In race to regain rare earth glory, Europe falls short on mineral goals

in race to regain rare earth glory, europe falls short on mineral goals

Workers look at bags of rare earth compounds in rare earth processing plant, owned by Belgian chemicals group Solvay, located in La Rochelle, France in this undated handout picture. Solvay/Handout via REUTERS

By Eric Onstad

LONDON (Reuters) - Four decades ago, a rare earth processing plant on France's Atlantic coast was one of the largest in the world, churning out materials used to make colour televisions, arc lights and camera lenses. Its current owner Solvay is racing to return the plant at La Rochelle to its former glory after years of diminished output as Europe seeks to boost production of the minerals fuelling the green energy transition.

The factory's 76-year history is a microcosm of the challenges Europe and the United States face as they seek to reverse massive migration of rare earth processing to China that took place around 25 years ago.

China became dominant in rare earths, a group of 17 minerals, by producing them at lower prices than the West, helped by government support, and often ignoring environmental concerns in a sector that can create toxic waste.

In recent years, China has beefed up sustainability and closed polluting operations.

In the 1980s and 1990s, output from the plant at La Rochelle set the benchmark for global rare earth prices. It now supplies 4,000 metric tons a year of separated rare earth oxides, a fraction of the 298,000 tons pumped out by China last year. Moreover, Solvay's modest output is focused on the kind of processed rare earths used for auto catalysts and electronics, not the kind needed for permanent magnets used in electric vehicles (EVs) and wind energy. Solvay says it will start producing those by next year. "We at Solvay want to put rare earths for permanent magnets back on the map in Europe," said An Nuyttens, president of Solvay's division that produces rare earth products. "It's not an easy one, it's going to be step by step, as the chain from mining up to magnets production needs to be built." Eventually, the 160-year-old chemicals group aims to supply 20% to 30% of the separated rare earths demand for magnet production in Europe, but Nuyttens said meeting that target may not be possible until after 2030, giving no date.

in race to regain rare earth glory, europe falls short on mineral goals

A person works at rare earths plant owned by Neo Performance Materials, which processes the minerals needed to make permanent magnets used in electric vehicles and wind turbines, in Sillamae, Estonia in this handout image dated to 2024. Neo Performance Materials/Handout via REUTERS

Under a new EU law that entered into force in May, the bloc has set ambitious 2030 targets for domestic production of critical minerals required for its green transition - 10% of annual needs mined, 25% recycled and 40% processed domestically by the end of the decade.The bloc has zeroed in on rare earths as one of the most important critical minerals due to their use in permanent magnets that power motors in EVs and wind energy. EU demand is forecast to soar sixfold in the decade to 2030 and sevenfold by 2050.

The EU will struggle, however, to meet most of the goals in rare earths, according to production forecasts gathered by Reuters and interviews with over a dozen industry executives, consultants, EU-funded officials, industry groups and investors.

Missing targets in the Critical Raw Material Act (CRMA) may impact the bloc's zero carbon goals while opening the prospect of further dependence on China amid heightened geopolitical tension with the West, analysts say. China accounts for 98% of EU rare earth permanent magnet imports.

in race to regain rare earth glory, europe falls short on mineral goals

A general view shows an under construction factory owned by Neo Performance Materials, that will produce rare earth permanent magnets used in electric vehicles and wind turbines, in Narva, Estonia in this handout picture dated to June 2024. Neo Performance Materials/Handout via REUTERS

EU Commission spokesperson Johanna Bernsel said they could not confirm the Reuters findings, but said the bloc would do its best to promote projects that help meet the goals in the CRMA.

"Projects in Europe will benefit from a streamlined permitting process, as well as coordinated support for accessing de-risking financing tools and matchmaking with downstream users," Bernsel said.

WINDOW CLOSING FAST

There are three main steps in the rare earth supply chain before permanent magnets can be produced -- mining, separating elements and producing metals/alloys (the latter two both come under the processing target). Reuters compiled production forecasts from companies and compared those with a demand forecast in a report by two EU-funded bodies to assess how the bloc is faring compared to its goals.

According to the Reuters analysis, the EU is due to have only scant output from rare earth mines by 2030; and there is similarly only one project in the metals and alloys sector, which is low margin.

The bloc, however, is likely to meet one target in its most advanced area, separation, producing 45% of needs by 2030.

The final stage of the supply chain - producing magnets from the metals - is not covered by the targets in the new law since they are a finished product, but EU output is expected to meet only 22% of expected demand by 2030, according to the Reuters analysis.

Obstacles to boosting EU rare earths output include public opposition to new mines, wary support by European industry which benefits from cheap Chinese imports, limited funding, uncertain demand as EV sales growth falters and weak prices for the metals.

"The window between now and 2030 is going to close very quickly in the context of how long it takes to get some of these projects and processing facilities off the ground," said Ryan Castilloux at consultancy Adamas Intelligence, which specialises in critical minerals.

Failing to include magnets in the CRMA targets is a "blindspot" and sets up the law to generate "false-positive" results, he added.

The EU spokesperson did not comment directly on that criticism, but noted that CRMA includes several measures to increase recycling.

MINING ON ICE

The European continent has rich rare earth deposits, but there is currently no mining of them. That is unlikely to change in the near term with some projects stalled due to public opposition. The only likely output in the EU by 2030 is re-processing waste from Sweden's LKAB iron ore mines, which would contribute about 1% of the EU's demand for oxides needed for magnets, based on the Reuters analysis.

Southern Sweden's Norra Karr project, which could supply a large portion of the region's demand, has been held up for 10 years in the government's permitting process and there has also been opposition by environmentalists who say it could pollute drinking water.

An executive of the project's owner, Leading Edge Materials, said a new application for a mining lease is underway for a redesigned project, but offered no timeline for starting production. The Swedish government did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

The company plans to apply for the project to be declared strategic under the CRMA, which in theory would make possible fast-track permitting in 27 months. Another rare earths mining project, Sokli in Finland, also aims to be named a strategic project, but it still has to go through environmental impact assessment and permitting. "It's not realistic to have it commissioned before 2030," said Matti Hietanen, CEO of the project's owner, state-owned Finnish Minerals Group. Non-EU-member Norway could contribute 10% of the bloc's demand by 2031, according to private company Rare Earths Norway, which said this month it has Europe's biggest rare earth deposit. A slide in rare earth prices is also dampening prospects for new mining projects. "At current price levels, most mines are just not profitable, so there must be support from governments and automakers," said Daan De Jonge at consultancy Benchmark Mineral Intelligence in London. EU companies are also gearing up to take advantage of the huge potential for recycling to supply critical rare earths, but it will take time before there is enough supply of old EVs and wind turbines to process. INTEGRATING THE SUPPLY CHAIN Other industry executives echoed Solvay's uncertainty about ramping up output by 2030, with several telling Reuters they could not commit to launching or raising production by then. Some of the wariness is due to sales demand for electric cars cooling in recent months after rising dramatically for several years, as consumers wait for more affordable models to hit the market. European EV sales fell 9% in May. Another challenge for Europe is competing with cheaper imports from China, which has a highly integrated rare earths supply chain including state-owned firms from mining to finished magnets.

Some of the key European rare earth firms have long had operations in China or joint ventures with firms there and are using that expertise to help boost their new EU ventures.One of those is Neo Performance Materials. It has a plant for separating rare earths in Estonia plus operations in other countries including China. It is also building a permanent magnet factory in Estonia, which is due to launch output next year and ramp up to 2,000 tons annual capacity over the following two to three years, enough magnets to power about 1.5 million EVs.

Expansion will depend on whether customers support the Critical Raw Material Act targets.

"If they're going to buy 40% of their processed material here, we will absolutely support that demand with production capabilities in Europe," said CEO Rahim Suleman. While competing with China is tough, Neo estimates it can produce magnets that would cost about $50 per vehicle more than imported magnets from China. The permanent magnets in hybrid and EV motors cost more than $300 per vehicle or up to half the cost of the motor, analysts say.

GKN Powder Metallurgy has launched small-scale production of permanent magnets at a plant in Germany and is gearing up to build a larger commercial facility based on demand. Magneti Ljubljana in Slovenia, founded in 1951, aims to expand output, but this depends on customers agreeing to purchase products that are more expensive than Chinese imports to diversify their supply and in some cases boost sustainability. "I've been working in this factory since 1986 and during that time, 27 factories in Europe closed down the production of magnets because of the price," Managing Director Albert Erman said.

(Reporting by Eric Onstad; Editing by Veronica Brown and Claudia Parsons)

OTHER NEWS

7 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Defending champions Italy sent packing

7 hrs ago

How to get Putin to negotiate? Strategy and resolve

8 hrs ago

How To Correctly Clean Your Remote Controls

8 hrs ago

Is Now the Time to Buy SoFi Technologies?

8 hrs ago

Verstappen escapes punishment for Austrian GP outlap slow driving

8 hrs ago

Sports Minister, Enoh speaks on Osimhen, Finidi row

8 hrs ago

As France prepares to vote, what are Macron's options?

8 hrs ago

Iran schedules rerun for July 5 as initial poll fails to produce President

8 hrs ago

Probe committee report: El-Rufai’s decision to go to court laughable – Lawmaker

8 hrs ago

Indonesia: The congregation celebrates Eid al-Adha with prayers in Indonesia, wearing all black

8 hrs ago

US Fed's favored inflation measure cools slightly in May

8 hrs ago

Nepal Landslides Kill Nine, Including Three Children - Monsoon Rains Cause Chaos | Video

8 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Slow-starting defending champs Italy face Switzerland in first knockout match

8 hrs ago

The Best Warren Buffett Stocks to Buy With $30,000 Right Now

8 hrs ago

Dhaka- Assam Men's, Women's Handball Series begins on Sunday

8 hrs ago

Samman peerless in Nanyuki as youngster Neel finishes fifth

8 hrs ago

PICTORIAL: MMA2 hosts Nigeria’s first airport wedding in Lagos

9 hrs ago

‘It is not up to me – Chelsea star on calls he should start for England

9 hrs ago

Putin’s Nuke Threat: Putin Vows To Make New Nuclear Missiles And Place Them Near NATO Nations

9 hrs ago

Rivers Angels receive N25m for President Federation Cup triumph

10 hrs ago

King Mohammed VI's mother, Lalla Latifa, passes away

10 hrs ago

Verstappen qualifying gap a "reality check" for F1 rivals

10 hrs ago

French parliamentary elections begin in overseas territories

10 hrs ago

Redbox’s owner files for bankruptcy after repeatedly missing payments and payroll

10 hrs ago

Amusan celebrates CAS ruling on doping allegation

10 hrs ago

Ferrari F1 upgrade could have triggered high-speed bouncing woes, says Sainz

10 hrs ago

Conte Accepts Osimhen's Quit Notice From Napoli

10 hrs ago

How will we govern super-powerful AI?

10 hrs ago

Piastri slams “embarrassing” Austrian F1 qualifying track limits situation

10 hrs ago

Costco Stock Is Up by Around 30% in the First Half of This Year. Can the Growth Continue in the Second Half of 2024?

10 hrs ago

Transfer: Romano confirms Chelsea forward to join Man City

11 hrs ago

Super Eagles can still qualify for 2026 World Cup – Minister, Enoh

11 hrs ago

Copa America Power Ranking: USMNT below Canada after second round of matches…

11 hrs ago

F1 Austrian GP: Verstappen storms to pole by 0.4s from Norris

11 hrs ago

Marquez explains Assen MotoGP sprint crash he ‘should have avoided’

11 hrs ago

Here Is My Top Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock to Buy Right Now

11 hrs ago

Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Denmark lock horns at Euro 2024 knockout stage

11 hrs ago

England's Rai and USA's Bhatia share PGA Detroit lead

12 hrs ago

Farmer builds replica plane from motorcycle engine

12 hrs ago

5 Reasons to Buy Disney Stock Hand Over Fist Right Now