Weekly energy market update:...

Brent oil futures for the Front Month on the ICE market reached their...

Europe: Electricity prices stable...

During the fourth week of November, electricity prices in most major European markets...

Europe: Southern demand rises...

During the week of November 24, electricity demand showed a contrasting pattern across...

Europe: Solar production declines...

During the week of November 24, solar photovoltaic (PV) energy production declined in...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeUncategorizedSerbia and EU...

Serbia and EU close to agreement on battery materials

The EU and Serbia are set to sign a deal over the supply of battery materials, the German government said Wednesday, a day after Belgrade allowed work to resume at a disputed lithium mining project.

Lithium is a strategically valuable metal crucial for making electric vehicle batteries and is key to helping Germany’s flagship automotive sector transition to greener production.

On Friday Serbia and the EU will sign a memorandum of understanding on “a strategic partnership on sustainable raw materials, battery supply chains and electric cars“, German government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit told reporters in Berlin.

The agreement is planned at a “critical raw materials summit” in Serbia which will be attended by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and European Commission Vice-President Maros Sefcovic, Hebestreit said.

He added that the deal came against the “backdrop of a sustainable lithium extraction project” in Serbia, which has been a political fault line in the Balkan country in recent years.

On Tuesday the government in Belgrade said operations could restart at a site near the western Serbian city of Loznica where vast mineral deposits discovered in 2004 are to be mined by Rio Tinto.

The project triggered mass protests and a long legal battle but last week Serbia’s constitutional court issued a ruling paving the way for work to resume.

Rio Tinto says the area holds one of Europe’s largest reserves of lithium and could produce 58,000 tonnes annually, enough for 1.1 million electric vehicles.

However, opponents have expressed worries over the mine’s impact on the environment and public health.

Rio Tinto has insisted that the project “will be subject to stringent environmental requirements in compliance with Serbia and EU regulations” and Hebestreit said the planned deal with Serbia would also include an “obligation to meet high environmental and sustainability standards”.

Vucic has hinted that Serbia could begin mining lithium as early as 2028, barrons.com reports.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Serbia: SEEPEX day-ahead market sees November trading dip amid stable prices

In November 2025, a total of 466,713.6 MWh of electricity was traded on the day-ahead market at the Serbian energy exchange SEEPEX, marking an 8.8% decrease compared to October. This corresponds to an average of 15,557.1 MWh traded per...

Serbia 2035: The fully integrated renewable economy

By 2035, Serbia will be a profoundly different energy and economic system than the one it operates today. The country stands at the threshold of a rare structural transformation—one that touches electricity, industry, manufacturing, transport, construction, finance and regional...

Serbia’s workforce challenge: Can the country train enough engineers for the renewable boom?

Serbia’s renewable-energy sector is expanding at a pace the country has never experienced before. Wind farms, solar parks, hybrid plants, substations, transmission corridors, battery systems and industrial PPAs are all driving a surge in investment that will transform the...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!