Focus on germanium, antimony mining, vital mineral resources

The Greek government, along with its Ministry of Environment and Energy, is placing significant emphasis on harnessing the potential of the country’s mineral resources, with particular attention directed towards the utilization of germanium and antimony elements, both vital for industry and the energy transition.

Rockfire Resources plc, a UK-based exploration company focusing on precious metals, base metals, and critical minerals – its subsidiaries include Hellenic Minerals I.K.E. – revealed last year that it had identified germanium deposits at the Molaoi mine in southeastern Peloponnese. The company is currently awaiting EU funding to progress with the development and utilization of these resources.

The European Union’s Environment Agency has identified germanium as one of the top 20 raw materials considered critical metals by the European Commission, given the potential risk of supply shortages.

Germanium is an important semiconducting material, while its compounds are used, among other things, for telecommunications optical fibres, as polymerization catalysts and in photovoltaics, while it is also widely used in various sectors of the chemical industry and metallurgy.

Germanium holds significant importance as a semiconducting material. Its compounds find application in diverse areas, including telecommunications optical fibers, photovoltaics, and serve as polymerization catalysts. Furthermore, germanium plays a crucial role in various sectors of the chemical industry and metallurgy.

As for the country’s antimony deposits, Greece possesses great potential, Theodoros Skylalakis, the Minister of Environment and Energy, highlighted at a recent EU energy council meeting.

The EU is willing to support European antimony extraction efforts as 87 percent of the world’s production of this mineral resource hails from China.

Antimony is used in the production of refractory materials, dyes, as well as in the glass industry, batteries and semiconductors.

Deputy Minister of Environment and Energy Alexandra Sdoukou, speaking at a recent conference titled “Greek specific issues: new raw materials industrial projects in Greece”, announced the launch of a tender for the lease of a mining site in order to determine the existence and exploitation of antimony, a mineral included in all EU lists from 2011 to date as a critical strategic metal.