In Race for Critical Minerals, EU Can’t Get Out of Its Own Way

May 11, 2026, 4:00 AM UTC

For the European Union, the fate of a Cold War-era mine near Bratislava is becoming a litmus test for its ambition to break free from China’s chokehold over critical minerals.

Sitting in a wooded range of hills in Slovakia known as the Little Carpathians, the so-called Trojarova project is where Soviet engineers first discovered a rich seam of antimony in the 1980s. Its owners, Canada-based Military Metals Corp, are pitching the facility as a chance for Europe to secure access to an uncommon metal used in military equipment.

For crucial resources such as antimony, EU nations appear unable put up ...

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