Aluminum   $ 2.1505 kg        |         Cobalt   $ 33.420 kg        |         Copper   $ 8.2940 kg        |         Gallium   $ 222.80 kg        |         Gold   $ 61736.51 kg        |         Indium   $ 284.50 kg        |         Iridium   $ 144678.36 kg        |         Iron Ore   $ 0.1083 kg        |         Lead   $ 2.1718 kg        |         Lithium   $ 29.821 kg        |         Molybdenum   $ 58.750 kg        |         Neodymium   $ 82.608 kg        |         Nickel   $ 20.616 kg        |         Palladium   $ 40303.53 kg        |         Platinum   $ 30972.89 kg        |         Rhodium   $ 131818.06 kg        |         Ruthenium   $ 14950.10 kg        |         Silver   $ 778.87 kg        |         Steel Rebar   $ 0.5063 kg        |         Tellurium   $ 73.354 kg        |         Tin   $ 25.497 kg        |         Uranium   $ 128.42 kg        |         Zinc   $ 2.3825 kg        |         
Czech-Republic-150x150

MINING IN CZECH REPUBLIC

Coking Coal

Coking Coal

1 734 896 metr. t

Lignite

Lignite

29 278 000 metr. t

Kaolin

Kaolin

3 454 000 metr. t

Uranium

Uranium

32 metr. t

The outlook for coal mining in the Czech Republic is weakening, and coal output will decline gradually over the long term. However, the closure of coal mining as well as coal-fired power generation is not expected anytime in 2023 despite the government’s original plan to end hard coal extraction and coal-fired power generation in the country by 2033. Amid the high energy cost crisis and the heavy usage of power in the industrial sector, the government has allowed for the further extraction and expansion of coal mining in the country.

The prospects for the country’s nascent lithium and manganese sectors continue to improve as the EU pushes to develop a local supply chain for electric vehicle manufacturing. Notably, the Cinovec lithium project in the Czech Republic’s Usti region was alleged to be strategic. The nomination means the project will be given priority for grant funding from the Just Transition Fund of the EU, which supports the European region’s reliance on fossil fuels and high-emission industries in their green transition. European Metal’s Cinovec project is regarded as Europe’s largest hard rock lithium deposit and the world’s fourth-largest non-brine deposit.