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Australia’s Lynas revamps deal to supply rare earths to Japan

By Thomson Reuters Mar 10, 2026 | 3:32 AM

March 10 (Reuters) – Australia’s Lynas Rare Earths has revamped its supply agreement with Japan Australia Rare Earths, securing a firm annual commitment for 5,000 ​tonnes of neodymium‑praseodymium, a key rare‑earth magnet ‌material.

Lynas, world’s largest rare earth producers outside China, will set aside 75% of its heavy rare earth oxide output for Japanese industry, with Japan Australia Rare Earths committing to buy half ‌of ​the firm’s total heavy rare earth ⁠production.

JARE, co-owned by state-run ⁠Japan Organisation for Metals and Energy Security and Sojitz Corp, had provided Lynas with A$200 million in 2023 to boost production of light and heavy ​rare earth materials.

CEO Amanda Lacaze said the deal will provide the Japanese industry with a “reliable supply” of ⁠rare earth products.

The deal keeps ⁠Lynas’ total supply capacity at up to ​7,200 tonnes per year through 2038, but locks in ​a $110 per kilogram floor price for the 5,000 tonne ‌annual commitment. If prices rise above $150 per kg, JARE gets 30% of the gain capped at $10 million per year.

“Sales above this minimum volume will be by ⁠mutual agreement and at no opportunity loss to Lynas,” the company said in a statement.

Rare earths, and the magnets made ⁠from them, are ‌embedded in small but critical amounts ⁠across devices from iPhones and washing machines ​to ‌F‑35 jets, and power everything from EVs ​to military ⁠systems.

The deal comes at a time when Washington has been pushing to secure critical minerals and reduce reliance on China, which produces around 90% of the world’s rare earth magnets.

(Reporting by Kumar Tanishk in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Mrigank Dhaniwala)