Japan condemns China’s dual-use export ban as rare earth curbs loom

Author: Sugiyama Satoshi, Komiya Kantaro

TOKYO, Jan 7 (Reuters) – Japan said on Wednesday China’s ban on its dual-use military exports was “absolutely unacceptable”, as a dispute between Asia’s two largest economies escalated and the threat of wider restrictions on vital rare earths loomed.

Dual-use items refer to goods, software or technology that have both civilian and military uses, including certain critical minerals necessary for manufacturing drones and chips.

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi sparked the dispute late last year when he said China’s attacks on democratically governed Taiwan could be seen as an existential threat to Japan. China considers Taiwan part of its territory, which Taiwan denies.

Beijing asked her to retract her remarks but she failed to do so, triggering a series of countermeasures, the latest of which was a ban on exports on Tuesday to military users or any purpose that would help bolster Japan’s military capabilities.

The Japanese government’s top spokesperson and Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara said: “Such measures that only target our country are very different from international practice, are absolutely unacceptable, and are deeply regrettable.”

At his daily news conference on Wednesday, he declined to comment on the impact this might have on Japanese industry, saying it was unclear exactly which projects would be targeted.

Japan’s Nikkei fell about 1% on Wednesday, bucking a trend that has seen U.S. and European benchmarks hit record highs.

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Shares of major military contractors Kawasaki Heavy Industries and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries were among the biggest decliners, down about 2%.

Will rare earths be restricted next?

China Daily, a newspaper owned by the ruling Communist Party of China, said on Tuesday that Beijing was considering further restrictions on rare earth exports to Japan, citing people familiar with the matter.

The move could have wide-ranging implications for the manufacturing powerhouse, including its key automotive industry.

Japan has sought to diversify its supply of rare earths since China last restricted rare earth exports in 2010, but it still relies on China for about 60% of its imports.

Analysts say Japan is almost entirely dependent on China for some heavy rare earths, such as those used in magnets for electric and hybrid car motors.

Japanese automaker Subaru said it was monitoring the situation closely, while peers such as Toyota and Nissan had no immediate comment.

Similar to the 2010 dispute, a three-month restriction on China’s rare earth exports could cost Japanese companies 660 billion yen ($4.2 billion) and reduce annual gross domestic product by 0.11%, Nomura Research Institute economist Takahide Kiuchi said in a report on Wednesday.

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