• Overview
  • Programme
  • Outcomes

Event organized by the UN Working Group on Transforming the Extractive Industries for Sustainable Development, as a side event to the EU Raw Materials week 2024

As the world grapples with the escalating demand for critical raw materials, particularly in renewable energy and other vital industries, the need for global cooperation in responsible and equitable governance has never been more pressing. 

This session will underscore the UN Secretary-General’s Panel on Critical Energy Transition Minerals (CETMs) Principles and Actionable Recommendations. The event will bring together representatives from the UN, European Commission, countries, and other stakeholders. 

The discussions will stress the imperative to ensure that resource-rich developing countries are the primary beneficiaries of these opportunities while safeguarding environmental and human rights. 

The side event will also delve into the ways UN agencies, under the auspices of the UN Working Group on Transforming the Extractive Industries for Sustainable Development, are actively supporting global efforts to enhance accountability, improve resource management, and foster sustainable development, including through the UN Knowledge Hub, UNFC, UNRMS and ICE-SRMs. 

While these initiatives are not the sole focus, they will provide valuable insight into how UN agencies can advance sustainable resource governance and ensure that mineral production contributes to fair economic growth and social equity worldwide.

This is an on-site event.

 

Programme 

Moderator: Martín Abeles, Director, Natural Resources Division, UN ECLAC

Introduction to the UN Secretary-General’s Panel Principles and Actionable Recommendations on CETMs and Leveraging partnerships on CETMs (results of mapping UN support)

  • Elisa Tonda, Chief, Resources and Markets Branch, Industry and Economy Division, UNEP 
  • Janez Potočnik, Co-Chair, UNEP International Resource Panel (IRP)

Panel Discussion: Implementing the UN Principles

  • EU Global Gateway and CETMs actions
  • EU strategic partnerships as a vehicle to socialise the CETM principles
  • UN Tools to support the implementation of Actionable Recommendations 

Panellists:

  • Zuko Godlimpi, Deputy Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition of South Africa
  • Charlotte Adriaen, Adviser on Critical Raw Materials, European External Action Service
  • Peggy Hicks, Director, Thematic Engagement, Special Procedures and Right to Development Division, UN OHCHR
  • Dario Liguti, Director, Sustainable Energy Division, UNECE

Q&A

Closing Remarks (Moderator)

 

UN and EU collaborate to align critical minerals governance with global principles

With demand for minerals critical to renewable energy technologies expected to almost triple by 2030, global and regional leaders gathered at the EU Raw Materials Week 2024 to address the critical challenge governing mineral resources essential for the energy transition. In a key session, UN agencies and the European Commission spotlighted the UN Panel’s Principles for Critical Energy Transition Mineral (CETM), outlining a roadmap to ground the clean energy transition in justice and equity and ensure sustainable, equitable, and transparent CETM value chains while fostering stronger partnerships between resource-producing and consuming nations and relevant stakeholders. 

The “Equitable and Just Energy Transition: Implementing UN Principles on Critical Energy Transition Minerals" session highlighted the urgency of leveraging global and regional partnerships to ensure the opportunities of the global energy transition are pursued with equity, justice and sustainability. 

" The Panel’s report identifies ways to ground the clean energy transition in justice and equity so that it spurs sustainable development, respects people, protects the environment and powers prosperity in resource-rich developing countries. It sets out recommendations for the entire minerals value chain, from investments to refining and manufacturing, transport and end-of-use recycling,” said Elisa Tonda, Chief of the Resources and Markets Branch, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). "The CETM principles provide a clear roadmap for aligning global sustainability goals with the realities of regional and national policies, ensuring no one is left behind." 

The session brought together representatives from Member States, UN agencies, the European Commission, and key stakeholders, emphasizing the role of partnerships in bridging the North-South divide. Developing countries with significant reserves of critical energy transition minerals face environmental degradation, human rights abuses, and limited local value addition. The event underscored the importance of fostering collaboration to address these issues and create mutually beneficial outcomes. The CETM principles were presented as a unifying framework to guide these efforts, complemented by tools like the United Nations Resource Management System (UNRMS), as presented by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE). “UNRMS, developed with support from the EU, is a key instrument to operationalize the principles by enhancing accountability and transparency across mineral value chains,” said Dario Liguti, Director of Sustainable Energy, UNECE. "Partnerships are essential to turning these principles into action. The EU’s drive, particularly through the Critical Raw Materials Act, demonstrates how regional initiatives can align with global frameworks to create a sustainable, inclusive future." 

As the energy transition accelerates, the session underscored the essential need for collaboration between resource-rich countries and those with high resource consumption. By advancing sustainable development, the UN and EU aim to ensure that the benefits of the energy transition are shared equitably, paving the way for a just and resilient future. 

Note to editors  

Background 

The UN Panel on Critical Energy Transition Minerals report is a how-to guide to help generate prosperity and equality alongside clean power. The Panel’s recommendations range from establishing a high-level expert advisory group housed within the United Nations to facilitate multistakeholder policy dialogue and coordination on economic issues in mineral value chains to a global traceability, transparency and accountability framework to creating a fund to address legacy issues as a result of derelict, ownerless or abandoned mines; to empowering artisanal and small-scale miners to become agents of transformation to foster development, environmental stewardship and human rights; and to strengthening material efficiency and circularity. The recommendations recognize the Secretary-General's and the UN's central role as an honest broker and convener of diverse interests on a complex and challenging set of issues critical to the energy transition and achieving the goals of the Paris Agreement on climate change. 

To access the report, the list of panel members, and more, please visit www.un.org/en/climatechange/critical-minerals.