As the race for green tech and clean energy heats up in 2026, China has called for global teamwork to stabilize critical mineral supply chains after the U.S. announced plans to host a high-stakes 'Critical Minerals Ministerial' meeting this year. 🌱🔋
Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian reiterated China's stance on Wednesday, emphasizing that "all parties must uphold market principles and international rules to keep supply chains resilient." The remarks come as nations scramble to secure lithium, cobalt, and rare earths vital for EVs, solar panels, and AI hardware.
💡 Why it matters: With 80% of the world's rare earth processing currently based in the Chinese mainland, this dialogue could shape everything from smartphone prices to climate goals. Lin stressed that "no single nation should monopolize the future of sustainable development"—a nod to growing tech rivalries.
What's next? Analysts predict the U.S. ministerial could spark new partnerships, but China's push for "open dialogue over bloc politics" hints at a delicate dance between competition and collaboration. Stay tuned as the mineral wars unfold! ⚖️🌐
Reference(s):
China responds to U.S. plan for a 'Critical Minerals Ministerial'
cgtn.com







