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What are 'rare earths' for? Paris, Dec 3 (AFP) Dec 03, 2025 Crucial for making smartphones, fighter jets and electric cars, "rare earth" metals have become a strategic bargaining chip since main producer China this year introduced restrictions on their exports. As the EU unveils a plan on Wednesday for boosting European production of critical raw materials to reduce reliance on China, here are some facts about these 17 elements and their key uses:
Four elements account for most of the sector's economic value: neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium and terbium.
Use of the rare elements maximises magnets' performance while reducing size and weight, said Damien Ambroise, energy manager at French consultancy Bartle. A single offshore wind turbine contains up to one tonne of such magnetic rare earths.
According to the US specialist newsletter Rare Earth Exchanges, US aerospace firm Lockheed Martin is the biggest American user of samarium, employed to make magnets that can withstand extremely high temperatures. Each F-35 fighter jet requires more than 400 kilograms of rare earths, according to a report by the US Congressional Research Service. Scandium is used to make light, strong aluminium-based alloys prized in aerospace -- and also in high-end sports gear such as golf clubs, bicycles and baseball bats.
Each handset contains about three grams of them -- more than 3,700 tonnes overall for the 1.24 billion devices sold worldwide in 2024.
They are also used in the manufacture of miniature motors, such as those that fold away a car's wing mirrors automatically when it is parked. Combustion-engine vehicles use rare earths too, notably in catalytic converters. Lanthanum and cerium help cut fine particle emissions.
Erbium is used in various medical fields, including dentistry, dermatology and ophthalmology. Erbium and neodymium are also important in making lasers for industrial engraving and cutting. Adding different rare earths alters the wavelength of the laser, and thus its use and colour, Ambroise said. "It makes for pretty colours in sound-and-light shows." |
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