The world order is fracturing and the European Union must turn to outer space in
its search for raw materials.
In short, it needs to mine the Moon.
So argues the European Commission in a new report on the key threats to Europe’s
security and prosperity, published Tuesday.
“[T]he global order has been shaken tremendously,” the EU executive’s sixth
annual Strategic Foresight Report warned, adding non-EU countries may no longer
be relied upon to supply materials vital in low-carbon energy technology.
“In response, there may be a growing emphasis on … advanced mining technologies
including space mining, starting with the Moon,” the report said.
Metals such as lithium, copper, nickel and rare earths are essential for
renewable energy and electric vehicles, and very few of them are mined within
the EU. The Commission is worried countries with rich reserves of these metals
could team up to manipulate supply, the same way the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) manipulates oil supply.
This could drive up prices and “restrict access to essential materials, posing a
serious challenge to the EU’s strategic autonomy and clean energy transition,”
the Commission said.
HAS BRUSSELS GONE MAD?
Space mining has been promoted by many government agencies, including the U.S.
government’s NASA and Japan’s JAXA.
In the EU, Luxembourg has positioned itself as Europe’s space mining hub, with
hopes of mining the Moon and asteroids using robots. These celestial bodies are
often rich in useful metals such as rare earths, aluminum, titanium, and
manganese, as well as precious metals like gold and platinum.
In June this year, the Commission released its Vision for the Space Economy, in
which it estimated so-called space resources could be worth up to €170 billion
between 2018 and 2045.
Still, industrial-scale space mining remains a distant dream, and practical
solutions for mining and transporting mined metals back to Earth are in their
infancy.
The EU has also fallen behind on establishing critical raw material supply
chains and refining capacity. | Christopher Neundrof/EPA
WHY IS EUROPE WORRIED?
The energy transition is sending demand for critical minerals (literally)
skyrocketing. To meet the goals of the Paris climate agreement, for example, the
world needs to mine as much copper over the next 25 years as has been mined in
the whole of human history, according to some estimates. Copper is essential in
anything that uses electricity.
It’s a similar story for lithium, used in EV batteries. The European Commission
expects EU lithium demand for batteries to be 12 times higher in 2030 than in
2020, and 21 times higher in 2050. Currently, the EU does not mine any lithium
at all.
The EU’s small, densely populated landmass, comparatively strong environmental
protections, and active civil society make it a difficult jurisdiction in which
to develop mines, even when resources are discovered. People don’t like having
mines in their backyard, as mining giant Rio Tinto’s attempt to open a lithium
mine in the EU’s neighbor, Serbia, has shown.
The EU has also fallen behind on establishing critical raw material supply
chains and refining capacity.
Meanwhile, forward-thinking China has established a stranglehold on critical raw
material supply chains, refining 40 percent of the world’s copper, 60 percent of
its lithium, 70 percent of its cobalt, and nearly 100 percent of its graphite,
according to a report last year by the Jacques Delors Centre.
“The EU … imports close to 100 per cent of its rare earths from China,” the
Delors report said. “This exposes it to supply disruptions and price volatility,
amplifying vulnerabilities in critical sectors.”