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Japan seeks solutions for rare earth curb

Panasonic boosts Sanyo, subsidiary holdings
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 7, 2010 - Panasonic said Thursday it had completed tender offers to raise its holdings in subsidiaries Sanyo and Panasonic Electric Works to more than 80 percent as it looks to more fully embrace green energy. The Japanese electronics giant will seek to further raise its stakes in the two units to 100 percent, it said. Panasonic now aims to shift its focus from home electronics -- which faces increasing competition and shrinking margins -- to the fast-growing and lucrative renewable energy and energy conservation business. In December it secured a controlling stake in its smaller rival Sanyo, in a deal that revamped Japan's troubled electronics industry.

By doing so, Panasonic gained access to Sanyo's coveted environmental technologies such as rechargeable batteries -- seen as a promising sector given growing concerns about global warming. Subsidiary Panasonic Electric Works makes lighting equipment, sensors and other key components for energy efficient homes and offices. Its stake in Sanyo is now at 81 percent and 84 percent in Panasonic Electric Works. The company also decided against a plan to issue around 500 billion yen in new shares initially planned to fund the stake-building. In July Panasonic announced an 818.4 billion yen (9.88 billion dollar) plan to buy up the remaining shares of both companies.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (UPI) Oct 7, 2010
Japan aims to curb its reliance on China for rare earth minerals particularly after China abruptly halted mineral shipments to Japan in recent weeks due to a diplomatic dispute between the countries.

Rare earth elements are indispensable to a range of green energy and high-tech components such as wind turbines, low-energy light bulbs, batteries for hybrid and electric cars, lasers, fiber-optic cables, cell phones and flat-screen monitors.

China, which produces 97 percent of the world's supply of rare earth elements, slashed its export quotas by 72 percent for the second half of this year, even before the Japanese coast guard arrested a Chinese trawler captain in disputed waters between the two countries.

While Japan consumes more rare earths than any other country, it has no deposits of its own.

"Japanese companies have become painfully aware of the risks of relying so greatly on China for strategic metals," said Akio Shibata, chief representative at the Marubeni Research Institute in Tokyo, The New York Times reports.

Last week Japanese Trade Minister Akihiro Ohata said the government was considering starting a stockpile of rare earths in case of future trade interruptions. Experts say that some manufacturers that rely on the elements have begun accumulating inventories enough to last for a few months or up to a year.

Japan is also seeking sources other than China for rare earths: Japanese trading company Sojitz, for example, is negotiating the rights to a Vietnamese rare earth mine, and industrial conglomerate Sumitomo intends to work with the Kazakhstan government to salvage rare earth elements from uranium ore residues.

Japan is seeking to develop its own alternatives to rare earths.

Japan's New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization announced last week that it had developed a hybrid vehicle motor that doesn't need rare earth metals, Japan's Nikkei News reports.

And Hitachi Metals is working on a magnet that uses copper alloys, thus reducing the need for rare earths. The company is also trying to extract rare earths from magnets in old computer hard drives.

China, for its part, maintains that its controls reflect a long-term strategy aimed at sustainability.

"What we pursue is to satisfy not only the domestic demand but also the global demand of rare earths. We should not only stand from the present, but should also look forward to the future," Premier Wen Jiabao said Wednesday at the sixth China-EU Business Summit in Brussels, Xinhua reports.



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