Sweden
Says It Has Uncovered a Rare Earth Bonanza
A
state-owned mining company announced it had found Europe’s largest deposit of
the vital minerals used in electric vehicles and other green technology.
·
The world’s production of rare earths is
dominated by China.
·
LKAB said it could take 10 to 15 years or
more before the metals were delivered to market because of the lengthy
environmental studies and other work required to open a mining facility in
Europe.
·
Rare earths, a group of 17 elements, are
crucial to cutting-edge technologies used for electric vehicles and wind
turbine generators.
·
China has a strong hold on the global rare
earth industry not only in mining but also in the complex processing of the
minerals, which produces radioactive contaminants. Russia is also a leader in
extracting the metals.
·
China’s dominant position gives Beijing
leverage over pricing of the metals as well as the potential to restrict
supplies to rivals.
· In northern Sweden, the rare earths are found in iron ore deposits.
A Swedish mining company
said this week that it had found Europe’s largest known deposit of coveted rare
earth metals, critical to many green technologies including electric vehicles,
in a far northern part of the country within the Arctic Circle.
The world’s production of
rare earths is dominated by China. The discovery by LKAB, a state-owned
company, creates the prospect that Europe could over time develop a domestic
source of these minerals.
“This is good news, not only
for LKAB, the region and the Swedish people, but also for Europe and the
climate,” Jan Mostrom, the company’s chief executive, said in a statement.
Finding the deposit,
estimated by LKAB at more than a million tons, is one thing, and extracting the
metals is another. LKAB said it could take 10 to 15 years or more before the
metals were delivered to market because of the lengthy environmental studies
and other work required to open a mining facility in Europe.
Rare earths, a group of 17
elements, are crucial to cutting-edge technologies used for electric vehicles
and wind turbine generators. As more of these items are manufactured to tackle
climate change and for other purposes, demand for the metals is soaring.
China has a strong
hold on the global rare earth industry not only in mining but also
in the complex processing of the minerals, which produces radioactive
contaminants. Russia is also a leader in extracting the metals.
With heavy investment going
into the electrification of the economy in order to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions, both Europe and the United States are looking to develop their own
sources of rare earths. The worry is that China’s dominant position gives
Beijing leverage over pricing of the metals as well as the potential to
restrict supplies to rivals. In 2010, China halted exports of
rare earths to Japan for two months over a fishing dispute.
LKAB’s find, near Kiruna,
Sweden’s northernmost city, indeed appeared to be of significant size, said
Ross Embleton, an analyst at Wood Mackenzie, a consulting firm. But he added
that unless European permitting procedures could be shortened in a way that was
acceptable to responsible investors, the lode was unlikely to make a big
difference to the global supply picture anytime soon.
“With European rare earth
assets, the development schedules are really hindered by this permitting
process,” he said.
There is no large-scale
mining of rare earths in the European Union, partly because of the difficulty
of creating new mines and facilities to refine the metal ores.
Nonetheless, LKAB executives
are pursuing a careful process intended to, over time, provide Northern Europe
both the ability to extract rare earths and to process them.
“We want to have the whole
value chain,” David Hognelid, LKAB’s chief strategy
officer, said in an interview. LKAB estimates that the discovery could “meet a
large part of the E.U.’s future demand” for the metals.
To help meet that goal, LKAB
recently became the largest shareholder in a Norwegian company, REEtec, that specializes in separating out the rare earths,
like neodymium, which is used to make powerful magnets. The plan would be to
have REEtec, whose technology is said to be more
environmentally friendly than older processes, eventually build a plant in
Sweden.
But before that, Mr. Hognelid said, LKAB must further assess the resources. In
northern Sweden, the rare earths are found in iron ore deposits. LKAB already
has a large iron ore mine near Kiruna that has rare earths in quantities that
are less concentrated than in the new find. The company said it was preparing
to build a tunnel several miles long from the iron ore mine into the new rare
earths deposit, known as Per Geijer, to further
assess the resources there.
The economy in Kiruna has
relied on mining for more than a century, but new extraction activity will need
to be balanced with other interests including preserving areas of natural
beauty and safeguarding reindeer herding in the region by the Sami people, Mr. Hognelid said.
“The use of the land will
always come with different interests that we will have to manage,” he said.
Deposits of rare earths on
Greenland, which is legally an autonomous part of Denmark, have attracted
extensive interest from the mining industry, though a Chinese company has been blocked from opening
a mine on the island because of contamination fears.
LKAB hopes the growing
demand for the metals and the imperative of developing domestic sources for
them in Europe will help clear the way for the new mine. “Without mines, there
can be no electric vehicles,” Mr. Mostrom said.