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BEIJING -- China's State Council on Thursday issued a national guideline that aims to promote sustainable and healthy development of the country's rare earth industry.
China will take effective measures to strengthen the management over the sector and speed up transforming the development pattern of the industry in order to protect and properly use rare earth resources, the guideline stated.
The guideline, posted on the central government's website, www.gov.cn, lists a slew of problems that severely affect the sector's healthy development, including illegal mining, excessively expanding smelting and extracting capacities, environmental damage, and disorder in exports.
Special campaigns will be launched to crack down on illegal mining activities and excessive production, and greater efforts will be made to combat practices that pollute the environment and damage the ecology. The campaigns will also target illegal exports and smuggling of rare earths, the guideline said.
China implements a quota system for rare earth exports. In a move to further streamline exports, the Ministry of Commerce and General Administration of Customs on Thursday jointly announced the inclusion of rare earth ferroalloys in the export quota system.
Furthermore, the guideline states China will restructure and optimize the sector through increased mergers. The country will also expand the strategic reserves of rare earth resources and quicken the steps in research and industrialization of key technologies within the industry.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said in February that China will streamline its rare earth industry during the coming five years, highlighting the urgent need to protect the environment and save resources by accelerating industrial upgrading and technological innovation in the sector.
As the world's largest rare earth producer and exporter, China provides more than 90 percent of the global demand, and its reserves account for one third of the world's total.
Specifics in Thursday's guideline also include efforts to implement greater order in rare earth exploration, smelting and extracting, and market distribution over the next one to two years.
During the period, industrial concentration will be improved as large companies will dominate in the sector, the guideline said.
In promoting industrial consolidation, the Ministry of Land and Resources in January announced the establishment of 11 state-managed rare earth mining zones in Ganzhou Prefecture, Jiangxi Province, which is rich in ion-absorbed-type rare earth.
The 11 mining zones have a combined area of 2,500 square kilometers, with rare earth reserves estimated at 760,000 tons.
Rare earth elements are crucial for the production of components used in a variety of high-tech products such as consumer electronics, but their mining is known to be destructive to forests, soil and farmland. The waste released after mining also damages the environment.
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