Zürcher Nachrichten - Sweden's Sami fear for future amid rare earth mining plans

EUR -
AED 4.337789
AFN 77.955631
ALL 96.755197
AMD 449.01782
ANG 2.11436
AOA 1083.11748
ARS 1714.991769
AUD 1.680903
AWG 2.126077
AZN 2.003623
BAM 1.955442
BBD 2.389263
BDT 145.083447
BGN 1.983595
BHD 0.445336
BIF 3528.88785
BMD 1.181154
BND 1.507992
BOB 8.226494
BRL 6.218962
BSD 1.186283
BTN 108.480146
BWP 15.624848
BYN 3.396778
BYR 23150.614952
BZD 2.385763
CAD 1.615163
CDF 2545.386154
CHF 0.918343
CLF 0.025875
CLP 1021.698128
CNY 8.204888
CNH 8.188343
COP 4286.407228
CRC 589.051003
CUC 1.181154
CUP 31.300576
CVE 110.244823
CZK 24.295626
DJF 211.241338
DKK 7.468671
DOP 74.984682
DZD 153.383359
EGP 55.514703
ERN 17.717307
ETB 185.059273
FJD 2.594346
FKP 0.861952
GBP 0.863246
GEL 3.183183
GGP 0.861952
GHS 13.007619
GIP 0.861952
GMD 86.794294
GNF 10417.295638
GTQ 9.102334
GYD 248.184577
HKD 9.228207
HNL 31.338674
HRK 7.536001
HTG 155.592055
HUF 380.589611
IDR 19798.264169
ILS 3.650461
IMP 0.861952
INR 106.427274
IQD 1554.009005
IRR 49756.105026
ISK 145.211105
JEP 0.861952
JMD 186.399493
JOD 0.837475
JPY 183.743887
KES 152.309797
KGS 103.291835
KHR 4779.827963
KMF 493.722575
KPW 1063.038442
KRW 1708.456332
KWD 0.362804
KYD 0.988515
KZT 599.055432
LAK 25511.330892
LBP 105750.711543
LKR 367.351212
LRD 220.049726
LSL 18.992424
LTL 3.487641
LVL 0.714468
LYD 7.494628
MAD 10.81772
MDL 20.083324
MGA 5293.997707
MKD 61.622244
MMK 2480.407042
MNT 4210.370736
MOP 9.543113
MRU 47.141891
MUR 54.202952
MVR 18.248559
MWK 2058.465599
MXN 20.457462
MYR 4.63843
MZN 75.298821
NAD 18.992585
NGN 1651.572071
NIO 43.685847
NOK 11.416147
NPR 173.703506
NZD 1.95266
OMR 0.454167
PAB 1.186283
PEN 3.995469
PGK 5.087074
PHP 69.722921
PKR 332.307261
PLN 4.219601
PYG 7887.556412
QAR 4.336506
RON 5.096325
RSD 117.438577
RUB 90.651241
RWF 1735.619524
SAR 4.429389
SBD 9.517857
SCR 16.416211
SDG 710.460956
SEK 10.539004
SGD 1.499433
SHP 0.886171
SLE 28.908779
SLL 24768.204249
SOS 678.498558
SRD 44.913357
STD 24447.499419
STN 24.514815
SVC 10.380056
SYP 13063.05918
SZL 18.997677
THB 37.156767
TJS 11.079572
TMT 4.14585
TND 3.422474
TOP 2.843935
TRY 51.371947
TTD 8.031598
TWD 37.277802
TZS 3055.101843
UAH 51.12635
UGX 4237.224499
USD 1.181154
UYU 46.021577
UZS 14502.345767
VES 438.964675
VND 30707.046542
VUV 140.742405
WST 3.201849
XAF 656.348104
XAG 0.013527
XAU 0.00024
XCD 3.192127
XCG 2.1379
XDR 0.816262
XOF 655.836968
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.557585
ZAR 18.87159
ZMK 10631.795497
ZMW 23.279739
ZWL 380.331049
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    16.7

    +4.19%

  • AZN

    1.3100

    188.41

    +0.7%

  • VOD

    0.2600

    14.91

    +1.74%

  • BTI

    0.3100

    60.99

    +0.51%

  • RELX

    -0.2700

    35.53

    -0.76%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.75

    -0.04%

  • RIO

    1.4900

    92.52

    +1.61%

  • GSK

    0.8700

    52.47

    +1.66%

  • NGG

    -0.6600

    84.61

    -0.78%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    25.83

    -0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.08

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    0.9400

    81.75

    +1.15%

  • BP

    -0.1800

    37.7

    -0.48%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.15

    +0.53%

Sweden's Sami fear for future amid rare earth mining plans
Sweden's Sami fear for future amid rare earth mining plans / Photo: Jonathan NACKSTRAND - AFP/File

Sweden's Sami fear for future amid rare earth mining plans

Sweden's indigenous Sami fear they will lose their livelihood and culture if plans go ahead to mine a large rare earths deposit located on their traditional reindeer grazing grounds in the far north.

Text size:

Rare earth elements are essential for the green transition, including electric vehicle battery production, and the large discovery made in Sweden in early 2023, as well as an even bigger one in Norway in 2024, has boosted Europe's hopes of cutting its dependence on China.

The Asian country is home to 92 percent of the world's refined rare earth production and 60 percent of rare earth mining.

Almost a kilometre underground in the Arctic town of Kiruna, Sweden's state-owned mining company LKAB is blasting an exploration tunnel from its iron ore mine to the neighbouring Per Geijer deposit, to assess its potential.

Its machines are advancing by five metres a day.

"We don't have any rare earths exploration or mining in Europe, so this has great potential," LKAB vice president Niklas Johansson told AFP on a recent visit.

However, there are "also a lot of challenges", he added.

- 'Legal hurdles' -

"There is political will" to mine the deposit, but also "a lot of legal hurdles, permitting processes, which the new rules are supposed to make easier," he said.

"But we still haven't seen any of it."

The "new rules" he's referring to are 47 "strategic projects" regarding rare earths and strategic materials drawn up by the European Commission in March 2025 and fast-tracked for approval.

Per Geijer is one of them. In theory, the mining permit procedure is supposed to take a maximum of 27 months.

LKAB has yet to receive its permit, and Johansson is seasoned enough to know it could take much longer.

"We might be looking at 10 years just to get the permit", and then "a couple of years in order to make a mine".

- 'Existential threat' -

The prospect of a mining eldorado in the region has Sami reindeer herders worried.

"We are really quite desperate," said Lars-Marcus Kuhmunen, a herder and head of the Gabna Sami community.

"We could be the last generation of Sami in this area," he said. Kiruna, he added, "will be a black spot on the map".

Their entire livelihood is at stake.

The planned mine "is set to obstruct the only remaining seasonal migration route connecting the winter pastures and summer pastures", explained Rasmus Klocker Larsen, a researcher at the Stockholm Environment Institute.

"The risk is that people are pushed to quit herding, and Sami customs and knowledge are not handed down to new generations," he added.

Larsen is currently conducting a study on the impact that mining projects on Sami lands have on the indigenous community's human rights.

Kuhmunen said the rare earths mine would cut the community's land "in half".

"Then we can't conduct our traditional reindeer herding as we have done for 400-500 years."

LKAB insisted the company would find a solution with the Sami.

"The Per Geijer project is still at an early stage with a lot of studies ongoing, including on which protection, adaptation and compensation measures will need to be taken regarding reindeer herding," LKAB sustainability director Pia Lindstrom told AFP.

"We think it is possible for both of our businesses to continue to operate and grow," she said.

- 'Culture, not money' -

But the Sami and LKAB representatives "don't speak the same language", argued Kuhmunen.

The discussions always revolve around financial compensation, he said.

"We don't want money," he stressed.

"We want our culture and reindeer herding to improve."

According to LKAB, the rare earths in the Per Geijer deposit are located in what is mainly an iron ore deposit, and can therefore be produced as by-products.

LKAB intends therefore to continue to extract iron ore at the Kiruna mine as it has since 1890, in order to make the rare earth and phosphorous mining profitable.

While the Per Geijer deposit is the second-biggest known deposit in Europe, it remains small on a global scale, representing less than one percent of the 120 million tonnes estimated worldwide by the US Geological Survey.

M.Hug--NZN