Europe’s processing competitiveness hinges on electricity costs, logistics corridors, and SEE engineering
Europe’s drive for strategic autonomy in raw materials and electrification metals is entering a decisive phase. The ability to compete […]
Europe’s drive for strategic autonomy in raw materials and electrification metals is entering a decisive phase. The ability to compete […]
Europe’s strategic autonomy in raw materials depends on designing, scaling and industrialising processing technologies that convert mined and recycled feedstock
The EU’s ReSourceEU initiative sets measurable targets for strategic raw materials, including 10% extraction within the EU, 40% processing inside
Europe’s ReSourceEU framework sets targets for raw-material extraction, processing and recycling, but the pitch argues that turning those targets into
Southeast Europe’s wind-investment expansion has accelerated, but investors continue to encounter a bankability gap in Serbia, Croatia, Montenegro, and Romania.
Europe’s industrial transformation is being tied to execution capacity as the EU accelerates its Critical Raw Materials Act (CRMA) and
Near-source front-end engineering is being used in Serbia as a platform approach involving mines, EPCM/EPC contractors, and lenders. The model
Europe’s industrial agenda is being reshaped by decarbonization, electrification, battery expansion, defense modernization, and supply-chain restructuring. Access to critical raw
The EU’s clean energy transition is linked to rising demand for critical raw materials including copper, lithium, nickel, cobalt, rare
Southeast Europe, including Serbia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Albania, Bulgaria, Romania, and adjacent mineral corridors, is described as
Market access through central location and logistics Serbia’s central position in Southeast Europe supports access to major markets across Europe,
Serbia is positioned to supply critical raw materials to Germany and the European Union, supported by natural resources and a