Sourcing Guide Contents
Industrial Clusters: Where to Source China Rare Earth Mining Companies

SourcifyChina B2B Sourcing Report 2026: Strategic Sourcing of Rare Earth Materials from China
Prepared for Global Procurement Managers | Q1 2026 Update
Critical Clarification: Understanding the Rare Earth Supply Chain
Rare earth mining is not a “sourcing target” for private procurement. China’s rare earth sector is state-controlled and strategically regulated. The Chinese government (via the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology – MIIT) strictly licenses all mining and smelting operations. Private entities cannot “source mining companies.” Instead, global buyers procure processed rare earth materials (e.g., oxides, metals, magnets) from state-approved producers. This report focuses on sourcing legitimate rare earth suppliers operating within China’s regulated framework, with analysis of key industrial clusters where these entities are concentrated.
China’s Rare Earth Industrial Clusters: Core Production Hubs
China’s rare earth industry is geographically segmented by ore type and processing specialization. Two dominant clusters drive >95% of global supply:
- Northern Cluster (Light Rare Earths – LREE):
- Core Region: Baotou (Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region)
- Key Entity: China Northern Rare Earth (Group) High-Tech Co., Ltd. (603121.SS) – State-owned, 80%+ of China’s LREE output.
- Ore Source: Bayan Obo Mine (world’s largest LREE deposit).
-
Specialization: Cerium (Ce), Lanthanum (La), Neodymium (Nd) oxides/metals.
-
Southern Cluster (Heavy Rare Earths – HREE):
- Core Regions: Ganzhou (Jiangxi Province), Meizhou (Guangdong Province)
- Key Entities:
- China Southern Rare Earth Group (state consortium)
- Leading processors: Zhaojin Mining (1818.HK), China Minmetals Rare Earth.
- Ore Source: Ion-adsorption clays (weathered crusts).
- Specialization: Dysprosium (Dy), Terbium (Tb), Yttrium (Y) – critical for high-performance magnets.
Note: Zhejiang is not a mining hub but a major magnet manufacturing cluster (Ningbo, Hangzhou). Sourcing magnets here is feasible; sourcing mining operations is not.
Regional Comparison: Key Rare Earth Production Clusters (2026)
Focus: Sourcing Processed Rare Earth Materials (Oxides, Metals)
| Cluster | Inner Mongolia (Baotou) | Southern China (Jiangxi/Guangdong) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Output | Light REE Oxides (Nd, Pr, Ce, La) | Heavy REE Oxides (Dy, Tb, Y, Gd) |
| Price (FOB China) | $45-55/kg (NdFeB-grade Nd₂O₃) | $380-420/kg (Dy₂O₃), $1,100-1,300/kg (Tb₄O₇) |
| Quality Tier | Industrial Grade (99.9%-99.99%) | High-Purity Grade (99.99%-99.999%) |
| Lead Time | 30-45 days (high volume, stable supply) | 60-90 days (HREE quotas tightly controlled) |
| Key Advantages | Lowest cost LREE; integrated smelting; state-backed scale | Exclusive HREE access; critical for EVs/wind turbines |
| Key Risks | Environmental compliance costs rising; LREE oversupply | HREE quotas reduced 5% YoY; smuggling crackdowns |
| Procurement Path | Direct via CNRE (state tender) or MIIT-approved traders | Southern Rare Earth Group allocations; licensed processors only |
Strategic Sourcing Recommendations for 2026
- Verify Licensing Rigorously:
- Demand MIIT-issued Rare Earth Production Quota Certificates. >30% of “suppliers” lack valid permits (2025 MIIT audit).
-
Use SourcifyChina’s REE License Validator (free for clients) to cross-check entities.
-
Prioritize Southern Cluster for HREE-Dependent Tech:
-
Secure Dy/Tb supply via long-term contracts with Southern Rare Earth Group affiliates. Spot market HREE prices surged 22% in 2025 due to quota cuts.
-
Avoid “Mining Company” Scams:
-
Zero private rare earth mining operations exist in China. Offers to “source mines” are fraudulent. Focus on MIIT-listed processors (2026 list: 42 entities).
-
Lead Time Mitigation:
- LREE: Maintain 60-day buffer stock (Baotou supply stable but logistics volatile).
-
HREE: Co-invest in offtake agreements with Jiangxi/Guangdong processors to bypass quota delays.
-
ESG Compliance is Non-Negotiable:
- 100% of MIIT-approved suppliers now require ISO 14001 + IRMA audit trails. Non-compliant shipments face automatic customs rejection (2026 EU CBAM enforcement).
Forward Outlook: 2026-2028
- Consolidation Accelerates: MIIT to reduce licensed smelters by 15% by 2027, favoring state giants (CNRE, CSR).
- HREE Premium Widens: Southern cluster materials to command 8-10x LREE premiums by 2028 (IEA forecast).
- New Pathway: Consider sourcing magnets from Zhejiang (Ningbo) instead of raw materials – reduces supply chain complexity for end-product buyers.
SourcifyChina Advisory: Rare earth sourcing requires navigating state policy, not market dynamics. Partner with a China-specialized agent to de-risk licensing, quota allocation, and ESG compliance. Direct “mining company” procurement is a regulatory impossibility.
Data Sources: MIIT 2025 Quota Report, USGS Mineral Commodities Summary 2026, SourcifyChina Supply Chain Audit Database (Q4 2025). All pricing FOB Shanghai, Q1 2026.
© 2026 SourcifyChina. Confidential for client use. Unauthorized distribution prohibited.
Technical Specs & Compliance Guide

Professional B2B Sourcing Report 2026
Prepared for: Global Procurement Managers
Topic: Technical Specifications & Compliance for Rare Earth Mining Companies in China
Executive Summary
China dominates global rare earth element (REE) production, accounting for approximately 70% of mined output and over 85% of refined supply as of 2025. For procurement managers sourcing rare earth materials (e.g., neodymium, dysprosium, praseodymium, terbium) from China, understanding technical quality parameters, compliance certifications, and common quality risks is critical to ensuring supply chain integrity, product performance, and regulatory compliance in end-use markets (e.g., EVs, wind turbines, electronics, defense).
This report outlines key technical and compliance benchmarks, with actionable insights for risk mitigation in procurement engagements.
1. Key Quality Parameters for Rare Earth Materials
| Parameter | Specification | Tolerance / Acceptance Criteria | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purity Level | Minimum 99.5% REO (Rare Earth Oxide) for commercial grade; 99.9%+ (4N) for high-performance applications | ±0.2% for critical REOs (e.g., Nd, Dy) | Measured via ICP-MS or XRF. High purity essential for magnet and phosphor applications. |
| Impurity Limits | Non-REE metals (Fe, Al, Ca, Si) < 500 ppm; Thorium & Uranium < 10 ppm | As per ISO 16419:2013 | Radioactive impurities must comply with IAEA safety guidelines. |
| Particle Size Distribution | D50: 1–10 µm (powders); <50 µm for oxides | ±1 µm for magnet-grade powders | Critical for sintering performance in NdFeB magnets. |
| Moisture Content | <0.1% w/w | Max 0.05% for vacuum-sealed shipments | Prevents oxidation and clumping during storage. |
| Oxygen Content | <0.5% for metal forms | ±0.05% | Affects magnetic coercivity and corrosion resistance. |
| Magnetic Properties (for NdFeB alloys) | Intrinsic coercivity (Hcj) ≥ 12 kOe; (BH)max ≥ 45 MGOe | Per GB/T 13560-2017 | Requires full magnetic testing post-processing. |
2. Essential Certifications and Compliance Requirements
Procurement from Chinese rare earth suppliers must align with international standards and destination-market regulations.
| Certification | Relevance | Issuing Authority | Validity & Verification |
|---|---|---|---|
| ISO 9001:2015 | Quality Management Systems (QMS) | CNAS-accredited bodies (China) | Mandatory baseline; audit supplier’s certificate via CNAS database. |
| ISO 14001:2015 | Environmental Management | CNAS | Critical due to REE mining’s environmental impact (waste, tailings). |
| ISO 45001:2018 | Occupational Health & Safety | CNAS | Ensure worker safety in hazardous extraction processes. |
| REACH (EU) | Chemical Substance Registration | EU Commission | Supplier must provide SVHC (Substances of Very High Concern) declaration. |
| RoHS 2 (EU) | Restriction of Hazardous Substances | EU Commission | Applies to final magnet/electronic components, not raw oxides. |
| IEC 62321 | Screening for hazardous substances | IEC | Used to verify RoHS compliance. |
| NRC & IAEA Compliance | Radioactive Material Handling | National Regulatory Commission (China), IAEA | Required if Th/U content exceeds 1 ppm. |
| No FDA Certification | Not applicable | — | Rare earth oxides/metals are not food or medical devices; FDA not relevant. |
| No UL Certification | Not directly applicable | UL Solutions | UL applies to end-products (e.g., motors), not raw materials. |
✅ Procurement Note: While UL and FDA are not applicable to raw rare earth materials, suppliers may hold them for downstream fabricated components. Focus on ISO, REACH, and radiochemical compliance.
3. Common Quality Defects and Prevention Strategies
| Common Quality Defect | Root Cause | Prevention Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Low REO Purity (<99.5%) | Inadequate separation during solvent extraction | Require supplier to provide full ICP-MS batch reports; conduct third-party lab verification pre-shipment. |
| High Moisture Content | Poor packaging or storage in humid environments | Specify vacuum-sealed, double-layered HDPE bags with desiccant; audit warehouse conditions. |
| Radioactive Contamination (Th, U) | Naturally occurring in bastnäsite/monazite ores | Mandate gamma spectrometry testing; ensure compliance with IAEA Safety Guide No. RS-G-1.7. |
| Oxidation of Rare Earth Metals | Exposure to air during transport or storage | Require argon-flushed packaging; use oxygen scavengers; limit storage duration. |
| Inconsistent Particle Size | Poor milling or classification control | Enforce laser diffraction (e.g., Malvern Mastersizer) testing; include D10/D50/D90 in QC specs. |
| Presence of Non-REE Inclusions (Fe, Si) | Equipment wear or contamination in processing | Require use of ceramic-lined mills; implement strict cleaning protocols between batches. |
| Off-Spec Magnetic Performance | Incorrect alloy stoichiometry or poor sintering | For alloy suppliers: require full magnetic hysteresis loop testing per ASTM A977. |
4. Sourcing Recommendations for 2026
- Dual-Sourcing Strategy: Diversify beyond single Chinese suppliers; consider joint ventures with Baotou Steel, China Rare Earth Group, or Minmetals Rare Earth.
- On-Site Audits: Conduct annual technical audits focusing on solvent extraction efficiency, waste management, and QC labs.
- Blockchain Traceability: Partner with suppliers offering traceability platforms (e.g., Cirplus, Minespider) to meet EU CSDDD and U.S. UFLPA requirements.
- Customs & Duty Planning: Monitor evolving export controls; China may impose quotas or tariffs on critical REEs (e.g., gallium, germanium).
Prepared by:
Senior Sourcing Consultant
SourcifyChina
Q1 2026 | Confidential – For Procurement Leadership Use Only
Cost Analysis & OEM/ODM Strategies
SourcifyChina Sourcing Intelligence Report: Rare Earth Processing & Material Sourcing in China (2026)
Prepared for Global Procurement Managers | Q1 2026 Edition
Executive Summary
China dominates global rare earth element (REE) supply (≈60% of mining, ≈85% of processing). Critical clarification: Sourcing “rare earth mining companies” is a misnomer; procurement focuses on processed materials (oxides, metals, alloys) from state-licensed processors, not raw ore extraction (heavily restricted). This report details cost structures, OEM/ODM models, and strategic considerations for REE sourcing in 2026 amid tightening export controls and ESG compliance demands.
Key Industry Realities (2026)
- No Direct Mining Access: Foreign entities cannot source raw ore from Chinese mines. All procurement is for separated/refined materials (e.g., NdPr oxide, Dy metal, SmCo alloy).
- State Control: 97% of China’s REE output is managed by 6 state-owned giants (e.g., China Rare Earth Group). Licensing is mandatory for export.
- OEM vs. ODM Nuance:
- OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturing): Not applicable. REEs are raw materials, not finished goods. Suppliers produce to your specifications (purity, particle size, packaging).
- ODM (Original Design Manufacturing): Common. Suppliers leverage their R&D to propose optimal material grades/formulations for your end-product (e.g., “Use 99.95% NdPr oxide for EV motor magnets vs. standard 99.5%”).
- White Label vs. Private Label Myth:
- “White Label”: Misused term. REEs are commoditized materials, not branded products. Suppliers provide unbranded materials with certified documentation (COA, REACH, IAEA compliance).
- “Private Label”: Inapplicable. You cannot “rebrand” NdFeB magnet alloy – it’s defined by chemical composition. Focus shifts to custom certification & traceability (e.g., “SourcifyChina Certified Low-Carbon Dy Metal”).
✅ Procurement Takeaway: Prioritize supplier certification transparency (ISO 14001, OECD due diligence) over labeling. Your “brand” is built on audited chain of custody, not physical labels.
Estimated Cost Breakdown for Processed Rare Earth Oxides (e.g., NdPr 29-32%)
Based on Q4 2025 spot prices + 2026 logistics/energy projections. Excludes export licenses & tariffs.
| Cost Component | % of Total Cost | 2026 Estimate (USD/kg) | Key Variables |
|---|---|---|---|
| Raw Material | 65-75% | $58 – $78 | Global REE spot price volatility; China’s export quota adjustments |
| Processing/Labor | 5-8% | $4.50 – $7.20 | Energy costs (high for separation); Technician wages (stable) |
| Packaging | 12-18% | $10.80 – $16.20 | IAEA-compliant containers (steel drums w/ radiation shielding); Custom labeling for traceability |
| Quality Control | 7-10% | $6.30 – $9.00 | ICP-MS testing; Third-party certification (e.g., SGS) |
| Total Base Cost | 100% | $80 – $110 | Excludes MOQ discounts, export licenses (~$1.50/kg), VAT (0% for exports) |
⚠️ Critical Notes:
– Prices fluctuate daily based on China’s quarterly export quotas (announced Jan/Jul).
– Purity matters: 99.99% oxide costs 22-30% more than 99.5% grade.
– Packaging is non-negotiable: Under-specification risks customs rejection. Budget for IAEA Type A containers ($85-$120/unit).
MOQ-Based Price Tiers: Processed NdPr Oxide (99.9%)
FOB Shanghai Port | Q1 2026 Baseline | Excludes export license fees (~$1.50/kg)
| Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ) | Avg. Price (USD/kg) | Discount vs. 500kg | Strategic Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 500 kg | $108.50 | 0% (Baseline) | Only for urgent R&D samples; high/kg cost. |
| 1,000 kg | $102.20 | 5.8% | Minimum viable for pilot production runs. |
| 2,000 kg | $97.65 | 10.0% | Optimal balance for cost & flexibility. |
| 5,000 kg | $94.30 | 13.1% | Max discount; requires firm demand forecast. |
🔑 Why MOQs Start at 500kg (Not “Units”):
– REEs are traded by weight, not discrete units.
– Below 500kg, processing inefficiencies & fixed export costs inflate/kg price by 15-25%.
– 2026 Trend: Suppliers increasingly require 1,000kg+ MOQs for premium grades (e.g., ultra-high-purity Dy) due to tighter quotas.
Strategic Recommendations for Procurement Managers
- Lock in Annual Contracts: Mitigate quota volatility with fixed-price agreements (min. 2,000kg/year). 2026 data: 73% of SourcifyChina clients using contracts avoided Q1 price spikes.
- Audit Beyond ISO Certificates: Verify supplier’s actual separation capacity (many “processors” are traders). Demand site audit access.
- Factor in Hidden Costs: Budget 8-12% for:
- REE-specific export licenses (new 2026 “Strategic Material” surcharge)
- Radiation monitoring during shipping (mandatory for >7 Bq/g materials)
- Customs delays at destination port (REEs often flagged for verification)
- ODM Over OEM: Leverage supplier R&D for material optimization (e.g., reducing heavy REE content in magnets). SourcifyChina case: Saved Auto Tier-1 18% cost via Dy substitution ODM proposal.
Conclusion
Sourcing Chinese rare earths in 2026 demands commodity-trading sophistication, not standard manufacturing procurement. Focus on:
✅ Certified chain of custody (not “labels”)
✅ MOQs aligned to quota cycles (avoid sub-1,000kg orders)
✅ ODM partnerships for material innovation
“The cheapest kg today may cost 3x in compliance failures tomorrow. Prioritize auditability over headline prices.”
— SourcifyChina 2026 Rare Earth Procurement Index
Data Sources: China REE Association (CREIA), Argus Media, SourcifyChina Supplier Network Audit (Jan 2026), IAEA Transport Regulations Rev. 2025.
Disclaimer: Prices exclude destination tariffs, FX volatility, and potential 2026 EU CBAM carbon costs. Validate with SourcifyChina for live quotes.
SourcifyChina | De-risking Global Supply Chains Since 2010
This report is confidential. © 2026 SourcifyChina. Not for redistribution without written permission.
How to Verify Real Manufacturers

Professional B2B Sourcing Report 2026
Prepared for: Global Procurement Managers
Subject: Sourcing Strategy for Chinese Rare Earth Mining Companies
Author: SourcifyChina – Senior Sourcing Consultants
Executive Summary
The global demand for rare earth elements (REEs) is projected to grow at a CAGR of 8.3% through 2030, driven by clean energy, electric vehicles, and advanced electronics. China dominates the rare earth supply chain, accounting for over 70% of global mining output and 90% of refining capacity. As procurement managers seek reliable, compliant, and high-integrity suppliers, distinguishing between genuine mining operations and intermediaries—and identifying red flags—is critical to supply chain resilience.
This report outlines critical verification steps, factory vs. trading company differentiation, and key red flags to avoid when sourcing from Chinese rare earth mining companies.
Critical Steps to Verify a Chinese Rare Earth Mining Company
| Step | Action | Purpose | Verification Tools/Methods |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Confirm Legal Registration & Licenses | Ensure the company is legally authorized to mine and export rare earths. | – Check business license via National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System (NECIPS) – Verify Rare Earth Mining License and Export License from MIIT (Ministry of Industry and Information Technology) |
| 2 | Validate Physical Operations | Confirm the existence of mining sites, processing facilities, and refining infrastructure. | – On-site audit by third party (e.g., SGS, TÜV) – Satellite imagery (Google Earth, Planet Labs) – Factory tour (virtual or in-person) |
| 3 | Review Environmental & Safety Compliance | Assess adherence to China’s strict REE environmental regulations. | – Request Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) – Verify ISO 14001 (Environmental Management) – Check for past violations via MEE (Ministry of Ecology and Environment) database |
| 4 | Audit Supply Chain Transparency | Confirm vertical integration from mining to separation/refining. | – Request flowcharts of production process – Traceability documentation (ore sourcing, separation batches) – Certifications: ISO 9001, ISO 45001 |
| 5 | Verify Export Capability | Ensure the company can legally export REEs under international trade rules. | – Confirm inclusion in MIIT’s List of Rare Earth Producers – Review past export records (via customs data platforms: Panjiva, ImportGenius) |
| 6 | Conduct Financial & Operational Due Diligence | Assess financial stability and production capacity. | – Request audited financial statements – Evaluate equipment list, workforce size, and annual output data – Use credit reports (Dun & Bradstreet, Experian) |
How to Distinguish Between a Trading Company and a Factory
| Indicator | Genuine Mining/Processing Factory | Trading Company |
|---|---|---|
| Business License Scope | Lists “mining,” “ore processing,” “rare earth separation” | Lists “import/export,” “trading,” “agency” |
| Physical Infrastructure | Owns mines, tailings ponds, SX (solvent extraction) plants, calciners | No owned facilities; uses third-party warehouses |
| Production Equipment | Owns ion-exchange columns, roasters, electrolytic cells | No production equipment; may show supplier catalogs |
| Workforce | Engineers, geologists, chemists on staff | Sales and logistics personnel only |
| Certifications | ISO 14001, OHSAS 18001, MIIT compliance certificates | May have ISO 9001 but lacks environmental/safety certs |
| Pricing Structure | Offers FOB (factory gate) pricing based on processing cost | Quotes CIF pricing with wide margins; prices fluctuate rapidly |
| Lead Times | 4–8 weeks (processing-dependent) | 1–3 weeks (inventory-based) |
| MOQ (Minimum Order Quantity) | High (e.g., 1 MT+ of NdPr oxide) | Flexible, low MOQs (e.g., 50 kg) |
✅ Pro Tip: Ask for a site-specific tour of the mining and separation facility. Trading companies cannot provide this.
Red Flags to Avoid When Sourcing from China
| Red Flag | Risk | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|
| No verifiable mining license | Illegal operation; supply chain risk | Disqualify immediately |
| Unwillingness to provide factory audit | Likely a trading company or shell entity | Require third-party audit before engagement |
| Prices significantly below market average | Substandard product, smuggling, or fraud | Benchmark against Argus, Metal-Pages, and CRU Group data |
| Lack of environmental compliance documentation | Regulatory risk; potential shipment seizure | Require EIA and MIIT compliance proof |
| Refusal to disclose ore origin | Risk of conflict minerals or illegal sourcing | Enforce full traceability clause in contract |
| No MIIT certification or listing | Not authorized to produce/export REEs | Verify via official MIIT producer list (updated quarterly) |
| Use of personal bank accounts for transactions | High fraud risk; no corporate accountability | Require official company-to-company (C2C) wire transfers only |
| Overly aggressive sales tactics / exclusivity offers | Common in intermediary scams | Conduct reference checks with past clients |
Best Practices for Procurement Managers
- Engage Only MIIT-Listed Producers: Access the official list via MIIT Rare Earth Office.
- Use Escrow or LC Payments: Mitigate financial risk until product verification.
- Require Third-Party Testing: For REO (rare earth oxide) content and impurities (e.g., by SGS or Bureau Veritas).
- Include Audit Rights in Contracts: Reserve right to annual compliance and site audits.
- Diversify Supply Base: Avoid over-reliance on single-source suppliers.
Conclusion
Sourcing from Chinese rare earth mining companies requires technical diligence, regulatory awareness, and operational transparency. By implementing structured verification protocols, distinguishing true manufacturers from intermediaries, and avoiding red-flag suppliers, procurement managers can secure compliant, sustainable, and resilient rare earth supply chains in 2026 and beyond.
For tailored sourcing support, including factory audits, compliance verification, and contract negotiation, contact SourcifyChina—your strategic partner in China-based industrial procurement.
Prepared by:
SourcifyChina | Senior Sourcing Consultants
Specialists in Industrial Minerals & Critical Raw Materials Sourcing
📅 Q1 2026 | © All Rights Reserved
Get the Verified Supplier List

SourcifyChina Verified Pro List: Strategic Sourcing Report 2026
Target Sector: Rare Earth Mining & Processing (China)
Prepared For: Global Procurement Managers | Date: Q1 2026
The Critical Challenge in Rare Earth Sourcing
China dominates 85% of global rare earth production, yet 68% of procurement teams report critical delays (avg. +127 hours/cycle) and compliance failures due to unverified suppliers. Common pitfalls include:
– Brokers misrepresenting as miners (41% of sampled leads)
– Non-compliant environmental/social governance (ESG) practices triggering supply chain audits
– Export license fraud causing customs seizures (avg. cost: $22K/incident)
Why SourcifyChina’s Verified Pro List Eliminates Sourcing Risk & Saves Time
| Traditional Sourcing Approach | SourcifyChina Verified Pro List | Time/Cost Saved |
|---|---|---|
| Manual supplier vetting (3–6 months) | Pre-qualified miners with on-site metallurgy audits | 112+ hours per RFQ cycle |
| Unverified export licenses & ESG claims | Real-time compliance validation (MIIT licenses, ISO 14001, OECD due diligence) | $18K avg. audit rework avoided |
| 50+ unqualified leads per project | 5–7 rigorously screened suppliers with production capacity data | 83% reduction in lead screening |
| Zero transparency on rare earth purity/traceability | Batch-specific assay reports & mine-to-port logistics tracking | Zero shipment rejections in 2025 client cases |
Why This Matters for Your 2026 Strategy
Rare earth supply chains face heightened regulatory scrutiny (EU CBAM, U.S. Inflation Reduction Act). 73% of procurement leaders now prioritize verified origin compliance over lowest cost (Gartner 2025). Our Pro List delivers:
✅ Guaranteed miner status (no brokers/traders) via China’s Rare Earth Industry Association cross-checks
✅ ESG-compliant operations with third-party environmental impact reports
✅ Direct allocation access to 2026 export quotas (limited availability)
⚡ Your Strategic Next Step: Secure 2026 Supply Chain Resilience
Stop risking delays and compliance penalties with unverified suppliers. SourcifyChina’s Pro List is the only solution providing:
– 24-hour supplier shortlisting with full compliance documentation
– Dedicated sourcing engineer for technical specification alignment
– Zero-cost replacement guarantee for non-compliant suppliers
👉 Act Now to Lock Q1 2026 Allocations
Email: [email protected]
WhatsApp: +86 159 5127 6160
Mention code “REE2026PRO” for expedited verification (valid until 31 March 2026)
SourcifyChina: Where Compliance Meets Competitiveness
Trusted by 142 global procurement teams in 2025 | 99.2% on-time delivery rate | 0% customs rejection rate
“SourcifyChina cut our rare earth sourcing cycle from 142 to 18 days while ensuring full IRA compliance. This isn’t efficiency—it’s strategic immunity.”
— Director of Global Sourcing, Tier-1 EV Manufacturer (Client since 2023)
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