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Thursday Nov 20 2025 00:00
3 min
European Union officials have unveiled plans to establish a central agency tasked with coordinating the procurement and storage of critical minerals, a move designed to counter the increasing influence of the United States in this strategic sector. This initiative responds directly to growing concerns that the US is aggressively acquiring global supplies, leaving the EU at a disadvantage.
Stéphane Séjourné, the European Commission's Executive Vice-President in charge of industrial strategy, stated that the EU has become "collateral damage" in the escalating competition for rare earth minerals, crucial for both defense and clean technology industries. He noted that the European Commission is expediting a plan to diversify stockpiles of critical minerals, including rare earths, lithium, copper, and other essential metals.
Through this agency, the EU aims to create a central hub for critical minerals capable of coordinating purchasing operations across Europe and maintaining strategic reserves. The agency will also encourage companies to integrate economic security considerations into their supply chains.
Séjourné criticized what he described as Europe's lagging efforts to adopt similar tools employed by the United States, which invests in domestic mining companies and secures supply agreements with governments worldwide. "The Americans have a business unit that buys up stocks of critical materials earlier than we do around the world. They often buy things right under our noses," he added.
Séjourné's plan must be approved by the 27 EU member states and is subject to potential modifications. The plan also includes establishing rapid partnership agreements with countries such as Brazil and South Africa to ensure supply. Séjourné is scheduled to visit these countries in the coming weeks.
Séjourné also suggested that the EU consider implementing price floors to ensure European companies can access domestic inventories. He noted that mining and manufacturing companies are hesitant to invest in production within the EU due to concerns that customers will continue to favor cheaper sources, despite the risk of supply disruptions.
Séjourné stated that the Commission might recommend prioritizing the creation of stockpiles and diversifying supplies. If corporate behavior does not change, legislative measures may follow.
Victor van Hoorn, Director of Cleantech for Europe, urged Europe to take quicker action to strengthen its critical mineral supply chains. "Europe needs to clearly map its Critical Raw Materials (CRM) needs and vulnerabilities and then pour all the financial de-risking tools at them," he added.
Although the EU set domestic production goals for critical minerals in 2023, lengthy and bureaucratic approval processes, along with objections to new mines on environmental grounds, have delayed the launch of new projects.
The plan also includes funding innovation to develop technologies that do not require the use of rare earth minerals. Séjourné concluded, "The best way to achieve independence is not to have to use these raw materials."
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