Skip to player
Skip to main content
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
1
Bookmark
Share
More
Add to Playlist
Report
Brett Guthrie Asks Experts How China Uses 'Market Manipulation' To Stunt US Rare Earth Industry
Forbes Breaking News
Follow
4 months ago
During a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing prior to the congressional recess, Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-KY) spoke about China's use of market manipulation to make the United States more reliant on China for critical minerals.
Category
🗞
News
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
General Lady Yields, the chair now recognizes the chairman of the full committee, Mr. Guthrie,
00:06
for five minutes for his question.
00:07
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
00:08
Thank you for having this.
00:09
Sorry, I've been in the rules committee over in the Capitol building most of the night.
00:12
So I missed your testimony, so I apologize.
00:16
And first, I want to just bring up, I know I think everybody probably heard that our
00:20
dear colleague, Jerry Connolly, passed away.
00:23
And I mentioned to him in our full committee, he was one of my dear friends here, he and
00:26
his wife, Smitty.
00:28
And I told a story about where he brought her the wrong Valentine gift last time.
00:31
This one, he was studying to be a priest.
00:34
He was in the seminary, was right before vows, and she had been a nun, his wife.
00:39
And they met at a nonprofit thing later.
00:41
They both, she had left the, anyway, I was telling a, we were on a NATO committee, telling
00:45
a friend of ours in Europe, I said, well, Jerry was about to be a priest and he married a nun.
00:49
And he came to me, he goes, you make it sound like I was trolling the convent.
00:53
You better tell it, you better tell that like it really is.
00:55
I didn't think about that, the story of it.
00:57
But anyway, so gosh, what, what a man, what a wonderful person.
01:02
So I'm sorry, we're going to all lose, we've lost him.
01:06
Getting back to the end, thank you, Mr. Chairman, for doing this.
01:09
Critical minerals, as we know, we saw during the tariff issues when China was going to start
01:15
restricting that and the leverage they had.
01:17
And so, Ms. Hunter, how critical are, how, how are critical minerals, and particularly
01:23
rare earth elements, for the reliability for energy and also to being competitive with
01:28
China for AI, which is part energy as well?
01:31
You want to talk about that?
01:33
Thank you for the question, Chairman.
01:35
Rare earths are a really good example here of the importance across energy infrastructure,
01:40
ensuring American energy dominance, and then also supporting new growing technologies
01:44
like the AI revolution.
01:47
They get a lot of attention, rare earth elements, for their application in permanent magnets,
01:51
specifically used to propel wind turbines, also to use in electric motors for EVs, but
01:57
to their utilization across society is really outsized.
02:01
When we're putting in place these new AI data centers, they have to remain cool.
02:05
It is the rare earth magnets that actually keep the fans going in these data centers, so
02:10
critically important there as well.
02:11
Another good example, besides rare earths is copper and aluminum, for their conductivity,
02:16
they're used not only in transmission infrastructure, but also in these data centers to make sure they
02:21
can have that high level of computation.
02:24
Okay, thanks.
02:24
And so, Ms. Sweeney and, or Ms. Hunter, and also Ms. Sweeney, the issue right now is China.
02:31
Well, we need them anyway, but the issue right now is China.
02:34
And so, could you talk about, I'm certain Ms. Sweeney and Ms. Hunter could talk about it, too.
02:38
I think my question for you, what are the economic implications of not having our own supply, Ms. Hunter?
02:44
And then, Ms. Sweeney, if you'll talk first and talk about both of it is, my understanding is that China has
02:50
tried to kind of drum up opposition in the United States for us to develop our own critical minerals
02:55
and rare earth elements, not only mining, but processing as well.
03:01
I mean, how does China try to use more manipulation, any type of thing to prevent us or discourage us
03:09
from developing this industry, which makes us more dependent on them?
03:12
Can you give us some examples of that?
03:13
Yes.
03:14
A great example, I think, is the Gervois cobalt mine in Idaho.
03:22
They were just about to open.
03:25
They were fully permitted.
03:28
And China dropped the price of cobalt, manipulated the market,
03:35
dumped excess cobalt onto the market,
03:39
and Gervois had to choose between operating a loss or closing,
03:46
and they closed that facility.
03:50
But that's a prime target for trade action, is it?
03:54
It should be.
03:56
So, Ms. Hunter, what are the national security implications
04:01
if China keeps doing this and we don't have our own supply?
04:03
There are very clear national and economic security implications
04:07
if we don't find alternative supplies to China.
04:10
Again, rare earths is a great example.
04:13
With the most recent export controls that we've seen,
04:16
that have been somewhat de-escalated.
04:19
We heard, you know, it's covered all over the news
04:23
about how manufacturers who keep, you know, around 45 to 60 days of inventories
04:27
are lacking alternative sources of supply,
04:29
particularly for heavy rare earths that we have to get processing online for.
04:33
Last year, the USGS documented a lawsuit.
04:35
Thanks, I'm just about out of time.
04:37
But we have the biggest proponent of rare earth minerals chairing this committee
04:40
right now on critical minerals, Mr. Palmer.
04:42
And we're going to all turn him loose and ourselves loose.
04:46
What?
04:47
Turning ourselves loose and having a game plan to different things?
04:49
I know he has a game plan.
04:50
I'm trying to learn from him.
04:52
So what do you, anybody, I do start with you guys,
04:54
suggest what does Congress need to be doing?
04:57
What's the biggest impediment that Congress can help you solve
04:59
to get rare earth and critical mineral processing in our nation?
05:03
State side, start Ms. Hunter.
05:05
And go down.
05:06
Permitting reform and helping with the cost of disadvantages for U.S. processors.
05:11
Ms. Hunter, Ms. Weaney?
05:12
I'm sorry.
05:12
Ditto.
05:13
Mr. Hergert, you want to?
05:14
Capital being put at risk.
05:16
There's a 30% premium in the United States
05:17
spent on unnecessary permitting costs.
05:21
The IRA, all it did was offset half of that.
05:24
So if we sped up mining projects, we would see close to a trillion dollars
05:28
of foreign direct investment pour into the United States,
05:31
and you wouldn't need Keynesian-style federal money.
05:33
Now, I'm not going to tell my members that are going to slap me that they don't like the free money,
05:37
but at the end of the day, we need to change the way we think about it.
05:41
That's what Mr. Palmer says, a trillion dollars of it.
05:44
So you're saying he's right.
05:46
We have a narrow window where China is at the end of its useful life on what it built 20 years ago.
05:52
It can no longer meet the purity standards that are required for AI, semiconductors, cathodes, and the rest.
05:58
So we have about a two-, three-year window where we need to get out of our own way,
06:01
and we might be able to catch up a little bit to China.
06:03
I'm not going to get to the other two of you, but I will say that the time to act is now,
06:07
and so it's time for us to put some action into this.
06:09
Thank you very much.
06:10
Appreciate it.
06:11
Thanks, gentlemen.
06:12
The chair now reckoned.
Be the first to comment
Add your comment
Recommended
5:06
|
Up next
Scott Perry Asks Expert How Chinese Manufacturing Reliance Will Affect US War-Fighting Capabilities
Forbes Breaking News
5 months ago
6:15
'China Has Us': Jared Moskowitz Slams U.S. Dependency On Chinese Goods
Forbes Breaking News
3 months ago
6:26
'We Can't Sit Back': Joe Manchin Warns Ryan MacKenzie That China's Mineral Dominance Will Continue
Forbes Breaking News
3 months ago
1:45
News outlets call last week's U.S.-China trade deal 'a win for China'
Arirang News
6 years ago
0:41
TikTok Shutdown Threat Heightens As U.S.-China Trade Talks Clash Over Tariffs And Tech Controls
Benzinga
2 weeks ago
5:38
James Moylan: Utilizing Mineral Deposits Outside Of Guam Would 'Greatly Enhance' National Security
Forbes Breaking News
3 months ago
5:02
Coronavirus backlash further fraying China’s ties to global economy
South China Morning Post
5 years ago
1:48
China halts new iron ore imports causes concern for Australia
ABC NEWS (Australia)
5 hours ago
0:35
Lawmakers Warn That Beijing Could Use Musk as a Backchannel to Washington
Benzinga
7 months ago
0:33
China calls on US to show 'mutual respect' after Trump trade deal comments
AFP English
7 months ago
4:46
Raja Krishnamoorthi Brings Props To Show How 'Dangerously Reliant On China' U.S. Is
Forbes Breaking News
2 months ago
5:10
'We Don't Have The Capacity': Joe Manchin Warns That U.S. Can't Produce Needed Minerals Domestically
Forbes Breaking News
3 months ago
5:04
'Is There A Real Cost Of Doing Nothing?' Cline Asks China Analyst About China's U.S. Patents
Forbes Breaking News
7 weeks ago
1:41
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent Asked: Are You Talking To China ‘Specifically About Tariffs, Or Not’?
Forbes Breaking News
5 months ago
6:22
Catherine Cortez Masto Asks Expert About Using 'Targeted' Tariffs On China To Bolster US' Critical Mineral Supply
Forbes Breaking News
5 months ago
3:17
U.S-China Trade Deal: Fragile Truce Or Lasting Trade Deal? | China Confirms Trade Deal With U.S
Oneindia
3 months ago
4:17
Witness Sounds Alarms On China’s Use Of TikTok To ‘Change The Social Narrative In Our Country’
Forbes Breaking News
4 months ago
5:22
'China Is Dramatically Ahead Of Us': Cliff Bentz Warns China Is Beating The U.S. In The AI Race
Forbes Breaking News
7 weeks ago
0:53
Karoline Leavitt Emphasizes Trump’s Confidence Ahead Of Trade Talks With China: ’They Need Our Consumer Base’
Forbes Breaking News
5 months ago
2:56
Chinese Residents, Business Owners React to Escalating U.S.-China Trade War
TaiwanPlus News
8 months ago
5:47
'The Theft And Destruction Is Real': Brad Knott Accuses China Of Stealing U.S. Intellectual Property
Forbes Breaking News
6 weeks ago
8:01
Ritchie Torres Warns That U.S. Is 'Dangerously Complacent' About China's Chokehold On Minerals
Forbes Breaking News
2 months ago
2:52
U.S-China Tariff War | China assess U.S’ offer for talks, warns against ‘extortion’
Oneindia
5 months ago
5:06
Clay Higgins Condemns Cheap, Foreign-Made Products Subsidized By ‘Communism,’ Child Labor
Forbes Breaking News
5 months ago
3:40
Young Kim: U.S. Needs 'Bold, Global' Strategy To Reduce Dependence On Chinese Minerals
Forbes Breaking News
3 months ago
Be the first to comment