EU moves on critical raw materials to boost home production
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen arrives for the weekly College of Commissioners meeting at EU headquarters in Brussels, Thursday, March 16, 2023. The College on Thursday will discuss the Critical Raw Materials Act, the EU’s long-term competitiveness strategy, and 30 years of the Single Market. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)
BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union presented plans Thursday to fundamentally revamp its policies on dealing with critical raw materials, imposing limits on imports from countries like China while unleashing subsidies and other financial incentives to ramp up home production.
The plans by the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, are essential in moving toward a climate neutral economy, while also increasing its strategic independence in a shifting world of geopolitical alliances.
“The EU is upping its game,” Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton said.
The lynchpin in the proposal is a commitment to produce at least 40% of the clean tech needed by 2030 in the 27-nation bloc, while at the same time ensuring that not more than 65% of consumption of any strategic raw material comes from a single third country — in practice, often China.
The EU now gets 98% of its rare earth material, 97% of its lithium and 93% of magnesium from China. Overall, critical raw materials are used in anything from solar panels to heat pumps and electric cars.
At the same time as seeking to disengage from Chinese dependency, the EU is seeking to build up a select Critical Raw Materials Club of alliances, with the likes of the United States and Canada, to further cement the Western bloc in an increasingly unstable global environment.
“We’re strengthening our cooperation with reliable trading partners globally to reduce the EU’s current dependencies on just one or a few countries,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said.
The plans still need to be approved by the EU’s 27 member states and the parliament, a process that is set to take many months, perhaps over a year.
To achieve its clean technology and strategic goals, the EU is making a major economic turn away for preaching the free-market economic gospel for decades and accepting very flexible state aid rules and subsidies as key ingredients to achieve its goals as the bloc has to move from a fossil fuel to a green economy.
“Private financing alone may not be sufficient and the effective rollout of projects along the critical raw material value chain may require public support, including in the form of state aid,” the European Commission proposal said. It added that it already had adapted state aid rules “to allow further flexibility for the member states to grant aid.”
“The aim is to further speed up and simplify the process, with easier calculations, simpler procedures, and accelerated approval,” the commission said.
The critical raw materials plan is set to be followed later by plans for the Net-Zero Industry Act on industrial incentives.
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