Protest against Rio’s proposed lithium mine in Belgrade, Serbia. Source: Reuters
The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

  • Rio Tinto’s (RIO) US$2.4 billion (A$3.34 billion) Serbian lithium project contracts may be cut following last weekends protests and road blockades by environmental activists
  • According to sources, Rio’s involvement was part of an economic plan for the country, but environmentalists say the plan could cause irreversible damage to the region
  • Protesters have forced President Aleksandar Vucic into the light in the few months leading to his next presidential campaign
  • Despite political pressure, Rio Tinto ended the day trading up 2.28 per cent at $105.99 apiece

Rio Tinto’s (RIO) US$2.4 billion (A$3.34 billion) Serbian lithium project contracts may be cut following last weekends protests and road blockades by environmental activists.

RIO previously planned to build a mine in the Jadar Valley, near Loznica, but the local municipality has already scrapped the plan and reallocated the land.

According to sources, Rio’s involvement was part of an economic plan for the country, but environmentalists say the plan could cause irreversible damage to the region.

In response, RIO stated all projects would meet the European Union’s environmental standards.

Protesters have forced President Aleksandar Vucic into the light in the few months leading to his next presidential campaign.

“We have worked in a transparent way, we have listened to the people,” Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said but highlighted the financial repercussions of annulling RIO’s contract.

“We have neither brought Rio Tinto in, nor have we made promises, nor have we done anything that the people did not know about,” Ms Branbic said, citing the government was accepting environmentalists requests.

She said President Vucic had highlighted the continuation of the mine would depend on the outcome of environmental studies and a referendum.

Protesters have asked policymakers to prohibit lithium extraction by all companies, not just Rio Tinto.

Despite political pressure, Rio Tinto ended the day trading up 2.28 per cent at $105.99 apiece.

More From The Market Online

Well below US$5K/oz, gold’s surefire status as a safe haven has shifted

In the post-COVID-19 world, it’s almost definitely news to nobody reading this that gold prices have staged a fairly historic run.
The Market Online Video

From the Wire: Why did the RBA cut last year just to walk it all back 12 months later?

The Reserve Bank of Australia made the call to hike interest rates again in CY26, using its second board meeting to bring them
ASX concept

ASX 200 reacts to an RBA 25bps rate hike by… closing somewhat firmly in the green?

Colour me surprised – the ASX200 successfully priced something in for once, with today’s RBA rate hike not scaring the market down into
India Russia flag

Not just AUKUS indexes: USA’s war on Iran visible on India’s NIFTY; Russia’s MOEX

While the Australian market is busy watching Wall Street, gold, and oil prices – and the prices of relevant stocks exposed to those