Highlights
- KU Leuven's SOLVOMET R&I Centre signed a groundbreaking services agreement with Uzbekistan's Technological Metals Complex.
- The agreement focuses on extracting rare earth elements and rhenium from U-depleted pregnant leach solutions.
- The partnership represents strategic friendshoring for the EU.
- It creates non-Chinese REE pathways and diversifies critical rhenium supply for aerospace and defense applications.
- The collaboration starts in January 2026.
- This partnership exports European hydrometallurgical expertise.
- It aims to build long-term strategic supply networks outside China's dominance.
A quiet but strategically significant deal emerged from EU Critical Raw Materials Week 2025: KU Leuvenโs SOLVOMET R&I Centre (opens in a new tab) has signed a first-ever services agreement with Uzbekistanโs Technological Metals Complex (TMK), (opens in a new tab) marking a new vector of cooperation in rare earth and rhenium recovery.
Table of Contents
The agreementโannounced during the โCritical Raw Materials Investment Opportunities in Uzbekistanโ session hosted by EIT RawMaterials (opens in a new tab) and the European Commissionโs DG INTPA (opens in a new tab)โfocuses on extracting rare earth elements (REEs) and rhenium from U-depleted pregnant leach solutions originating from Uzbekistanโs U-REE-Re deposits. For the West, this is not merely a research collaboration; it is a strategic diversification play.
Inking the Deal

A Technological Bridge to a Resource-Rich Partner
Uzbekistanโs TMK called the partnership โhistoric,โ positioning it as the countryโs entry into world-class hydrometallurgical innovation. But the implications extend beyond Central Asia. Europeโs CRM deficit is structuralโits geology cannot meet its industrial demand for magnet metals or critical superalloys. Partnerships with resource-rich, geopolitically stable states are the only viable path to resilience.
Enter Uzbekistan: a country with underexploited U-REE-Re resources, willing government partners, and a desire to ascend the critical minerals value chain. With SOLVOMETโs expertise in selective leaching and advanced metal recovery, the project offers a credible path to unlocking previously overlooked feedstocks.
Why It Matters for the West
This agreement is a tangible example of friendshoringโa cornerstone of the EUโs external CRM strategy. It reinforces three critical Western priorities:
1. Non-Chinese REE pathways:
Uzbekistan offers REE-bearing ores that bypass the China-centric supply chain.
2. Rhenium supply diversification:
Rheniumโessential for superalloys in aerospace and defenseโremains rare, expensive, and geopolitically sensitive. New recovery routes are strategically meaningful.
3. Technology transfer tied to Western standards:
By anchoring the project in KU Leuvenโs hydrometallurgical expertise, Europe exports know-how while maintaining environmental and governance benchmarks.
A Small Contract, A Big Signal
The project begins in January 2026. It is not a mine, not a refinery, not a megaton REE playโbut it is exactly the type of early-stage, technically credible partnership that often seeds long-term strategic supply networks. In an era where the West must rebuild critical mineral independence step by step, Uzbekistanโs willingness to align with EU institutions is a meaningful geopolitical winโand a reminder that not all strategic advances come in billion-dollar headlines.
ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโข โ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.
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