Chinese assessments of “critical” and “strategic” raw materials: Concepts, categories, policies, and implications

•Chinese experts categorize minerals based on assessments of their “strategic-ness”.•Not all minerals deemed “strategic” in China are subject to supply risk.•“Strategic” minerals include minerals for which China controls global supply chains.•Categories of “strategic” minerals are subject to differe...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe extractive industries and society Vol. 7; no. 1; pp. 127 - 137
Main Author Andersson, Patrik
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.01.2020
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Online AccessGet full text
ISSN2214-790X
DOI10.1016/j.exis.2020.01.008

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Summary:•Chinese experts categorize minerals based on assessments of their “strategic-ness”.•Not all minerals deemed “strategic” in China are subject to supply risk.•“Strategic” minerals include minerals for which China controls global supply chains.•Categories of “strategic” minerals are subject to different policies and regulations.•“Advantageous” and “protected” minerals are the most heavily regulated in China. Most research assumes that China works strategically with raw materials, and assessments of raw material criticality are shaped in part by perceptions of China’s resource policies and strategies. Few, however, have studied the domestic debates and expert advice on raw material criticality that inform China’s resource strategies. Based on a study of Chinese-language policy documents and academic articles, as well as conversations with Chinese researchers, this article explores how various categories of “strategic” and “critical” raw materials are constructed, bargained, and changed in China. Influenced in part by international discussions of criticality, Chinese assessments of the “strategic-ness” of mineral raw materials have supported the development of a Chinese prioritization and categorization scheme for raw materials, including the establishment of China’s first official catalogue of 24 “strategic minerals” in 2016. Mineral categorization produced by Chinese experts and policymakers have an industrial and societal impact. Policies have been adopted to strengthen China’s domestic supply capacity of minerals defined as “strategic” and different sub-categories of “strategic minerals” are subject to different policies and degrees of regulation.
ISSN:2214-790X
DOI:10.1016/j.exis.2020.01.008