Monday, November 04, 2013

China Opposes Release of Rare Earth Elements WTO Report

China said Friday it opposes the release of a WTO report about its export curbs on rare earths — exotic minerals used in mobile phones and other high-tech products — following news accounts that the document rejects Beijing's policy as a trade violation. The report by World Trade Organization experts is not a final ruling and leaks would violate the trade body's rules, the Commerce Ministry said in a statement. It gave no details of the report.

Japan's Jiji Press news agency and The Financial Times, citing unidentified officials, have said the report sides with the United States, the European Union and Japan. In a March 2012 complaint to the WTO, they said export curbs improperly favor Chinese domestic manufacturers in violation of Beijing's free-trade commitments. China has about 30 percent of global deposits of rare earths but accounts for more than 90 percent of production. It alarmed foreign companies by limiting exports in 2009 amid efforts to build up domestic manufacturers to capture more of the profits that go to producers of mobile phone batteries and other products.

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"China has repeatedly stressed that China's policy objective is to protect resources and the environment and achieve sustainable development, and that it has no intention of protecting domestic industries in a way that distorts trade," the commerce ministry statement said. Beijing's export curbs pushed up rare earths prices on global markets. That prompted foreign producers to announce plans to re-open or develop mines in California, Canada, India, Russia and elsewhere.

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