metallurgy

From volume to value: How Serbia can reposition its metallurgy and materials base in Europe’s industrial transition

Europe’s shift from volume-driven metallurgy toward value-intensive, technology-led materials production is reshaping the continent’s industrial geography. For Serbia, this transition is not a peripheral trend but a strategic opening. The country sits at the intersection of European manufacturing demand, South-East European energy systems, and emerging near-sourcing logic driven by carbon constraints, security of supply, and […]

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Recycling-linked metallurgy in Serbia: A quantified industrial finance model

Recycling-linked metallurgy offers Serbia one of the clearest pathways to expand heavy industry without importing Europe’s structural disadvantages of high energy cost, carbon exposure, and balance-sheet volatility. When analysed through a capital-markets lens, the appeal lies not in absolute scale but in capital efficiency, EBITDA density, and policy alignment, all of which are increasingly decisive for industrial financing

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Recycling-linked metallurgy and the economics of circular heavy industry in Serbia

Europe’s raw-material dependency is often discussed in geopolitical terms, but its most immediate industrial response is not new mining; it is recycling-linked metallurgy. Circularity is no longer a sustainability slogan. It has become an economic necessity driven by energy prices, carbon costs, and supply-chain risk. Across steel, aluminium, and copper, recycled material now represents the lowest-cost, lowest-carbon

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