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EU’s investment bank to work with Australian government on critical raw materials

The move aims to cut reliance on China, which most G7 and EU countries depend on for materials from rare earth magnets to battery metals

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Lithium raw materials mined in Western Australia, which are used in the production of batteries for electric vehicles. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

The EU’s European Investment Bank (EIB) and the Australian government said in a joint statement on Monday they would deepen cooperation on critical raw materials, as Western powers scramble to cut their reliance on China.

With the exception of Japan, Group of Seven (G7) countries and the EU are heavily or exclusively reliant on China for a range of materials from rare earth magnets to battery metals.

European officials and industry sources say financing remains a key hurdle in the bloc’s efforts to secure its supply chains of strategic minerals. Even the EU’s list of strategic projects receives no financial benefits.

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The European Commission is expected to present a wide-ranging economic security package on December 3.

“This declaration is the first step towards enabling the EIB to support the financing of critical minerals projects in Australia,” the statement said.

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“[It] furthers existing collaboration between Australia and the EU across the critical raw materials value chain – from exploration and extraction to processing, recycling and innovation.”

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