mineral · input

Dysprosium (Dy) Metal

Heavy rare earth added (1-6 wt%) to NdFeB magnets to maintain coercivity at high temperatures; critical for EV motors; sourced almost exclusively from ionic clay deposits in Jiangxi/Guangdong China

4

Source countries

5

Companies

1

Goods affected

0

Claims on record

What depends on it

Goods that need this input

1 essential American goods rely on dysprosium (dy) metal somewhere upstream in their supply chain.

Where it comes from

Source countries

Share of global supply, by country.

CountryShare of supply
CNChina90%
MMMyanmar5%
AUAustralia3%
USUnited States1%

Who makes it

Supplier companies

5 companies produce dysprosium (dy) metal.

China Southern Rare Earth Group

HQ CN55% share

State-controlled enterprise dominating heavy rare earth production from ionic clay deposits in southern China (Jiangxi, Guangdong, Fujian). Principal supplier of dysprosium and terbium globally. Formed 2011 by consolidation of six regional rare earth companies under SASAC mandate.

China Minmetals Rare Earth Co.

HQ CN18% share

State-owned rare earth conglomerate (~18% global lanthanum oxide market share); consolidated under China Minmetals Corp via SASAC-directed mergers with Chinalco (2021), Xiamen Tungsten (2023), and Guangdong Rare Earths Group (2024). In April-May 2025, SASAC centralized China's national rare earth minerals strategy under China Minmetals with 'full-chain control' enforcement — export licensing, SOE discipline, data traceability — representing a significant consolidation of state control over rare earth exports.

Shenghe Resources Holding Co., Ltd.

HQ CN8% share

Chinese rare earth company; significant minority investor in MP Materials (Mountain Pass CA) and off-take agreement holder for Mountain Pass concentrate — giving a Chinese state-linked company commercial involvement in the only US rare earth mine. This relationship has drawn US national security scrutiny. Shenghe processes the Mountain Pass concentrate in China and sells back NdPr oxide. Also has separate mining interests in Africa (Sierra Leone, Guinea) and operations in Australia.

Lynas Rare Earths Ltd.

HQ AU5% share

Australian rare earth mining and processing company (ASX: LYC, HQ Kuala Lumpur/Perth); world's largest rare earth producer outside China. Mines at Mount Weld, Western Australia (one of the world's highest-grade rare earth deposits) and processes at LAMP (Lynas Advanced Materials Plant) in Kuantan, Malaysia. Produces separated rare earth oxides including lanthanum oxide, LREE carbonate, neodymium-praseodymium oxide. Lanthanum from Lynas is a byproduct of Nd/Pr production — lanthanum has limited premium uses and Lynas has at times struggled to find buyers for its lanthanum output. Lynas is also building a heavy rare earth processing facility in Kalgoorlie, Australia and an NdPr separation facility in Seadrift, Texas (DoD-funded) to establish non-China rare earth processing.

MP Materials Corp.(MP)

HQ US1% share

Operator of Mountain Pass, California — the only US rare earth mine and the largest rare earth mine outside of China. Produces rare earth concentrate (bastnasite ore) with ~15% of global rare earth ore production. As of 2024, still shipping concentrate to China (Shenghe Resources, a major MP investor) for separation into NdPr oxide. On-site solvent extraction (SX) separation plant being commissioned at Mountain Pass to enable US-based separation. MP Materials also building a rare earth magnet manufacturing facility in Fort Worth, Texas. Mountain Pass was the world's dominant rare earth mine until Chinese competition drove Molycorp (predecessor) bankrupt in 2015.