Iron-ore miner LKAB says it has identified “significant deposits” of rare earth elements in Arctic Sweden that are essential for the manufacture of electric vehicles and wind turbines.
The Swedish government-owned company, which mines iron ore at Kiruna, nearly 600 miles north of Stockholm, said there are more than a million tons of rare earth oxides.
“This is the largest known deposit of rare earth elements in our part of the world, and it could become a significant building block for producing the critical raw materials that are absolutely crucial to enable the green transition,” said LKAB chief executive Jan Mostrom.
“Without mines, there can be no electric vehicles.”
Ebba Busch, Sweden’s minister for energy and business, said: “The EU’s self-sufficiency and independence from Russia and China will begin in the mine.
”We need to strengthen industrial value chains in Europe and create real opportunities for the electrification of our societies.
“Politics must give the industry the conditions to switch to green and fossil-free production.”
New exploration results from the Per Geijer ore body in Kiruna shows mineral resources of rare earth elements of more than a million tonnes, making it Europe’s largest deposit of its kind.
Learn more: https://t.co/YBcKR4FwUa pic.twitter.com/ss6teczvl6— LKAB (@LKABgroup) January 12, 2023
Rare earths reach into the lives of almost everyone on the planet, in everything from hard drives and mobile phones to lifts and trains.
They are especially vital to the fast-growing field of green energy, feeding wind turbines and electric car engines.
Exploration at the site will not start for years even if permits are delivered quickly.