The Swedish state-owned mining company LKAB announced on Thursday that it had found more than a million tons of rare earth oxides in Kiruna, northern Sweden. Rare earth elementsalso known as rare earth metals or rare earth oxides, are a set of 17 heavy metals which have a wide range of commercial and industrial uses.
They are of particular importance for the green transition, as they are needed for the production of wind turbines and metal earth sverige vehicles. Jan Mostrom, CEO of LKAB, said in a statement that the find was good news for "Europe and the climate", adding "it could become a significant building block for producing the critical raw materials that are absolutely crucial to enable the green transition.
Experts say the size of the find still needs to be verified but the estimate from the company of 1 million tons would make it the largest of its kind in Europe. Not really. The deposit, dubbed Per Geijer, is located in the Swedish portion of the Arctic Circle, which has been known to be rich in rare earth minerals for several decades.
LKAB already runs the largest iron ore mine in Europe and their exploration for rare earths in Kiruna has been widely publicized. Despite the name, rare earths are plentiful in many parts of the world but mining and extracting them is extremely complex and costly.
It can also be very damaging to the environment. China has by far the largest amount of rare earth reserves of any country in the world, followed by Vietnam, Brazil and Russia. In Europe, there are heavy regulatory barriers to the mining and production of critical raw materials and it does not currently mine raw earths.
As a result, the EU is heavily dependent on China and other countries for them. That has become a major political issue given how the EU wants to both end trade dependencies on China and Russia and boost its own green technologies to achieve its climate goals.
Nabeel Mancheri, secretary-general of the Global Rare Earth Industry Association, says a lot more work is needed to determine the quality of the deposit. You still need a lot of drilling, a lot of testing, and you don't have the full information about what quality the ore grade is yet," he told DW.
Klinger says the find could potentially end up being an alternative source for Europe's rare earth needs, but said it would take between 10 and 15 years to develop a mine, which is in line with the company's own estimates. It is a monumental construction and engineering feat to open a new mine," she said.
In order for LKAB to exploit the discovery, they would need to drive a change in how the EU approaches the issue of mining for such raw materials. LKAB CEO Mostrom says he hopes the stringent permitting processes for mining within the EU can be sped up in order for the company to bring finished materials more quickly to market.
The European Commission is currently working on lowering the barriers to the mining and production of critical raw materials for the green transition. However, Mancheri says establishing a mining industry is still only half the job.
Experts say this is a critical question, as rare earths are also used in many polluting industries. Even the Swedish state-owned LKAB, or any other mining company for that matter, is not required to sell its output to firms in the renewable energy technologies sector.
She says that if mining firms such as LKAB are to demand that the permit process is sped up for them in the name of fighting climate changethere must be EU rules which prevent the output going to non-green sectors. Skip to content Skip to main menu Skip to more DW sites.