What are Rare Earths?

Rare earths, or rare earth elements (REEs), are a group of 17 metallic chemical elements that are essential to many modern technologies. Despite the name, they are not actually rare in the Earth’s crust; they are called “rare” because they are difficult and costly to extract and refine in usable form.
What elements are included

Rare earths consist of:
15 lanthanides (from lanthanum to lutetium)
Plus scandium and yttrium, which have similar chemical properties

Why rare earths are important

Rare earth elements are critical for high-tech and clean-energy applications, including:
Smartphones, laptops, and TVs
Electric vehicles (motors and batteries)
Wind turbines
Military and aerospace systems
Medical imaging equipment
Magnets, lasers, and semiconductors

For example:
Neodymium and dysprosium are used in powerful permanent magnets
Europium and terbium are used in display screens
Lanthanum is used in camera lenses and batteries

Why they matter geopolitically
Mining and processing rare earths is environmentally challenging
China dominates global rare earth processing and supply chains
Many countries, including Canada and the U.S., consider rare earths strategic minerals for economic and national security

Key takeaway

Rare earths are strategic, technology-enabling elements that underpin modern electronics, clean energy, and defense industries, even though they are not truly rare in nature.

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