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| Inner Mongolia Luneng rare earth |
The Inner Mongolia Luneng rare earth metal plant marks another expansion in China's strategic magnet materials capacity. The Inner Mongolia Luneng rare earth metal plant will add 10,000 t/yr of praseodymium-neodymium metal capacity in Baotou. As a result, the Inner Mongolia Luneng rare earth metal plant will further tighten China’s grip on the global rare earth magnet supply chain.
Baotou strengthens its role as China’s rare earth capital
Inner Mongolia Luneng has secured government approval to build a high-purity rare earth metal line in Baotou. The project will sit inside the rare earth new materials industrial complex at Bayan Obo industrial park. This location links the plant directly to upstream rare earth resources and downstream alloy and magnet makers.
The company will invest Yn265.93mn ($37.35mn) to construct the 10,000 t/yr PrNd metal facility. Construction is expected to take 24 months, although no firm start-up date has been disclosed. However, the project clearly targets surging demand from new energy vehicles, wind turbines, robotics and electronics.
Praseodymium-neodymium metal is the core raw material for high-performance permanent magnets. These magnets power traction motors in EVs and generators in modern wind turbines. Therefore, any new PrNd metal capacity in Baotou has direct implications for the global energy transition supply chain.
Praseodymium-neodymium prices climb on tighter spot supply
Spot prices for praseodymium-neodymium metal have risen sharply since late October. Higher oxide feedstock costs, tighter spot availability and stronger magnet sector purchases all support the uptrend. Futures trading on the Zhonglianjin platform has also pushed oxide prices higher, feeding through to metal.
Prices for 99.9pc PrNd metal increased to Yn680-685/kg ex-works by 10 November. That mid-point represents an 11pc gain from late October levels. Meanwhile, 99pc PrNd oxide prices climbed nearly 10pc to Yn557-562/kg over the same period. These moves highlight how quickly sentiment can shift in a relatively concentrated market.
Magnet producers are responding to firm orders from EV, wind and consumer electronics customers. As a result, they are willing to pay higher prices to secure PrNd metal and oxide supplies. In this context, Baotou’s new high-purity capacity could ease domestic tightness while reinforcing China’s pricing influence worldwide.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Luneng’s new PrNd metal project underlines how China continues to invest aggressively along the rare earth magnet value chain. Additional high-purity capacity in Baotou will support local magnet makers but may deepen import dependence for overseas OEMs. Global EV and wind players will closely watch whether new non-Chinese PrNd projects can meaningfully diversify supply before this plant comes online.

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