Highlights
- DGWA chief Stefan Müller warns that Europe is missing its chance on critical minerals while the U.S. and Japan secure deposits and processing capacity—the real strategic chokepoint.
- Processing, including separation, refining, and chemical conversion, is the hard bottleneck where China's decades of expertise, scale, and permitting tolerance create an advantage—not just mine access.
- Europe's policy approach won't solve a chemistry problem: without capital, offtakes, and processing capacity now, it will pay a dependency premium later in magnet supply chains.
A German business daily (FAZ (opens in a new tab)) quotes commodities adviser Stefan Müller (DGWA) arguing that Europe is “missing its chance” on critical minerals while the U.S. and Japan lock up deposits and processing pathways. The core warning is familiar to Rare Earth Exchanges™ readers: the mine is not the chokepoint—processing is. Europe can identify “projects” all day, but if it cannot separate, refine, and convert material into magnet-grade inputs, it remains strategically exposed.
Table of Contents
Stefan Müller—Keeping it Real in Europe

The Parts That Ring True in the Supply Chain
Müller is on solid ground when he stresses the “second step” problem—separation, refining, and chemical conversion—as the hard bottleneck. That is where China’s advantage sits: not just ore access, but decades of process know-how, scale, and permitting tolerance. He is also right that critical minerals are not software. Timelines are long (often a decade-plus), and the number of bankable projects is limited by geology, permitting, capex, and downstream contracts.
His plain-language explanation of why “rocks aren’t usable” without complex, energy-intensive processing is accurate—and investor-relevant. Processing is where costs, environmental friction, and schedule risk concentrate.
The Numbers That Need Receipts
Several claims read more like persuasion than documented fact in the excerpt:
The assertion that the U.S. has put “at least $50B” into projects “this year alone” is plausible-sounding but unverified here. Many of the announcements are possibilities of loans, not hard cash on the table.
The “Australia $8.5B rare earth agreement with the U.S.” reference may reflect real deal chatter, but it’s stated without specifics (which project, which parties, what instrument).* The line that “most interesting projects don’t have ESG risk is too sweeping. ESG exposure varies by jurisdiction, labor model, and tailings chemistry—and investors price that risk for a reason.
What’s Notable, and Why This Matters Now
The most important signal isn’t the rhetoric (“damning indictment”). It’s the implicit admission that Europe is still trying to policy its way out of a chemistry problem. Platforms and project lists help—capital, offtakes, and processing capacity help more. If Europe does not pay the “learning curve tax” now, it will pay the “dependency premium” later—often in magnet supply, not headlines.
Citation: Sven Astheimer (FAZ), interview excerpt with Stefan Müller (DGWA), Dec. 27, 2025.
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