Europe's Mining Problem: Finding Precious Metals When Supply Chains Are Breaking Down

MarketDash Editorial Team
21 days ago
As geopolitical tensions fracture global supply chains, Europe is scrambling to secure its precious metals supply. The EU imports 50% of its copper concentrate and faces mounting pressure to reduce dependency on China and other foreign suppliers through domestic mining expansion and strategic partnerships.

Here's an uncomfortable question keeping European policymakers up at night: where exactly will the continent get its precious metals when the world keeps splitting into competing economic blocs? Europe's mining sector has spent decades living in the shadow of mining giants in Canada and Australia, importing what it needs without much fuss. That comfortable arrangement is looking increasingly risky.

The numbers tell a stark story. The European Union currently imports around 50% of its copper concentrate, which is precisely the kind of dependency you don't want when geopolitical tensions are running hot and both China and the United States are aggressively nearshoring their supply chains. Beijing has tightened export controls on rare earths and critical minerals this year, sending a clear message about the weaponization of resources. The EU and US are both scrambling to reduce dependency on China and other suppliers for national security reasons.

In response, the EU has designated 47 strategic projects aimed at securing access to critical minerals and reducing import risks. It's a start, but the challenge is significant. Europe's domestic copper reserves total around 41 million metric tons, which sounds impressive until you realize that's a minor fraction of the approximately 1.2 billion metric tons in global reserves concentrated primarily in Chile, Australia, Peru, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The EU Institute for Security Studies didn't mince words: "Dismantling Beijing's critical raw material weapon requires a sweeping emergency policy package to wean Europe off Chinese supply as soon as possible." Europe needs to build its "own geo-economic tools as a deterrent and combine this with a bold reindustrialisation agenda to salvage its prosperity." That's diplomatic language for we're in trouble and need to fix this fast.

Europe's Existing Mining Powerhouses

The good news is that Europe isn't starting from zero. The continent has supply options to derisk its supply chains from China, particularly in precious metals. Leading European producers operate advanced facilities across Scandinavia, Poland, and Russia, though that last one comes with obvious complications these days.

Agnico Eagle's (AEM) Kittila mine in Finland represents one of the EU's premier gold operations, generating 218,860 ounces in 2024. The Finnish operation benefits from automation technologies and renewable energy integration, positioning it among the continent's lowest-cost producers with all-in sustaining costs below $1,300 per ounce.

Poland's KGHM Polska Miedź stands as the largest European copper producer, with annual output approaching 700,000 metric tons. The state-owned enterprise operates major underground complexes, including Polkowice-Sieroszowice and Rudna, where copper extraction produces significant silver as a byproduct. These operations churned out 1,533 metric tons of silver in 2022, establishing Poland as Europe's leading silver producer.

Swedish mining leader Boliden operates strategically essential mines, including Aitik and Garpenberg. The latter ranks as one of the world's most efficient underground zinc mines with significant silver output. In 2024, it produced 8.23 million ounces, ranking number 17 on the global silver production list. Boliden has focused on sustainable practices, including electronic waste recycling and carbon capture. Its revenues reached around €6.5 billion in 2024.

Russia's Norilsk Nickel maintains substantial copper production with the Norilsk complex producing around 350,000 metric tons per year, alongside nickel and palladium. First-quarter 2025 output reached 109,355 metric tons, demonstrating operational stability despite challenging Arctic conditions. But here's the problem: unless the current political situation is resolved, Russian commodities primarily produced at the Kola Peninsula near Murmansk won't reach EU supply chains. So much for that option.

Promising Exploration Projects

Among ongoing greenfield discoveries and brownfield expansions, Canada's Group Eleven Resources (GRLVF) has emerged as a promising player in Ireland's prolific zinc district. The firm holds around 549 square kilometers of prospecting licenses across three main properties.

The exploration has made notable discoveries at the PG West project, intercepting high-grade mineralization including 39.7 meters grading 9.5% zinc and lead, plus 131 grams per ton silver. Deeper copper-silver zones return grades up to 3.72% copper and 838 grams per ton silver. Group Eleven's strategic position adjacent to Glencore's (GLNCY) Pallas Green deposit reduces exploration risk, while the company benefits from Ireland's infrastructure-rich environment and favorable mining jurisdiction.

Neighboring Glencore holds a 17.1% stake through its Glencore Canada subsidiary, providing strategic validation but also sparking rumors of potential merger and acquisition activity.

Finland's exploration sector shows promise with Arctic Minerals' Hennes Bay project. The project has an inferred resource of 55.39 million tons grading 1.0% copper equivalent, containing 447,000 tons of copper and 37 million ounces of silver.

In Greece, Eldorado Gold is advancing projects including Olympias and Skouries, while planning low-impact mining practices amid regulatory scrutiny. The latter is set to start production in 2026, targeting 140,000 ounces of gold and around 30,000 metric tons of copper per year.

The Greenland Wild Card

Greenland, as a Danish territory, offers substantial untapped potential despite infrastructural challenges. The island's strategic position and vast commodity wealth sparked renewed discussion earlier this year following US President Donald Trump's repeated suggestions to purchase the territory. While rare earth elements kept Greenland in the headlines, its gold mining potential remains notable.

Last month, Amaroq Minerals reported discoveries with grades up to 38.7 grams per ton across multiple sites in the Nanortalik Gold Belt. The company's Nalunaq gold mine resumed production in late 2024 following approvals for environmental and social impacts, with inferred resources supporting one of the world's highest-grade gold operations. Greenland's mineral potential extends to copper, with Amaroq identifying gold-copper systems at Isortup Qoorua, including assays of 1.98% copper.

EU Candidate Countries Enter the Picture

Countries gravitating toward EU economic integration present additional opportunities for mineral development. In Serbia, Chinese-controlled Zijin Mining is executing a massive expansion of the Bor Copper Complex and the Cukaru Peki mine, targeting 290,000 metric tons of copper in 2025, with long-term goals of reaching 450,000 tons annually. The company's $3.5 billion investment plan includes drilling to depths of up to 2 kilometers and expanding throughput to 15,000 tons per day, positioning Serbia as Europe's second-largest copper producer.

Serbia's political uncertainty continues to pose risks to large-scale investment, though. Rio Tinto (RIO) has just mothballed the $3 billion Jadar lithium project, citing the project's lack of permitting progress. That's a polite way of saying the regulatory environment remains challenging.

Bosnia and Herzegovina's mining sector centers on Adriatic Metals' (ADTLF) Vares project, which entered commercial production in July 2025 after declaring sustained operational stability. The polymetallic operation is currently ramping to nameplate capacity of 800,000 tons per annum, extracting copper, silver, lead, zinc, and gold with investments exceeding €200 million.

Why European Mining Moves at a Crawl

European mining projects face substantially longer development timelines than those in traditional mining regions, creating competitive disadvantages that discourage investment. In Canada or Australia, permitting can be completed within two years under optimal conditions. European processes face significant regional variability.

The European mining bureaucracy has historically focused on environmental protection and stakeholder consultation. The EU's evolving regulatory framework encompasses environmental impact assessments, waste management obligations, and community consultations, often extending project timelines beyond those in competing jurisdictions.

Northern European jurisdictions, including Scandinavia, achieve relatively efficient approvals, with 49% of mining executives reporting permits granted within six months, outpacing even traditional mining leaders. Canadian processes, despite averaging two years, can extend to 15 years for complex projects involving Indigenous consultations and environmental reviews, yet maintain greater transparency than their European counterpart.

Ian Bond at the Centre for European Reform wrote in October: "The EU has equipped itself with a wide variety of legislative and regulatory tools to try to ensure that China cannot gain too much influence through its economic leverage. The strategy remains a patchwork of tools largely applied at the national rather than the EU level, which results in varying degrees of effectiveness in its application."

That's the fundamental tension Europe faces. The continent desperately needs to develop domestic mining capacity to reduce strategic vulnerability, but its own regulatory complexity makes that difficult to achieve quickly. It's not an easy problem to solve, but given the geopolitical environment, Europe doesn't have much choice but to figure it out.

Europe's Mining Problem: Finding Precious Metals When Supply Chains Are Breaking Down

MarketDash Editorial Team
21 days ago
As geopolitical tensions fracture global supply chains, Europe is scrambling to secure its precious metals supply. The EU imports 50% of its copper concentrate and faces mounting pressure to reduce dependency on China and other foreign suppliers through domestic mining expansion and strategic partnerships.

Here's an uncomfortable question keeping European policymakers up at night: where exactly will the continent get its precious metals when the world keeps splitting into competing economic blocs? Europe's mining sector has spent decades living in the shadow of mining giants in Canada and Australia, importing what it needs without much fuss. That comfortable arrangement is looking increasingly risky.

The numbers tell a stark story. The European Union currently imports around 50% of its copper concentrate, which is precisely the kind of dependency you don't want when geopolitical tensions are running hot and both China and the United States are aggressively nearshoring their supply chains. Beijing has tightened export controls on rare earths and critical minerals this year, sending a clear message about the weaponization of resources. The EU and US are both scrambling to reduce dependency on China and other suppliers for national security reasons.

In response, the EU has designated 47 strategic projects aimed at securing access to critical minerals and reducing import risks. It's a start, but the challenge is significant. Europe's domestic copper reserves total around 41 million metric tons, which sounds impressive until you realize that's a minor fraction of the approximately 1.2 billion metric tons in global reserves concentrated primarily in Chile, Australia, Peru, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The EU Institute for Security Studies didn't mince words: "Dismantling Beijing's critical raw material weapon requires a sweeping emergency policy package to wean Europe off Chinese supply as soon as possible." Europe needs to build its "own geo-economic tools as a deterrent and combine this with a bold reindustrialisation agenda to salvage its prosperity." That's diplomatic language for we're in trouble and need to fix this fast.

Europe's Existing Mining Powerhouses

The good news is that Europe isn't starting from zero. The continent has supply options to derisk its supply chains from China, particularly in precious metals. Leading European producers operate advanced facilities across Scandinavia, Poland, and Russia, though that last one comes with obvious complications these days.

Agnico Eagle's (AEM) Kittila mine in Finland represents one of the EU's premier gold operations, generating 218,860 ounces in 2024. The Finnish operation benefits from automation technologies and renewable energy integration, positioning it among the continent's lowest-cost producers with all-in sustaining costs below $1,300 per ounce.

Poland's KGHM Polska Miedź stands as the largest European copper producer, with annual output approaching 700,000 metric tons. The state-owned enterprise operates major underground complexes, including Polkowice-Sieroszowice and Rudna, where copper extraction produces significant silver as a byproduct. These operations churned out 1,533 metric tons of silver in 2022, establishing Poland as Europe's leading silver producer.

Swedish mining leader Boliden operates strategically essential mines, including Aitik and Garpenberg. The latter ranks as one of the world's most efficient underground zinc mines with significant silver output. In 2024, it produced 8.23 million ounces, ranking number 17 on the global silver production list. Boliden has focused on sustainable practices, including electronic waste recycling and carbon capture. Its revenues reached around €6.5 billion in 2024.

Russia's Norilsk Nickel maintains substantial copper production with the Norilsk complex producing around 350,000 metric tons per year, alongside nickel and palladium. First-quarter 2025 output reached 109,355 metric tons, demonstrating operational stability despite challenging Arctic conditions. But here's the problem: unless the current political situation is resolved, Russian commodities primarily produced at the Kola Peninsula near Murmansk won't reach EU supply chains. So much for that option.

Promising Exploration Projects

Among ongoing greenfield discoveries and brownfield expansions, Canada's Group Eleven Resources (GRLVF) has emerged as a promising player in Ireland's prolific zinc district. The firm holds around 549 square kilometers of prospecting licenses across three main properties.

The exploration has made notable discoveries at the PG West project, intercepting high-grade mineralization including 39.7 meters grading 9.5% zinc and lead, plus 131 grams per ton silver. Deeper copper-silver zones return grades up to 3.72% copper and 838 grams per ton silver. Group Eleven's strategic position adjacent to Glencore's (GLNCY) Pallas Green deposit reduces exploration risk, while the company benefits from Ireland's infrastructure-rich environment and favorable mining jurisdiction.

Neighboring Glencore holds a 17.1% stake through its Glencore Canada subsidiary, providing strategic validation but also sparking rumors of potential merger and acquisition activity.

Finland's exploration sector shows promise with Arctic Minerals' Hennes Bay project. The project has an inferred resource of 55.39 million tons grading 1.0% copper equivalent, containing 447,000 tons of copper and 37 million ounces of silver.

In Greece, Eldorado Gold is advancing projects including Olympias and Skouries, while planning low-impact mining practices amid regulatory scrutiny. The latter is set to start production in 2026, targeting 140,000 ounces of gold and around 30,000 metric tons of copper per year.

The Greenland Wild Card

Greenland, as a Danish territory, offers substantial untapped potential despite infrastructural challenges. The island's strategic position and vast commodity wealth sparked renewed discussion earlier this year following US President Donald Trump's repeated suggestions to purchase the territory. While rare earth elements kept Greenland in the headlines, its gold mining potential remains notable.

Last month, Amaroq Minerals reported discoveries with grades up to 38.7 grams per ton across multiple sites in the Nanortalik Gold Belt. The company's Nalunaq gold mine resumed production in late 2024 following approvals for environmental and social impacts, with inferred resources supporting one of the world's highest-grade gold operations. Greenland's mineral potential extends to copper, with Amaroq identifying gold-copper systems at Isortup Qoorua, including assays of 1.98% copper.

EU Candidate Countries Enter the Picture

Countries gravitating toward EU economic integration present additional opportunities for mineral development. In Serbia, Chinese-controlled Zijin Mining is executing a massive expansion of the Bor Copper Complex and the Cukaru Peki mine, targeting 290,000 metric tons of copper in 2025, with long-term goals of reaching 450,000 tons annually. The company's $3.5 billion investment plan includes drilling to depths of up to 2 kilometers and expanding throughput to 15,000 tons per day, positioning Serbia as Europe's second-largest copper producer.

Serbia's political uncertainty continues to pose risks to large-scale investment, though. Rio Tinto (RIO) has just mothballed the $3 billion Jadar lithium project, citing the project's lack of permitting progress. That's a polite way of saying the regulatory environment remains challenging.

Bosnia and Herzegovina's mining sector centers on Adriatic Metals' (ADTLF) Vares project, which entered commercial production in July 2025 after declaring sustained operational stability. The polymetallic operation is currently ramping to nameplate capacity of 800,000 tons per annum, extracting copper, silver, lead, zinc, and gold with investments exceeding €200 million.

Why European Mining Moves at a Crawl

European mining projects face substantially longer development timelines than those in traditional mining regions, creating competitive disadvantages that discourage investment. In Canada or Australia, permitting can be completed within two years under optimal conditions. European processes face significant regional variability.

The European mining bureaucracy has historically focused on environmental protection and stakeholder consultation. The EU's evolving regulatory framework encompasses environmental impact assessments, waste management obligations, and community consultations, often extending project timelines beyond those in competing jurisdictions.

Northern European jurisdictions, including Scandinavia, achieve relatively efficient approvals, with 49% of mining executives reporting permits granted within six months, outpacing even traditional mining leaders. Canadian processes, despite averaging two years, can extend to 15 years for complex projects involving Indigenous consultations and environmental reviews, yet maintain greater transparency than their European counterpart.

Ian Bond at the Centre for European Reform wrote in October: "The EU has equipped itself with a wide variety of legislative and regulatory tools to try to ensure that China cannot gain too much influence through its economic leverage. The strategy remains a patchwork of tools largely applied at the national rather than the EU level, which results in varying degrees of effectiveness in its application."

That's the fundamental tension Europe faces. The continent desperately needs to develop domestic mining capacity to reduce strategic vulnerability, but its own regulatory complexity makes that difficult to achieve quickly. It's not an easy problem to solve, but given the geopolitical environment, Europe doesn't have much choice but to figure it out.

    Europe's Mining Problem: Finding Precious Metals When Supply Chains Are Breaking Down - MarketDash News