The European Union has signalled a decisive pivot toward direct investment in Australia’s critical-minerals sector as Brussels seeks to reinforce access to materials vital for clean energy and industrial transformation.
Speaking after meetings with Australian ministers and business leaders, European Commission Executive Vice-President and Trade Commissioner Maroš Šefčovič confirmed that the bloc intends to take equity stakes in selected mining and processing projects under a new investment framework.
“We did the first such selection of the projects where we would declare our official interest,” Šefčovič told reporters in Melbourne. “That list should be published very, very soon.”
According to Reuters, the EU plans to finance investments through a mix of equity stakes, long-term offtake agreements, and joint ventures — potentially supported by the European Investment Bank and national development institutions.
The initiative follows a cooperation agreement signed on 17 November between the EIB and the Australian government to strengthen collaboration across the entire raw-materials value chain, from exploration to recycling. It builds on the EU’s Critical Raw Materials Act, adopted earlier this year, which sets new diversification targets for sourcing and processing key minerals.
The projects under review are understood to include Australian lithium, nickel, and rare-earth operations — commodities central to electric-vehicle batteries, magnets, and renewable-energy technologies. Australia remains one of the world’s largest suppliers of these materials, while Europe depends heavily on China for refining and processing.
Šefčovič said the move forms part of Europe’s effort to avoid the supply shocks experienced in recent years. “We in Europe paid so much for dependencies over the last years,” he said. “It started with Russian oil and gas — we know how much we over-paid when we had to diversify very quickly.”
For Australia, the initiative dovetails with its Future Made in Australia agenda and 2024 Critical Minerals Strategy, both of which encourage foreign partners to invest in domestic value-adding and processing capacity rather than solely extraction. King described the collaboration as a “natural next step” in strengthening allied supply chains while maintaining Australia’s commitment to environmental and social governance standards.
The agreement also comes as trade talks between Brussels and Canberra resume, following last year’s stalled negotiations over agricultural market access. Both sides have expressed optimism about concluding a comprehensive free-trade deal that would expand cooperation in energy, technology, and resources.
Analysts expect the EU’s shortlist of investment-ready Australian projects to be released within weeks, with first transactions potentially announced in 2026. The European Commission has suggested that the model could later extend to partnerships with Canada, Chile, and southern Africa.
The EU’s shift from policy advocacy to direct capital participation marks a new phase in the global contest to secure raw-materials resilience. For Australia, it signals growing international recognition of its strategic role in the world’s clean-energy supply chain — and a reminder that resource diplomacy now carries as much weight as trade policy itself.





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