China tightens indium export checks as AI demand increases

SINGAPORE, June 19 (Reuters) – China is stepping up scrutiny over exports of indium, leading some buyers to fear the niche metal, sought after for next-generation data centers, may be ​added to the export control regime that has become one of Beijing’s most ‌potent trade weapons.
China produces nearly 70% of the world’s indium, a byproduct of zinc refining mostly used in displays and solder but also the raw material for making indium phosphide, used to make high-speed optical ​chips for AI data centers.
Beijing put indium phosphide on an export control list in ​February 2025 and the restrictions have become enough of a hurdle for ⁠next-generation data centers that the CEO of Nvidia-backed chipmaker Coherent traveled to Beijing with President ​Donald Trump in May to raise the issue.
While indium metal is not on the export ​control list, two buyers told Reuters about growing scrutiny over their purchases from Chinese customs. For the first time this year, a European buyer was asked to disclose information about end users, including where they ​were based.
A major buyer in North America said approvals had gone from same day to ​several days, which they attributed to more scrutiny of paperwork and described as “tense”. This buyer had not ‌been ⁠asked for extra information by customs.
China’s Ministry of Commerce did not immediately respond to a request for comment on a public holiday.
All the buyers declined to be named owing to the sensitivity of the topic.
The extra due diligence is not uniform and two other buyers told ​Reuters they had heard ​of extra scrutiny ⁠but not faced it themselves. So far, Reuters has not identified any shipments that have been blocked.
Nonetheless there is some concern in the ​small industry that this is a prelude to tighter controls or ​the end-user ⁠disclosures which China, and other countries with export control regimes, use to chart global supply chains and chokepoints.
Indium has been identified as a potential vulnerability for the U.S., whose Defense Logistics Agency earlier ⁠this ​year released a request for proposals to stockpile up ​to 403 tons of the material over three years.
Another North American buyer said they suspected that the reporting requirements ​were “a precursor to restrictions or outright bans on exports.”

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