EM&T validates non-China rare earth magnet supply ahead of 2027 deadline
Evolution Metals & Technologies Corp. has validated its ability to supply commercial-scale, non-China rare earth permanent magnets through its Korean subsidiaries, securing quality certifications from two global Tier-1 electronics OEMs for six grades of sintered neodymium-iron-boron magnets. This positions the company as a viable alternative to Chinese supply ahead of the January 1, 2027 DFARS deadline, with production capacity expanding via a binding Purchase Order with ULVAC, Inc. for thirteen production machines.

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Evolution Metals & Technologies Corp. has validated its capability to supply commercial-scale, non-China rare earth permanent magnets ahead of the January 1, 2027 DFARS defense sourcing deadline. The company's Korean operating subsidiaries successfully completed customer quality certification procedures with two leading global Tier-1 electronics OEMs across six grades of sintered neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) magnets. These certifications establish Evolution Metals & Technologies Corp. as a commercially credible alternative to Chinese supply for the U.S. and allied industrial base.
The certifications cover six specific grades spanning the full commercial temperature-performance spectrum: N48M, N50M, N42H, N45H, N35SH, and N46SH. These grades range from medium-temperature compositions used in consumer electronics and automotive sensors to super-high-temperature grades required for EV traction motors, wind turbines, robotics actuators, and defense systems. The super-high-temperature N35SH and N46SH grades incorporate heavy rare earth elements, including dysprosium, which are subject to export controls by the People's Republic of China.
Strategic Positioning and DFARS Compliance
The validation comes as the industry faces the January 1, 2027 implementation of DFARS 252.225-7052, which is expected to restrict U.S. defense contractors from incorporating Chinese-origin rare earth magnets in qualifying defense systems. The U.S. Department of War, the U.S. Department of Commerce, and the Export-Import Bank of the United States have committed billions of dollars to support domestic and allied rare earth magnet capacity before this deadline.
Operational Expansion and Equipment
Evolution Metals & Technologies Corp. is advancing its production capacity through a binding Purchase Order with ULVAC, Inc. dated May 14, 2026. The agreement involves the delivery of thirteen production machines to the company's Korean operations scheduled for November 2026. The company is also developing a planned U.S. industrial campus to further support its vertically integrated supply chain.
Frank Moon, Chief Executive Officer of Evolution Metals & Technologies Corp., stated that quality certification from leading Tier-1 OEMs is the most critical validation in the industry. He highlighted that the company is meaningfully advanced relative to peers in delivering commercial-scale, OEM-certified, non-China high-performance rare earth permanent magnets with less than seven months remaining until the DFARS deadline.
| Magnet Grade | Temperature Class | Application Focus |
|---|---|---|
| N48M | Medium | Consumer electronics, automotive sensors |
| N50M | Medium | Consumer electronics, automotive sensors |
| N42H | High | Electric motors, EV components |
| N45H | High | Electric motors, EV components |
| N35SH | Super-High | EV traction motors, defense, aerospace |
| N46SH | Super-High | EV traction motors, defense, aerospace |
How will the company secure the necessary supply of heavy rare earth elements like dysprosium given existing Chinese export controls?
What is the expected production capacity of the planned U.S. industrial campus compared to the current Korean operations?
Will the company pursue similar quality certifications with defense contractors specifically to meet the January 2027 DFARS deadline?




















