Data InsightsBrazil, India, Vietnam, and Russia hold large reserves of rare earth, but mine very little of them

Brazil, India, Vietnam, and Russia hold large reserves of rare earth, but mine very little of them

Side-by-side horizontal bar chart of national shares of global rare earths production and known reserves in 2024, where each country’s production share and reserves share are compared. It shows China dominating both production and reserves (about 69% production and 49% reserves). The United States and Myanmar have notable production shares (about 11.5% and 8% respectively) despite much smaller reserves. Brazil, India, Vietnam, and Russia hold large reserves, but mine very little of them (their production shares are all below 1%).

Some technologies central to the clean energy transition depend on rare earth elements. The permanent magnets found in many electric vehicle motors and wind turbine generators rely on them. They are also used in some military hardware.

China dominates global production of rare earths; in 2024, it accounted for nearly 70% of the global total.

But the picture is not as concentrated when you examine which countries have rare-earth reserves. That is what the chart shows, plotting production and reserve shares side by side. China still holds the most known reserves, but at 49%, this is substantially lower than its production share.

Brazil holds 23% of reserves and is barely mining them. India, Vietnam, and Russia also hold significant reserves, but only a small fraction of current output.

The large gap between where reserves are located and where mining occurs partly reflects China's early investment in mining infrastructure and processing capacity, which other producers have not yet matched. Other countries hold the geological potential but have not yet developed the infrastructure to convert it into production at scale.

Read more about which countries have the critical minerals needed for the energy transition

Our latest Data Insights

See all Data Insights