Power economics shaping Europe’s future materials refining and processing capacity in Serbia
Power economics is described as the decisive variable for where Europe’s future materials refining and processing capacity will be located. […]
Power economics is described as the decisive variable for where Europe’s future materials refining and processing capacity will be located. […]
Serbia is physically connected to the wider European power and gas system and is exposed to EU rules governing cross-border
European policy discussions on industrial resilience often start with access to lithium, rare earths, nickel, copper, and manganese. Political speeches
Europe’s industrial expansion is increasingly constrained in core markets by high and volatile energy prices, dense regulatory frameworks, urban saturation,
For much of the past two decades, Serbia’s industrial competitiveness was discussed through labour cost, tax stability, logistics access to
Europe’s hydrogen transition is described as being driven by cross-border corridors rather than announced electrolysis capacity. Hydrogen requires physical continuity,
Europe’s decarbonisation agenda is accelerating faster in steel and metallurgy than in almost any other heavy industry. The European Green
Europe’s industrial transition depends on rare-earth elements and the magnet materials derived from them. Neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium and terbium are
Europe’s metals and advanced-materials rebuild is reshaping industrial strategy through smelters, refineries, processing plants, battery-chemical lines, recycling hubs and hydrogen-ready
Europe’s pursuit of strategic autonomy in raw materials, electrification metals and industrial processing capacity is entering a decade shaped by
Europe’s ReSourceEU framework sets targets for raw-material extraction, processing and recycling, but the pitch argues that turning those targets into
The European Union’s ReSourceEU sets measurable objectives for strategic raw materials by 2030: 10 percent extracted within the EU, 40