Chifeng Gold Laos Rare Earth Output Plan Targets Medium and Heavy Rare Earth Growth

Chifeng Gold plans to raise Laos rare earth output and build separation capacity with Xiamen Tungsten.
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Chifeng Gold Laos Rare Earth Output Plan Targets Medium and Heavy Rare Earth Growth
Chifeng Gold

Chifeng Gold Laos rare earth output plans are moving into a faster ramp-up phase as the Chinese diversified mining firm targets higher production from its Mengkang mine this year. The company plans to reach designed output capacity of 3,675t of mixed rare earth oxide at the Laos site.

The Chifeng Gold Laos rare earth output strategy is focused on meeting rising demand from upstream oxide plants. The plan also strengthens China-linked access to medium and heavy rare earth resources outside China’s domestic mining base.

The company produced 998t of rare earth ores at Mengkang in 2025, with sales of 853t and inventories of 145t. The mine only started operating in the third quarter of 2025, meaning 2026 will be an important test of its ramp-up capability.

Chifeng Gold also plans to build a 3,000 t/yr rare earth separation plant in Savannakhet province with Xiamen Tungsten. This would move the Laos platform beyond mining and into early-stage processing, improving value capture and supply-chain control.

Mengkang Ramp-Up Strengthens Medium and Heavy Rare Earth Supply

The Mengkang rare earth project is strategically important because it contains medium and heavy rare earth oxides. These materials remain among the most sensitive parts of the rare earth supply chain because they are essential for high-performance magnets, defense systems, electric vehicles, robotics, wind turbines and advanced electronics.

Chifeng Gold had total proven rare earth resource reserves of 60,000t by the end of 2025. The Mengkang site accounts for 25,500t of medium and heavy rare earth oxide resources, with an average grade of 0.025%.

Some market participants expect the Mengkang project to meet 8-10% of global demand for medium and heavy rare earths once fully operational. If achieved, that would give Laos a more important role in global rare earth supply and strengthen Chifeng Gold’s position in a high-value segment.

Chifeng Gold also holds the Saipan rare earth mining site in Laos. Saipan has proven resources of 32,000t of medium and heavy rare earth oxide, with an average grade of 0.045%.

The presence of both Mengkang and Saipan gives Chifeng Gold a broader Laos rare earth platform. This matters because medium and heavy rare earth supply is difficult to expand quickly, and new projects face technical, environmental and permitting challenges.

The Chifeng Gold Laos rare earth output plan therefore comes at a sensitive time. Global consumers are looking for supply diversification, while Chinese companies are also trying to secure more overseas resources to support oxide separation, metals production and magnet manufacturing.

Xiamen Tungsten Partnership Links Laos Ore to Separation Capacity

Chifeng Gold’s partnership with Xiamen Tungsten gives the Laos rare earth strategy more downstream depth. The two companies signed an agreement in September 2022 to establish Chijin Xiamen Tungsten, a joint venture focused on developing rare earth minerals in Laos.

The joint venture has registered capital of 60mn yuan, or about $8.79mn. Chifeng Gold holds 51%, while Xiamen Tungsten holds 49%.

Chijin Xiamen Tungsten completed its acquisition of the Mengkang project in March 2024 and obtained mining rights from the Laos government in March 2025. This sequence shows that the project has moved from acquisition into operational development within a relatively short period.

Under the partnership, Xiamen Tungsten and its subsidiaries receive priority access to rare earth minerals in Laos. Chifeng Gold will support the joint venture’s registration, launch and policy coordination in Laos.

This arrangement is commercially important because Xiamen Tungsten brings downstream rare earth processing and metals experience. Chifeng Gold brings resource ownership and project development. Together, they can connect mining, separation and downstream supply more effectively.

The planned 3,000 t/yr separation plant in Savannakhet would further strengthen that connection. If delivered, the plant would reduce dependence on exporting raw or semi-processed material and allow more value to remain in the regional processing chain.

Chifeng Gold is also active in other metals. The company holds 583t of gold resources, 590,000t of copper resources, 560,000t of zinc and lead resources, and 80,000t of molybdenum resources.

Its cathode copper output rose by 9.07% on the year to 6,754t in 2025, while sales increased by 9.5% to 6,869t. Copper concentrate output more than doubled to 3,160t, with sales rising to 3,122t.

However, performance across other metals was mixed. Lead concentrate output fell by 9% to 3,680t, while molybdenum concentrate production slipped by 1.6% to 675t.

This broader metals base gives Chifeng Gold diversification, but the rare earth strategy is likely to receive more attention because of its strategic value. Medium and heavy rare earths carry stronger supply-chain importance than most conventional base metal outputs.

The Metalnomist Commentary

Chifeng Gold’s Laos rare earth push shows how Chinese companies are building overseas control in medium and heavy rare earths before supply pressure intensifies. The key issue is whether Laos can move from ore production into reliable separation capacity without becoming only another upstream resource base.

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