EU: European Parliament and Council agree on Critical Raw Materials Act
"EU agrees mineral supply targets to cut reliance on China"
Negotiators for EU governments and the European Parliament reached a deal on Monday (13 November) on targets for domestic supply of critical minerals such as lithium and nickel to reduce its reliance on third countries, principally China. [...]
The political agreement now needs to be formally approved by both Parliament and Council in order to become law – a process that is usually a rubber-stamping exercise. It will be put to a vote in the Parliament’s industry, research and energy committee (ITRE) on 7 December. [...]
Higher recycling goal
According to the new benchmark agreed by negotiators, the EU will aim to recycle at least 25% of its annual consumption of strategic raw materials by 2030 – up from 15% in the Commission’s original proposal.
The recycling goal will be based on materials collected from consumer waste rather than the EU’s annual consumption, a change in the calculation method that will be expounded by the European Commission in an implementing act to be adopted in 2027. Meeting the target will not be a legally-binding obligation on EU countries, however. [...]
The new law will also ensure “the highest environmental and social standards,” he added in a statement, saying the Commission will now “work with EU members to identify strategic projects that will benefit from shorter and more efficient permitting procedures and easier access to finance”.
#CriticalRawMaterialsAct was agreed upon right now- in extreme speed compromising human rights and environmental standards https://t.co/NjrjhSEspN
— Johanna_Sydow (@JohannaSydow) November 13, 2023