Highlights
- European Commission Executive VP Stéphane Séjourné's visit to Neo Performance Materials' Estonia facility signals the EU's commitment to building non-Chinese critical mineral supply chains through the RESourceEU policy.
- Neo operates the only commercial rare earth separation plant in the EU (Silmet, Estonia) plus magnet manufacturing capabilities, controlling the full value chain from separation to finished magnets.
- Neo is strategically positioned to benefit whether EU funding accelerates or stalls, as its existing non-Chinese magnet production becomes increasingly valuable amid global supply scarcity.
When European Commission Executive Vice President Stéphane Séjourné toured Neo Performance Materials’ (opens in a new tab) rare earth magnet plant in Estonia this week, the optics were unmistakable: Europe is elevating the strategic importance of homegrown magnet manufacturing, and Neo—with facilities spanning rare earth separation to finished magnets—is one of the very few non-Chinese companies capable of doing it at scale.
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European Commission Executive Vice President Stéphane Séjourné
Neo CEORahim Suleman highlighted the Commissioner's deep engagement with the science and economics of magnet manufacturing—an art Europe urgently needs to relearn. The visit dovetailed with the EU’s RESourceEU announcements, a policy framework aimed at stockpiling, joint sourcing, financing tools, and updated regulatory pathways to build durable, non-Chinese critical-mineral supply chains.

For investors, the symbolism matters as much as the policy: Neo is becoming central to Europe’s rare earth independence narrative.
A Company Built for This Moment
Neo Performance Materials is not a newcomer riding geopolitical tailwinds. It operates a global suite of businesses across the value chain:
- Silmet (Estonia): The only commercial rare earth separation plant in the EU.
- Magnet manufacturing: Including sintered NdFeB capabilities in Europe—an exceptionally rare non-Chinese footprint plus a couple facilities in China
- Advanced materials: Serving automotive, EV motors, electronics, aerospace, and green-tech markets.
Neo’s competitive edge has always been its ability to combine upstream separation, midstream alloying, and downstream magnet making—exactly the capabilities Europe lacks, and exactly the bottlenecks China dominates.
Reading Between the Lines: Policy Momentum Meets Market Reality
Europe ispreparing new levers for stockpiling and supply-chain cooperation. Yetit is equally true that Europe has repeatedly announced ambitious strategies without delivering equivalent industrial execution. The enthusiasm is real, but the timeline remains uncertain.
Still, the EU’s presence at Neo’s plant signals that Brussels is aligning its political weight with proven industrial actors—not speculative startups. It is a rare instance where rhetoric and capacity actually meet.
Why This Matters for the Rare Earth Investor
Neo’s Estonia facility is strategically irreplaceable. If the EU can fund and scale domestic magnet capacity through RESourceEU, Neo stands to benefit disproportionately. If Europe stalls, Neo still gains—because scarcity makes its existing non-Chinese magnet output more valuable.
Either way, Neo is positioned not as a follower, but as the anchor manufacturer in Europe’s rare earth revival.
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