China has announced the suspension of a range of export-control measures that were originally introduced on October 9, 2025. This suspension, effective immediately, applies to curbs on several strategically vital materials, including rare earths, lithium-battery components, super-hard materials, and various essential strategic equipment. The pause in these restrictions will last for one year, until at least November 10, 2026.
The original export controls were widely seen as a retaliatory measure against increasingly restrictive US export controls on advanced semiconductor technology and AI. By pausing these curbs, China is signaling a potential shift in its trade and diplomatic strategy, likely aimed at easing escalating tensions ahead of anticipated high-level talks, such as the planned meeting between President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump.
The decision is expected to ease immediate supply-chain pressures for global industries, particularly those dependent on Chinese rare earths for manufacturing high-tech products, electric vehicles, and defense systems. While the suspension is significant, analysts caution that the underlying structural control frameworks may still remain in place and could be reactivated after the one-year period, pending the outcome of broader geopolitical negotiations.



