Europe's Critical Raw Materials Act faces a fundamental implementation barrier: community opposition has emerged as the decisive constraint for new mining projects, not geology or economics.
With 85% of known domestic mineral deposits lying within or near environmentally protected areas, as demonstrated by CIRAN, operationalising the CRMA requires institutional innovations grounded in community realities. Drawing on stakeholder consultations across European regions, the CIRAN Consortium identified three prerequisites for community acceptance: (1) demonstrable material criticality for societal needs, (2) minimal environmental impact through technological innovation, and (3) fair and binding benefit-sharing.
CIRAN developed two complementary institutional mechanisms—systematic decision-making frameworks and Community Development Agreements—that address those conditions while upholding democratic values and environmental standards. These frameworks require no changes to EU legislation, are adaptable across Member State contexts, and provide practical pathways for reconciling strategic resource security with local legitimacy.
CIRAN proposed a logical framework justifying extraction based on system-oriented assessment and co-creation of knowledge (i.e. tested and validated by communities located in or near environmentally protected areas). It developed novel social contract models (Community Development Agreements) identifying rights, obligations, and responsibilities of governments (national/regional), communities, and mine operators, capable of addressing transformations and challenges due to climate change.
As a distinctive feature, CIRAN brought together 24 external experts on environmental, political, social, economic, and technological factors shaping energy transition responses and CRM demand. These experts, organised in four Expert Groups (EGs), supported the Consortium by conveying insights on policy-making and implementation, economic drivers, technologies, mining, local governance, social capital, nature conservation, and biodiversity.