Energy · Brazil
Key Facts
—The visit. The EU’s international-partnerships commissioner, Jozef Síkela, toured a rare-earth processing site in Minas Gerais, Brazil, on June 20.
—The pitch. Brussels wants Brazil to refine minerals at home rather than ship raw ore, securing European supply through purchase deals.
—First deal. The site’s owner, Viridis, signed a non-binding letter this month to supply Belgium’s Solvay, with a firm deal possibly done by end-July.
—Treaty next. Síkela said the EU plans a memorandum of understanding with Brazil’s government, with nickel and lithium also named as priorities.
—The prize. Brazil holds the world’s second-largest reserves of critical minerals, the inputs for electric vehicles, wind turbines and defence kit.
—The rival. China refines an estimated 85% to 90% of the world’s rare earths, the dependence Europe is racing to reduce.
The EU Brazil rare earth push has spent months as a political framework; this week it began to look like actual business, with a commissioner on the ground and a first supply deal taking shape.
Europe wants to break China’s grip on the metals that power electric cars, wind farms and weapons. Its chosen partner for that is increasingly Brazil.
On June 20 the EU’s commissioner for international partnerships, Jozef Síkela, visited a rare-earth research and processing centre in Poços de Caldas, in the southeastern state of Minas Gerais, in remarks reported by Reuters. It was a sign of how seriously Brussels now takes the relationship.
The site belongs to Viridis, a mining company developing one of four Brazilian projects the EU has shortlisted. Síkela called Brazil the bloc’s most strategic partner in Latin America.
Why the EU Brazil rare earth deal is moving now
The core of Europe’s offer is value, not just volume. Brussels wants Brazil to process minerals on home soil and climb into higher-margin production, rather than simply export raw ore.
That matches Brazil’s own ambition. The country holds the world’s second-largest reserves of critical minerals but has long shipped them out cheaply, capturing little of the value.
The endowment is striking. Brazil holds an estimated 94% of the world’s niobium reserves and ranks among the top holders of graphite and nickel, a spread that few countries can match.
The most concrete sign of progress is corporate. Viridis signed a non-binding letter of intent this month to supply mixed rare-earth carbonate to Solvay, the Belgian chemicals group, with its chief executive saying a firm deal could close by the end of July.
Viridis is also putting real money behind it. The company plans to invest about $360m in a commercial plant capable of producing 15,000 tonnes of that carbonate a year from 2028.
At government level, the next step is a treaty. Síkela said the EU intends to advance a memorandum of understanding with Brazil, naming nickel and lithium as further priorities, though the details are still being negotiated.
The China problem behind the courtship
The urgency comes from one number. China refines an estimated 85% to 90% of the world’s rare earths, a chokehold that leaves European carmakers and defence firms exposed.
That exposure stopped being theoretical. Recent Chinese export curbs on dual-use goods, including a strike at the American buyer of Brazil’s only working rare-earth mine, showed how fast Beijing can squeeze supply.
Europe’s answer is its Critical Raw Materials Act, which sets targets to source more minerals at home and cap reliance on any single country. The Brazil projects are meant to help meet those goals.
The real test is the middle of the chain. China’s dominance lies in refining and magnet-making, not the mines, so the question is whether Europe will fund processing in Brazil rather than just buy the output.
What it means for investors
For an outside investor, the shift from talk to contracts is the signal to watch. A political framework is cheap; a binding offtake deal and a built refinery are not.
The Solvay letter and the planned memorandum are the first real markers. Whether they harden into financed plants will decide if Brazil becomes a genuine alternative source or stays a promising map of reserves.
The timing also helps. With the long-delayed EU–Mercosur trade deal advancing, minerals give Brussels and Brasilia a concrete, high-value project to anchor the wider relationship.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the EU Brazil rare earth partnership?
It is a push by the European Union to source critical minerals such as rare earths, lithium and nickel from Brazil, reducing reliance on China. The EU has shortlisted four Brazilian projects and wants minerals refined locally.
What new step did the EU take this week?
Commissioner Jozef Síkela visited a rare-earth site in Minas Gerais on June 20 and said the EU plans a memorandum of understanding with Brazil. A first supply letter between Viridis and Belgium’s Solvay could become a firm deal by end-July.
Why does the EU Brazil rare earth deal matter?
China refines most of the world’s rare earths, leaving Europe’s car and defence industries exposed. Sourcing and processing minerals in Brazil would give the bloc a strategic alternative, if Europe funds the refining and not just the mining.
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