Hundreds of Chinese investors visited North Korea in June 2026 to inspect major mining facilities, with interest focused on minerals that are subject to U.N. sanctions against Pyongyang, raising fresh concerns about the pace of expanding North Korea-China economic cooperation.
A China-based source with knowledge of North Korea told Daily NK on Monday that since mid-June, hundreds of Chinese investors have entered North Korea to tour major mining facilities, checking conditions on the ground with a focus on tungsten, iron ore, and molybdenum. United Nations Security Council resolutions on North Korea prohibit the export of iron ore and other minerals from the country as part of measures targeting Pyongyang’s weapons programs, meaning any deals involving those materials would likely constitute sanctions violations.
According to the source, the visiting investors are exploring arrangements under which they would supply mining equipment and technical expertise to North Korean mines in exchange for receiving raw ore as payment. The purpose of the visits is to directly assess production conditions, the state of existing equipment, and the practical feasibility of increasing ore extraction before committing to formal investment. Some investors have brought Chinese technical specialists along to evaluate equipment needs on site.
The source said the atmosphere among the visiting investors is focused and purposeful, less a general tour than a concrete scouting mission to gauge investment viability in specific terms.
Shift toward joint ventures raises sanctions stakes
What makes the current round of activity particularly notable, the source said, is both its scale and its organizational form. While informal Chinese investment in North Korean mines has a long history, the simultaneous arrival of investors in such numbers, with concrete investment plans in hand, is described as unusual.
The structure being discussed also represents a departure from past practice. Previously, individual Chinese investors typically rented access to a mine for a set period or provided capital and equipment in exchange for a share of production, arrangements that were relatively short-term and easy to exit. Current discussions center on formal joint venture contracts between the two sides, which involve longer contract periods and make it harder to extract profits quickly and walk away.
Chinese investors are nonetheless viewing the joint venture model as offering greater business stability than earlier informal arrangements, under which losses from mid-contract problems had to be absorbed individually with little recourse, the source said.
North Korea is also reported to be actively seeking such agreements. Its mines hold substantial reserves but face serious constraints in expanding output, including aging extraction and processing equipment, chronic power shortages, and inadequate transportation infrastructure. Pyongyang is said to favor the equipment-for-minerals exchange model as a practical workaround for the sanctions environment, in which conventional financial transactions are largely blocked.
If deals of this kind proceed, sanctions violation concerns would be difficult to avoid, the source noted. Should iron ore or other explicitly sanctioned commodities be included in the traded goods, the individuals and companies involved would risk drawing scrutiny from the international community.
Despite those risks, the source said joint venture discussions involving mineral production are likely to continue in the near term, driven by the mutual economic interests of both sides. Chinese investors are said to view North Korean mining as a risky but potentially profitable sector, and the source predicted that organized North Korea-China mineral joint venture activity will expand in the period ahead.
Reporting from inside North Korea
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June 30, 2026 at 04:35PM
by DailyNK(North Korean Media)
