By Yuka Obayashi
SHIZUOKA, Japan, Jan 12 (Reuters) – A Japanese mining ship set sail for a remote coral atoll on Monday to probe mud rich in rare earths, part of Tokyo’s efforts to reduce its reliance on China for essential minerals as Beijing tightens supply.
The month-long mission of the Chikyu test vessel near Minamitori Island, about 1,900 km (1,200 miles) southeast of Tokyo, will mark the world’s first attempt to continuously raise seafloor mud from 6 km (4 miles) deep on a ship.
Japan, like its Western allies, has reduced its reliance on China for minerals vital to the production of cars, smartphones and military equipment, an effort that has become urgent amid a major diplomatic row with Beijing.
“One of our missions is to build a supply chain for domestically produced rare earths to ensure a stable supply of minerals essential to the industry,” Shoichi Ishii, head of the government-backed project, told reporters last month before the ship departed from the port city of Shizuoka on a sunny day with snow-capped Mount Fuji in the background.
REDUCING DEPENDENCE ON CHINA WILL NOT BE EASY
China last week banned exports of items intended for the Japanese military that have civilian and military uses, including some critical minerals. The Wall Street Journal reported that Beijing has also begun to restrict rare earth exports to Japan more broadly.
Japan condemned China’s dual-use ban but declined to comment on the report of a broader ban, which China has not confirmed or denied. Chinese state media, however, said Beijing was weighing the move.
Finance ministers from the Group of Seven industrial powers will discuss rare earth supplies at a meeting in Washington on Monday, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Japan is no stranger to facing China’s wrath over rare earths. In 2010, China halted exports following an incident near disputed islands in the East China Sea.
Since then, Japan has reduced its reliance on China to 60 percent from 90 percent, investing in overseas projects such as the tie-up between trading house Sojitz and Lynas Rare Earths in Australia and promoting less mineral-based rare earth recycling and manufacturing processes.
The Minamitori Island project, however, is the first to attempt to source rare earths domestically.
“The fundamental solution is to be able to produce rare earths in Japan,” said Takahide Kiuchi, executive economist at Nomura Research Institute.
“If this new round of export controls ends up covering a lot of rare earths, Japanese companies will again make efforts to move away from China, but I don’t think it will be easy,” he said.