One day after China's announcement of an export ban on dual-use goods to Japan, the restrictions took effect on January 7, threatening established trade flows amid escalating tensions over Taiwan remarks by PM Sanae Takaichi. Japan protested the move as 'unacceptable' and is now evaluating broader fallout from the wide-ranging list of affected military-civilian products.
China's export restrictions on dual-use goods to Japan, announced January 6 and effective January 7, target a broad array of items with military and civilian uses, including rare earths essential for semiconductors, drones, and defense applications. This follows PM Sanae Takaichi's November remarks framing a potential attack on Taiwan—viewed by Beijing as its territory—as an existential threat to Japan.
Japan's Foreign Ministry swiftly protested, with director general Masaaki Kanai calling the ban 'extremely regrettable' and deviating from international norms during a January 6 meeting with Chinese embassy officials. Prior retaliatory steps included urging Chinese citizens to avoid Japan and suspending Japanese seafood imports.
Unlike those measures, this ban—covering around 1,100 items from China's export control list—could inflict greater economic damage, especially given China's 60% share of Japan's rare earth supplies despite diversification. Officials describe it as potentially symbolic to pressure Takaichi domestically, echoing a 2010 rare earth dispute.
Japanese authorities are assessing disruptions to bilateral trade, which saw November rare earth exports rise 35%, while considering responses amid a record 9 trillion yen defense budget. The episode underscores how Taiwan frictions are weaponizing economic ties, heightening regional uncertainty.