare earth processing capacity to maintain its global dominance in the supply of critical materials, including praseodymium, neodymium, lanthanum, and cerium—key elements used in the neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) magnet industry.
NRE has also strengthened its partnership with Golden Dragon by investing 105 million yuan in 2022 to expand its equity in the company. The move secured priority supply agreements for praseodymium-neodymium metal, lanthanum metal, and mischmetal lanthanum-cerium products, reinforcing NRE’s role as a strategic supplier within the rare earth industry chain.
NRE's Financial Performance and Market Challenges
NRE’s latest financial report reflects mixed performance trends amid volatile rare earth prices:
- Q3 2024 Revenue: 8.56 billion yuan, a 1.5% increase year-on-year.
- Q3 2024 Net Profit: 359.92 million yuan, up 11% from 2023.
- January-September 2024 Revenue: 21.55 billion yuan, down 14% year-on-year.
- January-September 2024 Net Profit: 405.32 million yuan, a 71% drop from the previous year.
The decline in profitability stems from weaker rare earth prices, driven by sufficient supply and lower-than-expected demand growth. Praseodymium-neodymium (Pr-Nd) metal—one of the most crucial rare earth elements for EV motors, wind turbines, and industrial magnets—saw its average price drop by 28% to 477 yuan/kg ex-works in the first nine months of 2024.
Despite softening rare earth prices, NRE has benefited from strong restocking activity by magnet manufacturers and tighter rare earth mining quotas, which have helped stabilize the Pr-Nd market in recent months.
Conclusion
NRE’s new rare earth oxide plant in Baotou strengthens China’s position as a dominant force in the global rare earth supply chain. With China tightening rare earth mining quotas and demand from the EV and renewable energy sectors expected to rise, NRE’s strategic partnerships and production expansion could bolster its long-term market position. However, price volatility and uncertain global demand remain key challenges for the rare earth industry in 2025.
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