
Japan's energy security agency to join gallium production study in Australia
JOGMEC, a Japanese independent administrative agency, aims to diversify sources of gallium to reduce the country's reliance on imports from China.
The agency and Japanese trading house Sojitz have established a joint venture n Western Australia — Japan Australia Gallium Associates (JAGA) — which will conduct a joint study with Alcoa to explore the feasibility of producing gallium at an alumina refinery there owned by the U.S. company.
JAGA and Alcoa aim to complete the feasibility study by the end of fiscal 2025 and start gallium production in calendar 2026.
According to JOGMEC, Japan imported about 97 tons of gallium out of the 167 tons that the country consumed in 2021. Of the total imports, 57%, or 55 tons, was sourced from China. Japan's gallium imports from China have been on the decline since Beijing tightened export controls on the mineral in 2023.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NHK
4 hours ago
- NHK
Japan PM Ishiba briefed by chief trade negotiator on tariff talks in US
Japanese Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru has told his chief negotiator on US tariffs to explain to the public the measures he has confirmed so far with Washington. Economic Revitalization Minister Ryosei Akazawa has just returned from a visit to the US capital. Akazawa briefed the prime minister on Saturday about his meetings with US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. Akazawa reported that the US side agreed to amend an executive order on tariffs to correctly reflect what the two countries had agreed upon. Japan wants the amended order to clarify that the baseline US tariff of 15 percent will not be stacked on top of existing duties. Akazawa also confirmed that Washington will issue another executive order to lower its levies on Japanese autos and auto parts to the agreed 15 percent. Ishiba told Akazawa that the public deserves an explanation because interest in the topic is high and the government needs to seek the people's understanding. After the meeting, reporters asked Akazawa if he plans to prepare a written document for public disclosure. He replied that he will consider it. He said he believes it is better to give an explanation after Japan and the US decide how to handle major sector-by-sector tariffs.

12 hours ago
Tariffs on Japanese Products to Be Revised: U.S. Official
News from Japan Aug 9, 2025 17:37 (JST) Washington, Aug. 8 (Jiji Press)--The United States will revise the way it applies the 15 pct reciprocal tariffs on Japanese products, a White House official told Jiji Press on Friday. The official said that the tariffs on imports from Japan will be 15 pct including existing tax rates, as is the case for products from the European Union. The remarks came after the 15 pct reciprocal tariffs on Japanese imports went into effect on Thursday. Japanese economic revitalization minister Ryosei Akazawa, who is in charge of tariff negotiations with the United States, said he confirmed with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick in Washington on Thursday that the U.S. side would revise the executive order on reciprocal tariffs to reflect the Japan-U.S. agreement reached in late July. The White House official also indicated that such a revision will be made. According to the Japanese government, the U.S. side agreed not to impose a reciprocal tariff on Japanese items that are already subject to tariffs of 15 pct or higher, while setting the reciprocal tariff rate at 15 pct for products with an existing levy of less than 15 pct. [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press


Yomiuri Shimbun
15 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Japan Trade Negotiator Akazawa to Give Diet Explanation on U.S. Deal on Aug. 15
TOKYO (Jiji Press) — Economic revitalization minister Ryosei Akazawa will explain the trade agreement reached between Japan and the United States last month at a budget committee meeting of the Diet on Aug. 15, the ruling and opposition parties decided Friday. Akazawa, Japan's chief negotiator for tariff talks with the United States, will provide the explanation after discrepancies between Japan and the United States over reciprocal tariffs under President Donald Trump came to light. The event will take place in an executive meeting of the Budget Committee of the House of Representatives. The main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan asked the ruling Liberal Democratic Party to hold an out-of-session meeting of the committee to discuss issues related to the U.S. tariffs. With the Japanese and U.S. governments not producing a joint document on the tariff agreement, CDP leader Yoshihiko Noda told a press conference that 'this was a huge misjudgment.' Akazawa said the U.S. side has told him that Washington would revise its executive order on the reciprocal tariffs. Referring to this, Noda said: 'We don't even know when it will be corrected. The uncertainty can't be dispelled.' CDP policy chief Kazuhiko Shigetoku also condemned the government's handling of the tariff agreement, in a meeting of a task force dealing with Japan-U.S. trade issues held at the Diet building. 'The rationale on which Japan judged that not documenting the agreement is a better way has become less convincing,' he said. 'There is lingering concern that the promise might become a 'verbal agreement' again,' Democratic Party for the People chief Yuichiro Tamaki said on X. 'An explanation to the Diet is necessary.' Japan Innovation Party leader Hirofumi Yoshimura, also the governor of Osaka Prefecture, told the press at the prefectural government office that the government must give an explanation on the matter. 'What was agreed on is uncertain without any documents on the deal,' he said.