Reemet

⚛ REEmET TECHNOLOGIES

Electrochemically ProducedRare Earth Metals - First in the EU!

REEmet is building EU’s first electrochemical rare earth metallization plant — turning oxides into the NdPr alloy that powers wind turbines and electric vehicles, made with green electricity.

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The Problem

Europe doesn't have a resilient supply
of rare earth metals.

Wind turbines, electric vehicles, and electronics all depend on rare earth metals — but 90% come from China, and zero come from the EU. As demand rises six-fold by 2030, this gap becomes an industrial crisis.

0%
EU rare earth metallization today
Zero plants in operation
90%
Comes from China
5% Japan · 1% USA · 4% other
EU demand growth by 2030
21× by 2050

The Process

From oxide to metal — sustainably.

Molten salt electrolysis converts NdPr oxide into high-purity NdPr metal alloy — the raw material for permanent magnets in EVs and wind turbines.

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STEP 01

NdPr Oxide

Reddish-brown rare earth oxide feedstock from friendly-country sources.

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STEP 02

Electrolysis

In a molten-salt bath at the cathode, oxide is reduced into liquid metal — powered by green electricity.

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STEP 03

NdPr Metal Alloy

High-purity neodymium-praseodymium alloy — ready for permanent magnet manufacturing.

Value Proposition

Built for European resilience.

Resilient Supply

NdPr alloy delivered to magnet makers in Europe — secured against geopolitical disruption.

Local Metallization

Every step from oxide to metal happens within the EU. No outsourcing of critical processing.

Friendly Feedstock

Rare earth oxides sourced exclusively from politically aligned, transparent partners.

Green Electricity

100% renewable energy powering the electrolysis — the cleanest rare earth metal on the market.

Scale-Up Roadmap

From lab to 1,000 tonnes per year.

pilotlab
PHASE 1
2026 Q1
Lab Pilot
12 pilot plant
PHASE 2
2026 Q4
Pilot Plant
20 T/year
13 full scale plant
PHASE 3
2029
Full-Scale Plant
1,000 T/year

Research Partnerships

Backed by leading research institutions.

Joint research and feasibility studies with three Baltic universities.

Tallinn University of Technology

University of Tartu

University of Latvia

Together

Let's build Europe's rare earth supply chain.