Serbia May Suspend Lithium Deal With Rio Tinto
SARAJEVO - Serbia may soon decide to annul all contracts related to mining group Rio Tinto's $2.4 billion lithium project in the country, Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said on Saturday, as green groups blocked roads across Serbia protesting against the plan.
Rio Tinto wants to develop the mine near Loznica in the
western Jadar valley, but the local municipality has already scrapped a plan
https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/rio-tinto-pause-lithium-mine-serbia-after-protests-report-2021-12-23
to allocate land for it.
The development is part of Serbia's efforts to bring in
investment and boost economic growth. But environmentalists have staged
protests and blocked roads to press authorities to end the project, which they
say would cause irreparable damage to the area.
Rio has said any development would meet domestic and
European Union environmental standards.
The protests have caused a political headache for the ruling
coalition loyal to President Aleksandar Vucic ahead of April elections.
"We have neither brought them (Rio Tinto) in, nor have
we made promises, nor have we done anything that the people did not know
about," Brnabic told television channel Pink, saying the government was
close to accepting all requests from environmentalists.
"We have worked in a transparent way, we have listened
to the people," Brnabic said, adding the government needed to see how much
it would have to pay out if the deal is annulled.
Brnabic also said the government wanted to win agreement for
any decision from President Aleksandar Vucic, who she said was against the
fulfilling of "requests by foreign services and agencies".
Vucic has repeatedly said that opening the mine would
dependon the outcome of an environmental study and a referendum.
The protesters who blocked roads including in the capital
Belgrade want the government to ban the extraction of lithium not only by Rio
Tinto but any other company.
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