The conversation about Serbia’s mining future is overwhelmingly dominated by two icons: lithium and copper. Lithium because it symbolizes electrification, energy transition and geopolitical currency i
Europe needs materials, Serbia needs industry: Aligning interests without surrendering control
Europe’s industrial reality is simple: it cannot meet its energy transition, manufacturing restructuring, and technological competitiveness goals without secure access to critical materials and reliab
Serbia — Europe’s processing hub: Turning resources into industrial power
Europe’s raw materials challenge is widely misunderstood. Public debate tends to orbit around mining projects, geological exploration, and access to resources. Yet the deeper structural gap in Europe’
Nuclear energy is not a project – it is a generational responsibility: Without experts, knowledge and strong institutions, Serbia cannot make a serious decision
Today, nuclear energy is often mentioned in Serbia as if it were a simple technical solution to our energy challenges. In public debate it is presented almost like an infrastructure procurement issue:
Carbon and certificates trading in South-East Europe: The industrial producers’ playbook for survival and advantage
South-East Europe is moving into a period where emissions, carbon pricing, and green electricity certification are no longer policy experiments. They have become structural realities shaping who can c
Green energy certificates, CBAM and the new reality of exporting to the European Union
Green energy certificates and CBAM now sit at the heart of Europe’s industrial trade reality. The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism was created not as a tariff instrument, but as a structural equalis
Serbia’s industrial moment: Why metallurgy and materials processing can become the sovereign backbone of Europe’s new manufacturing era
Serbia is entering a decisive economic moment in which metallurgy and materials processing are no longer simply industrial activities, but the structural foundation of national competitiveness, techno
Serbia as Europe’s industrial second layer: From peripheral economy to strategic processing partner 2035
Europe is entering a new industrial era in which power is no longer defined primarily by who owns natural resources, but by who controls processing. Sovereignty today lies not in mines, but in metallu
South-East Europe as Europe’s chemical lifeline: Why Serbia’s engineering power could anchor the EU’s new industrial generation
Europe’s chemical industry is no longer debating whether it is in crisis. That question has already been answered by plant closures, deferred investments, asset write-downs, and the silent relocation
From extraction to integration: Why Europe prefers SEE and Serbian miners with downstream optionality
For most of modern mining history, success was defined by extraction. The ability to discover deposits, define resources, secure permits, build mines and ship raw outputs into the global marketplace c

