Finland has a strong mineral cluster, which in addition to mining of minerals also has a high capacity for refining and further processing. In addition, Finland is a producer of high-quality mining technology.
According to the 2023 sector report on the mining industry published by the Ministry of Employment and the Economy, in 2022, a total of 33.2 million tonnes of ore was extracted from Finland’s nine metallic mineral mines (eg, gold, chrome, copper, nickel, zinc, cobalt and silver), and 16.3 million tonnes of industrial mineral ore was extracted from the 26 industrial mineral mines (eg, calcite, dolomite, apatite, talc and quartz).
The legal system in Finland is based on civil law, and mining operations are regulated both at a national and an EU-law level. Exploration and mining operations are regulated by the Mining Act (No 621/2011, kaivoslaki), which regulates exploration and mining and the organising of the use of areas required for mining and exploration. The Mining Act lays down provisions for the exploration and exploitation of a deposit containing mining minerals, for (non-mechanised) gold panning in an area owned by the state and for the termination of related operations, as well as the proceedings for the establishment of a mining area.
The regulations of the Mining Act are supplemented by the Government Decree on Mining Activities (No 391/2012, valtioneuvoston asetus kaivostoiminnasta), the Decree of the Ministry of Employment and the Economy on Mine Hoists (No 1455/2011, työ- ja elinkeinoministeriön asetus kaivosten nostolaitoksista), the Government Decree on Mining Safety (No 1571/2011, valtioneuvoston asetus kaivosturvallisuudesta) and the Government Decree on Extractive Waste (No 190/2013, valtioneuvoston asetus kaivannaisjätteistä).
In Finland, the privilege to exploit a deposit belongs to the finder of the deposit, but the state controls and supervises the mining operations through the granting and supervision of exploration and mining permits under the Mining Act and Government Decree on Mining Activities.
The party first applying for a permit in accordance with the provisions laid down in the Mining Act shall have priority for the permit. If a mining permit is applied for with respect to a deposit located within an area covered by a valid exploration permit, the exploration permit-holder shall have priority for the mining permit if it submits a mining-permit application as set out in the Mining Act during the validity of the exploration permit. For the purpose of preparing an exploration-permit application, an applicant may reserve an area by submitting notification to the mining authority about the matter (reservation notification). A reservation only provides priority for an exploration permit, not other rights.
The landowner is entitled to an exploration fee with respect to exploration permits, and excavation fee and by-product fee with respect to mining permits.
The exploration permit-holder must pay an annual compensation to the owners of land included in the exploration area, which is EUR20 per hectare for each of the first four years, EUR30 per hectare from the fifth to seventh year; EUR40 per hectare from the eighth to tenth year; and EUR50 per hectare for the 11th and for further years of validity of the exploration permit, up to the maximum validity of 15 years.
A mining permit-holder must pay an annual excavation fee to the owners of the land included in the mining area. The excavation fee consists of a fixed annual amount of EUR50 per hectare and a variable fee which is based on the value of the executed and exploited minerals. If the permit authority has postponed the expiry of the mining permit prior to mining having started, or if mining operations have been interrupted for more than five years, the fixed excavation fee is EUR100 per hectare until mining activities are commenced or resumed.
The variable excavation fee is 0.15% of the calculated value of mining minerals included in the metal ores that are excavated and exploited in the course of a year or, if mining minerals other than metallic minerals are in question, taking into consideration the grounds influencing the financial value of the mining minerals, a reasonable compensation for excavated and exploited mining minerals in accordance with either an agreement between the property owner and the holder of a mining permit, or confirmation by the mining authority. The mining authority confirms the amount of the excavation fee annually by its decision based on information that is to be submitted by the holder of the mining permit for that purpose by 15 March each year.
In addition, the mining permit-holder must pay annual property-specific compensation (by-product fee) to each landowner in the mining area for the benefit gained from by-products of mining activities that are used for purposes other than mining activity. The by-product fee shall be moderate, considering the factors influencing the financial value of the by-product. If the mining permit-holder and landowner do not agree on the compensation, it shall be a maximum of 10% of the sales proceeds gained from the by-product. If an agreement is not made on the by-product, it shall be ordered officially in a proceeding establishing a mining area, conducted upon application by the party claiming compensation, the party concerned responsible for prospecting work, or the permit-holder.
The state has a grantor-regulator role in Finland. The parliament enacts the laws. The state controls and supervises the mining operations through the granting and supervision of the exploration and mining permits by the relevant state authorities. The Ministry of Employment and the Economy is responsible for the general guidance, monitoring and development of exploration and mining activities under the Mining Act.
The Finnish Safety and Chemicals Agency (Tukes) acts as the general mining authority responsible for granting exploration and mining permits and enforcement of compliance with the Mining Act. The government, however, decides on matters concerning a redemption permit for a mining area and on mining permits related to the production of uranium or thorium.
Otherwise, there is no mandatory national or government joint venture, contracting or participation in relation to exploration or mining operations in Finland. If an exploration or mining project is located on state-owned properties, the state as a landowner is represented by Metsähallitus, the state-owned enterprise that administrates the state-owned land and water areas.
Mineral rights are transferrable permits granted by state authorities based on the Mining Act for exploration or utilisation of mining minerals which have a property value and can be pledged as a security.
Prospecting Work
Based on the Mining Act, everyone has a right to conduct geological measurements and make observations and to take minor samples in order to find mining minerals, even on another’s land, provided that the activities do not cause damage or more than minor inconvenience or disturbance (prospecting work). The right to carry out prospecting work can be compared to a so-called everyman’s right – ie, the general public’s right which allows the freedom to roam the countryside. Sampling is considered to be allowed as prospecting work if it is carried out – eg, with a hand-held hammer, shovel or hand-held drill, provided that the sampling does not cause damage or more than minor inconvenience or disturbance, and the sampling site is restored.
However, prospecting work may not be carried out on certain restricted areas such as a public cemetery, traffic routes or passages in public use, area used by the defence forces or controlled by Border Guard, as well as areas within 150 metres of buildings intended for residential or work use or comparable space and within 50 metres of a public building or utility, a power line with voltage of over 35,000 volts or a transformer station. In addition, other areas corresponding to the above list that are designated for special use are restricted areas.
Exploration Permit
An exploration permit is needed if the exploration causes damage or more than minor inconvenience or disturbance, and the landowner has not given permission for exploration. The exploration permit is also required if the activity poses any risk to people’s health, general safety or other industrial and commercial activity, as well as any deterioration of values concerning the landscape or nature conservation. Exploration targeted at uranium or thorium always requires an exploration permit.
An exploration permit allows the holder to explore the permitted area and the structures and composition of geological formations, and to conduct other exploration in order to prepare for mining activity and other ore-prospecting in order to locate a deposit and investigate its quality, extent and degree of exploitation. It does not authorise exploitation of the deposit and, subject to the activities allowed based on the exploration permit, does not limit the property-owner’s right to use the area or to dispose of it.
The exploration permit-holder shall limit exploration and other use of the exploration area to measures necessary for the purposes of exploration activity which shall be planned so as not to cause an infringement of public or private interests that is avoidable by reasonable means. Exploration pursuant to an exploration permit, and other use of the exploration area, may not cause harm to people’s health or a danger to public safety; essential damage to other industrial and commercial activity; significant changes in natural conditions; essential damage to rare or valuable natural occurrences; or significant damage to the landscape.
Mining Permit
Establishment of a mine and the undertaking of mining activity requires a mining permit. A mining permit entitles the holder to exploit the mining minerals found in the mining area: the organic and inorganic surface materials, excess rock, and tailings generated as a by-product of mining activities (by-product of mining activity); and other materials belonging to the bedrock and soil of the mining area, insofar as the use thereof is necessary for the purposes of mining operations in the mining area. Moreover, the mining permit entitles its holder to perform exploration within the mining area within the limits set out for exploration under the Mining Act, and possibly more detailed conditions specified in the mining permit.
A mining permit alone does not automatically provide the permit-holder a right to use the mining area or auxiliary area (surface rights). If the applicant for the mining permit does not own the land in respect of which the mining permit is applied or has not secured the right to use the area otherwise contractually, the right to use an area in the possession of another party as a mining area requires a permit from the government (redemption permit for a mining area). A redemption permit for a mining area may be granted if the mining project is based on public need and the mining area meets the requirements laid down in the Mining Act. The requirement of public need shall be assessed particularly on the basis of the impact of the mining project on the local and regional economy and employment, and the social need for raw material supply.
In addition to the redemption permit for a mining area, unless otherwise provided by law, a limited right of use and other rights may be granted in the mining permit to an auxiliary area to a mine that is not owned by the mining permit-holder, provided that the auxiliary area is an area that is indispensable as regards mining activity, is located in the vicinity of the mining area and is necessary for the purposes of road access, transport equipment, power lines or water pipes, sewers, treatment of waters, or a transport route to be excavated to a sufficient distance from the surface. Such a right can be granted only as far as the placement of functions planned for the area cannot be otherwise arranged in a satisfactory manner, and at moderate cost.
The Finnish Safety and Chemicals Agency (Tukes) is the national mining authority that grants exploration and mining permits under the Mining Act and supervises and enforces compliance with the Mining Act. However, mining permit matters relating to production of uranium or thorium under the Mining Act and Nuclear Energy Act (No 990/1987, ydinenergialaki) and a redemption permit for a mining area are handled and granted by the government. Within certain limits, exploration can also be carried out on a contractual basis with the landowner’s permission (see 1.5 Nature of Mineral Rights). However, operators carrying out exploration based on a landowner’s permission are obliged to notify the Tukes in writing of any exploration works prior to the commencement of the works.
An exploration permit shall remain valid for a maximum of four years after the decision has become legally valid, with the possibility of extending its validity for a maximum of three years at a time. In total, the permit may remain valid for a maximum of 15 years. The prerequisites for extending the validity of the permit are that exploration has been effective and systematic and further research is necessary in order to establish the possibilities for exploiting the deposit. Further, it is required that the permit-holder has complied with the obligations laid down in the Mining Act, as well as the permit regulations, and that the extension to the validity will not cause an undue burden to public or private interests. When applying for an extension of a permit that has been valid for at least ten years, extension must have consent of at least half of the landowners of the exploration area.
A mining permit shall remain valid until further notice after becoming legally valid. A mining permit can also be granted for a fixed term, if this is justified in view of the quality and extent of the deposit, the applicant’s ability to meet the conditions for ensuring the commencement of mining activities, and other factors that have emerged during processing of the application. A fixed-term mining permit may remain valid for a maximum of ten years after the decision has become legally valid, after which its validity can be extended until further notice or by ten years at a time.
The permit authority shall review the regulations of a mining permit that is in force until further notice at a maximum interval of ten years. In order to secure essential public or private interests, or for other special reasons, an order can also be given for the regulations of a fixed-term mining permit to be revisited at regular intervals. The revision of permit regulations shall not in any significant way decrease the benefit gained from the mining project.
The permit authority shall decide that the mining permit will expire if the permit-holder has not initiated mining activity within the time limit specified in the permit, or the preparatory work to indicate that the permit-holder is seriously aiming towards actual mining operations. The permit authority shall also decide that the mining permit will expire if mining activities have been interrupted because of a factor dependent on the permit-holder continuously for a minimum of five years, or if mining activities can be considered to have actually ended. The matter may be raised by the permit authority on its own initiative, by the local authority, or by a party suffering damage.
However, the permit authority may postpone the expiry of the mining permit, twice at the most, and specify a new deadline for commencing mining activity or continuing operations. The expiry of a permit can be postponed for a maximum of ten years in total. The permit-holder shall submit an application to the permit authority prior to the expiry of the mining permit, stating a reason for the granting of a time limit and setting forth a plan for commencing or continuing mining activity. Furthermore, the permit authority shall decide that the mining permit will expire if the mining area does not belong to the permit-holder or if the permit-holder has not gained possession of it within five years of the granting of the permit, or if the permit-holder submits an application concerning this.
The mining authority shall alter an exploration or a mining permit, either on its own initiative or upon application by the relevant authority supervising the securing of the public interest in its field or a party suffering damage, if the activities cause a consequence prohibited by the Mining Act, or the detrimental impacts of the activities deviate substantially from the assessments made during permit consideration.
The permit authority may cancel an exploration or a mining permit if incorrect or incomplete information has been given in the application or appendices thereto, such that it has essentially affected the conditions set for granting a permit or the permit consideration in other ways, if the permit-holder no longer meets the requirements for the granting of a permit or if the permit-holder has materially neglected or violated the obligations, restrictions, or permit regulations laid down in the Mining Act. Permits may also be cancelled if the activities are estimated to jeopardise national defence, security of supply, the operation of infrastructure necessary for the functioning of society or other comparable national security interests. If the deficiencies, violations or neglect can be corrected or are insignificant, the permit authority shall set a time limit for the permit-holder in question to rectify the defect, violation or neglect, before making an above-mentioned decision.
An exploration permit or a mining permit may be assigned to another party. The assignee shall fulfil requirements corresponding to those applicable to the permit-holder under the Mining Act. Furthermore, the assignee of a mining permit concerning the production of uranium or thorium shall hold a permit for mining operations as specified in the Nuclear Energy Act. Assignment may be cancelled on the basis of national security (please see the paragraph above).
Environmental Legislation
Environmental issues are regulated by many different national environmental laws and policies. As Finland is a European Union member state, a considerable share of Finnish environmental legislation and policies are based on EU environmental policy and regulation, either as directly applicable EU regulations or through the implementation of EU directives.
The principal environmental laws affecting the mining industry include the Environmental Protection Act, the EPA, (No 527/2014, ympäristönsuojelulaki); the Act on Environmental Impact Assessment Procedures, the EIA Act (No 252/2017, laki ympäristövaikutusten arviointimenettelystä), the Water Act (No 587/2011, vesilaki), which governs water-related construction projects and the use of water resources and the aquatic environment; the Waste Act (No 646/2011, jätelaki), which governs waste management and littering, the prevention of waste generation, and the prevention of danger and harm to human health and the environment caused by waste; the Nature Conservation Act (No 9/2023, luonnonsuojelulaki), which governs nature and landscape conservation and management; the Land Use and Building Act (No 132/1999, maankäyttö- ja rakennuslaki), which governs planning of areas and the construction and use of areas (as of 1 January 2025, the Act will be divided into the Land Use Planning Act (No 132/1999, alueidenkäyttölaki), governing the planning, construction and use of land, and the Building Act (751/2023, rakentamislaki), governing the planning, construction and use of buildings); and the Chemicals Act (No 599/2013, kemikaalilaki), which governs the enforcement of European Union chemicals legislation and certain national obligations regarding chemicals.
Environmental Authorities
The main general authority to control environmental policy, draft environmental legislation and guide other authorities’ work relating to environmental issues is the Ministry of the Environment (ympäristöministeriö).
The competent permitting authorities for environmental permits relating to mining operations are the Regional State Administrative Agencies (aluehallintovirasto), which are charged with issuing environmental permits for activities with major environmental impacts, as well as all permits under the Water Act.
The competent environmental supervisory authorities in relation to mining operations are the regional Centres for Economic Development, Transport and the Environment, ELY Centre (elinkeino-, liikenne- ja ympäristökeskus, ELY-keskus), which supervise – eg, the compliance with the EPA and the environmental permits. ELY Centres also act as contact authorities and issue justified statements in the environmental impact assessments carried out in accordance with the EIA Act.
Municipalities have a central role in land use planning, and wide discretional powers to decide whether to approve or reject a plan. Municipalities also function as permit authorities for construction permits and other land use and building permits.
Environmental Permit
Pursuant to the EPA, an environmental permit is required for activities that involve a risk of environmental pollution. Mining operations and the excavation of gold with machines require an environmental permit, as does an ore or mineral concentration plant. The majority of exploration is of a nature that can be carried out without an environmental permit, but exploration may also require an environmental permit if the impacts of the planned activities (eg, test mining) exceed the criteria set out in the EPA.
An environmental permit shall be applied for in accordance with the EPA. The permit consideration is based on judicial discretion, which means that the environmental permit must be granted to the operator should the requirements set in the EPA be fulfilled.
Rejection of a permit application or permit decision and its individual regulations may be appealed against. In addition to the parties concerned – ie, permit applicant, neighbours and other persons affected by the activity, environmental NGOs and those who may be affected by the operations have the right to appeal a permit decision.
The first appellate instance is the Administrative Court of Vaasa and the second and final instance is the Supreme Administrative Court. However, it should be noted that the right to appeal to the Supreme Administrative Court in environmental cases is subject to a requirement of leave to appeal. Leave to appeal is granted under the Administrative Judicial Procedure Act (No 808/2019, laki oikeudenkäynnistä hallintoasioissa), if the matter involves a need for a precedent or an obvious error, or if there is another serious reason for issuing a decision on the merits of the case.
The EPA governs an integrated permit regime for emissions into air, water and soil, and the generation of waste. However, the environmental permit does not necessarily cover all activities on the project site, in which case other permits or notifications pursuant to other environmental laws may be required. A mining operation often requires a water permit for intake of water for the purposes of mining operations or building of ponds. Any such water permit is processed together with the environmental permit and both permits are included in one decision unless this is deemed unnecessary for a special reason.
EIA Procedure
Pursuant to Annex 1 of the EIA Act, mining, concentration and processing of metal ore or other mining minerals requires an EIA when the aggregate amount of the excavated material is at the minimum 550,000 tonnes per year, or the mine covers an area of more than 25 hectares. The mining, concentration and processing of uranium or thorium requires an EIA. The results of an EIA procedure are reflected in the EIA report and a justified statement issued based thereon by the ELY Centre and are to be taken into consideration when issuing a permit for a project. The right of appeal on the grounds of lack or inadequacy of the EIA is linked to the approval of/appeal against the permit decision.
The areas included in the European Community’s Natura 2000 network are subject to specific limitations on allowed operations, as set out in the Nature Conservation Act. If a project or plan, either individually or in combination with other projects and plans, is likely to have a significant adverse effect on the ecological value of a site included in the Natura 2000 network, and the site has been included in, or is intended for inclusion in the Natura 2000 network for the purpose of protecting this ecological value, the planner or implementer of the project is required to conduct an appropriate assessment of its impacts (Natura Assessment). The same correspondingly applies to any project or plan outside the site which is likely to have a significantly harmful impact on the site.
The mining authority shall ensure that the Natura Assessment is carried out and shall thereafter request an opinion on the Natura Assessment from the ELY Centre and the authority in charge of the site in question. No authority is empowered to grant a permit for the implementation of a project, or to adopt or ratify a plan, if the assessment procedure indicates that the project or plan would have a significant adverse impact on the particular ecological values for the protection of which the site has been included in, or is intended for inclusion in, the Natura 2000 network.
In the above-mentioned case, a permit can only be granted if the government decides that the project or plan must, in the absence of alternative solutions, be carried out for imperative reasons of overriding public interest. Furthermore, where a site hosts a priority natural habitat type referred to in Annex I of the Habitats Directive (92/43/ETY), or a priority species referred to in Annex II, a further precondition for granting a permit or adopting or ratifying a plan is that a reason relating to human health or public safety, or to beneficial consequences of primary importance for the environment, or any other imperative reason of overriding public interest so demands. In the latter case, an opinion shall be requested from the European Commission.
In addition, geological surveys and prospecting are not allowed in national parks or strict nature reserves. In other nature reserves, those operations are allowed only with permission from the authority or agency in charge of the site, provided that the conservation objectives of the site are not jeopardised.
Protection of plant and animal species including but not limited to important resting places of protected species and trees hosting a large bird of prey may also restrict exploration or mining activities, even outside an enforced conservation area based on the mandatory regulations of the Nature Conservation Act, unless a derogation from the protection provisions is granted for the planned operations.
Further, protection of antiquities may result in restrictions on exploration or mining based on the Antiquities Act (No 295/1963, muinaismuistolaki).
As a requirement for granting a mining permit, the relationship of the mining area and any auxiliary area to other usage of land needs to have been clarified. Mining activity shall be based on a local detailed plan or a legally binding local master plan in accordance with the Land Use and Building Act. The municipalities have a monopoly on land use planning with the above-mentioned plans.
In addition, municipalities can impact the mining activities within the municipality, since an exploration permit cannot be granted over an area in terms of which the local authority opposes the granting of a permit, for a reason concerning planning or other good cause related to land use, unless there is a specific reason for granting the permit.
The permit authority will request statements on an exploration or a mining permit application from the relevant municipalities, which also have the right to appeal a decision concerning the granting of such a permit.
The permit authority will request statements on an exploration or a mining permit application from the municipalities, the ELY Centre and the responsible authorities or institutions within the area affected by the activities that are the object of the permit. In addition, the parties concerned are given an opportunity to lodge complaints concerning the permit, and parties other than those involved will also be afforded the opportunity to express their opinions.
Any effects caused by the proposed activity on the rights of the Sami as an indigenous people, to the Skolts or to reindeer herding must also be established and evaluated in co-operation with the respective representative entities and the applicant. The permit authority shall publish the application on its noticeboard and, when the matter is of major significance, in at least one newspaper in general circulation in the affected area. In addition, the parties and the municipalities involved shall be informed separately. A decision concerning an exploration or a mining permit or redemption permit for a mining area shall be issued after the public notice.
The Sami Homeland and Skolt area are subject to specific protection.
An exploration or a mining permit must not be granted if activities under the permit would, in the Sami Homeland, alone or together with other corresponding permits and other forms of land use, substantially undermine the preconditions for engaging in traditional Sami sources of livelihood or otherwise to maintain and develop the Sami culture or in the Skolt area would substantially impair the living conditions of Skolts and the possibilities for pursuing a livelihood in the Skolt area. Further, an exploration or a mining permit must not be granted in a special reindeer herding area if activities under the permit would cause considerable harm to reindeer herding. However, a permit may be granted regardless of an impediment referred to above if it is possible to remove that impediment through permit regulations.
In the Sámi Homeland, the permit authority shall – based on the report submitted by the applicant in its permit application and in co-operation with the permit applicant, Sámi Parliament, Skolt village meeting, local reindeer herding co-operatives and the authority or institution responsible for management of the area – assess the effects caused by activity in accordance with the exploration or mining permit on the rights of the Sámi as an indigenous people to maintain and develop their own language and culture and traditional livelihoods and shall consider measures required for decreasing and preventing damage. The Sámi Parliament, the Skolt village meeting and the local reindeer herding co-operative must be given an opportunity to comment on the report before the start of co-operation.
In order to clarify the matter, the permit authority can arrange an event to which the representatives of the Sámi Parliament, the Skolt village meeting, the Skolt Council, the local reindeer owners’ associations concerned, the applicant and the authority or institution responsible for management of the area, the municipality, the local fishing area and forests in joint ownership are invited for consultation.
In an area specifically intended for reindeer husbandry, the permit authority shall, in co-operation with the reindeer herding co-operatives operating in the area, investigate the harm caused to reindeer husbandry by the activities covered by the permit.
In the Skolt area, the permit authority shall request a statement from a Skolt village meeting concerning assessment of the impacts caused by activity under the permit on the sources of livelihood and living conditions of the Skolt people.
Community development agreements are neither mandatory nor usual in Finland.
Certain voluntary mining-related CSR tools have been developed in Finland, being a system of annual CSR reporting for companies operating in Finland in the field of mining and ore exploration and a sustainability standard for mining based on the Canadian initiative Towards Sustainable Mining (TSM). The Finnish TSM includes ten tools for evaluating corporate responsibility and includes annual reporting and triennial reporting assurance. The CSR tools cover the entire lifecycle of mining operations. The tools were developed by the Finnish Network for Sustainable Mining, the operations of which ceased in 2023. The Finnish Mining Association is continuing the development and implementation of the corporate responsibility work.
Illegal mining is not considered an issue in Finland. The operators comply well with permitting requirements and granted permits. Tukes as the mining authority and the local ELY Centres as environmental supervising authorities intervene effectively in unauthorised activities. There is also a number of quite active NGOs that provide information and make initiatives to the supervising authorities.
Most confrontation regarding mining projects has been seen in situations where the planned location of a mining project is in the vicinity of a tourist resort. This has even resulted in attempts by the municipality to prohibit mining on certain areas by an explicit restriction in master plan regulations. The Supreme Administrative Court, however, ruled in May 2019 (KHO 2019:67) that master plan regulations specifically prohibiting mining operations entirely in certain areas of the municipality are illegal. However, it should be noted that the municipalities currently have more control in the matter, as the mining activity shall be based on a local detailed plan or a legally binding local master plan.
The Finnish Network for Sustainable Mining was established in 2014 as a discussion and co-operation forum for the mining industry and its stakeholders. The work of the network created a solid foundation for the joint responsibility work of mines by developing tools to promote more responsible and sustainable exploration and mining and to increase dialogue between mines and stakeholders. In particular, stakeholder co-operation was of primary importance in starting and establishing the industry-level responsibility work. The application of the TSM standard to Finland was a significant joint effort and the result achieved was meritorious in many ways. Thereafter, focus of the network’s work shifted to implementing the standard. As a result, the responsibility of organising the responsibility work in the mining sector was taken over and is currently being carried by the Finnish Mining Association. The next step is to strengthen the standard and change the way of working to match TSM’s international model.
In general, initiatives to deal with climate change are appearing in the mining industry in the form of tighter emission limits in environmental permits. The limitations on use of coal in energy production and promoting of biofuels and green energy may also have an impact on the mining industry, since mining companies will aim to reduce their carbon emissions.
Finland’s most central climate change legislation, the Climate Act (No 423/2022, ilmastolaki), was renewed in 2022. According to the Act, Finland’s goal is to become carbon neutral by 2035. The law also aims to ensure that the greenhouse gas emissions from the effort-sharing and emissions-trading sectors decrease by at least 60% by 2030 and by at least 80% by 2040 compared to the 1990 levels. The aim is also to decrease 90–95% by 2050. According to the Act, Finland should also take national measures to adapt to climate change by promoting climate change resilience and the management of climate risks. Central government authorities shall promote the achievement of these objectives in their activities.
According to the new Government Programme published on 20 June 2023, the government will prepare a new energy and climate strategy aimed at carbon negativity, with the promotion of clean transition and investments in industry as key elements.
Previous regulations related to mining and climate issues included, for example, the Act on prohibiting the use of coal in energy production (416/2019, laki hiilen energiakäytön kieltämisestä). This Act entered into force on 1 April 2019, and it prohibited the use of coal as a source for electricity and heat production as of 1 May 2029. Also, the Act on promoting biofuels (No 418/2019, laki biopolttoöljyn käytön edistämisestä) entered into force on 1 April 2019, with the intention of promoting the use of biofuels in heat production, working machines and some engines in order to achieve the goals to reduce carbon emissions agreed upon in the EU.
The new Government Programme published in 2023 aims to influence the climate primarily through effective emission-reduction measures, increasing carbon sinks and innovative clean solutions that replace solutions based on polluting energy sources and raw materials in both Finland and other countries.
The government will review the Carbon Neutrality strategy in connection with the preparation of the new Energy and Climate strategy. One of the priorities of the Energy and Climate Strategy is that Finland will reduce emissions faster than anticipated in industry and energy production. The aim is also to update low-carbon road maps for industries.
In addition to government-led projects, the Finnish Network of Sustainable Mining has been part of developing more sustainable mining in Finland since 2014. The network provides an ongoing forum for discussion and co-operation between the mining industry and its stakeholders. It develops suitable tools for Finland to promote more responsible and sustainable mining, to exploit synergies between different industries and to prevent conflicts. In the network’s vision, Finland will develop into a pioneer in sustainable mining, where the industry will take into account natural values, cultural and social environment and other industries.
The National Mineral Strategy of Finland was published in December 2024. The objective of the strategy is to promote the growth of the Finnish mineral cluster in order to strengthen the clean transition and strategic autonomy of Europe and to increase the value add of mining raw materials. It defines six main targets which include – eg, efficient implementation of the Critical Raw Materials Act and responsibility in all areas of sustainability. To meet the identified objectives, the strategy proposes measures such as promoting streamlining of permit procedures, ensuring adequate mapping of the mineral potential of bedrock and planning incentives for the introduction of the best technologies and circular economy solutions.
In addition to the exploration, excavation and by-product fees payable by the permit-holder to the landowners, a reservation fee of EUR1/hectare is payable to the state by the party making the reservation notification for the reserved area.
New Mining Mineral Tax Act (314/2023, kaivosmineraaliverolaki) took effect on 1 January 2024. The Act will be applied for mining of minerals referred to in the Mining Act, except for minerals found in gold panning. The mining company, as a holder of the mining permit, is liable to pay mining mineral tax. The obligation to pay mining mineral tax arises for metallic minerals (Ag, Co, Cr, Au, Cu, Li, Ni, Pd, Pt, Zn, Pb, U) at the time when the mining mineral is delivered for enrichment. According to the guidance issued by the Finnish Tax Administration (FTA), the tax is levied also from such metallic mineral which cannot be utilised during enrichment. For other mining minerals referred to in the Mining Act, the obligation to pay mining mineral tax arises at the time of extraction. In case the mining permit is transferred to another operator, the new holder of the permit is liable to pay mining mineral tax after the mining authority’s approval of the transfer has become enforceable.
The tax for metallic minerals is 0.6% of the ore’s taxable value. FTA will assess taxable values annually based on arithmetic means on previous years, with international prices using sources such as LBMA, LME and NYMEX. Tax for other mining minerals is EUR0.2 per tonne.
The mining operators must register with FTA before starting activities subject to the mining mineral tax. The tax period for mining mineral tax is a calendar year and therefore the first tax return must be filed, and the tax paid, by 12 March 2025. The revenue collected from the mining mineral tax is estimated to be around EUR25 million annually.
In addition to the mining mineral tax, a Finnish-resident entity is subject to corporate income tax on its worldwide income, and a non-resident entity on its Finnish source income. A company is resident in Finland on the basis of incorporation. Entities whose place of effective management is located in Finland are also considered to be resident taxpayers. A permanent establishment (PE) is created according to the applicable tax treaty and principles of OECD model convention. For example, mine, quarry, oil well, natural gas well, or other site for the extraction of natural resources, as well as a branch, creates a PE. The income tax rate for limited liability companies and other corporate entities is 20%.
As a rule, the Finnish tax resident payor must withhold 20% tax at source from dividends paid to a non-resident corporate entity, unless a tax treaty limits Finland’s right to tax. Most Finnish tax treaties provide the source state with the right to withhold tax at source of 10–15% on dividends other than direct investment dividends received by corporate entities. Tax at source of 0–5% can usually be withheld on direct investment dividends. No withholding tax is imposed on dividends paid to a company referred to in the EC Parent-Subsidiary Directive owning at least 10% of the capital of the payer. Interest payments to non-residents are usually tax-exempt according to the Finnish Income Tax Act.
Finland has adopted ATAD 1 interest deduction limitation rules. According to Finnish legislation, interest expenses are deductible if the total net interest expenses to both related and unrelated parties of a company do not exceed a EUR500,000 threshold in a tax year. If net interest expenses exceed this threshold, the limitations would be applied to the total amount and not just the amount exceeding the threshold. If the threshold is exceeded, only net interest expenses of up to 25% of the adjusted taxable profit (taxable EBITD) are deductible. The net interest expenses to third-party debts are deductible with a EUR3 million limitation.
The land and buildings of properties used for mining are subject to real estate tax, just like other properties of industrial plants. General real estate tax is paid to municipalities, and it varies between 0.93% to 2%.
The New Environmental Damage Fund will take effect on 1 January 2025. These funds are part of the secondary environmental liability systems, and they are collected as tax-like environmental liability contributions from operators whose activities may pose a risk of environmental pollution. The liability contribution for mining operators is between EUR2,700 and EUR30,000 annually.
Electricity tax for class I electricity is 2,253 cent/KWH. The lower electricity tax rate of 0,063 cent/KWH is for electricity used for industry, such as mining and enrichment (class II).
Tax incentives for energy-intensive industry, such as mining and enrichment, will be abolished starting from 1 January 2025.
There are no tax stabilisation agreements available in Finland.
The sale of goods is generally subject to 25,5% VAT, but if assets belonging to a business are transferred in connection with the sale of the business, the sale of assets is exempted from VAT, provided that the purchaser continues to use the assets in the business.
Transfer of real estate located in Finland is subject to transfer tax of 3% of the sales price. The transfer of shares in Finnish companies is subject to a transfer tax of 1.5% if one of the parties to the transaction is a Finnish resident.
Capital gains from the disposal of business assets are taxed as normal income with a tax rate of 20%. Among other requirements, if the seller has owned at least 10% of the fixed-asset shares in the company for at least one year, the sale of shares may be treated as tax-exempted.
Non-Finnish-resident entities are subject to capital gains tax on the transfer of real estate located in Finland. Transfer of shares or similar rights is subject to capital gains tax if more than 50% of the total assets consists directly or indirectly of Finnish real estate. Some of the Finnish tax treaties may, however, prevent taxation of capital gains on indirectly owned Finnish real estate.
Finland’s good infrastructure, the large, sparsely populated areas and the availability of detailed and extensive geological data produced by the Geological Survey of Finland make it an attractive mining country. Furthermore, Finland’s stable political and economic situation are positive factors. In addition, Finland has leading knowledge and suppliers in the area of mining technology.
Finland has geological potential for minerals required for green transition – eg, cobalt, copper, lithium, nickel and graphite.
There are no special rules on foreign investment approval or restriction on foreign direct investment in the exploration and mining sectors. The Finnish Act on the Screening of Foreign Corporate Acquisitions (No 172/2012, laki ulkomaalaisten yritysostojen seurannasta) applies where at least 10%, one-third or 50% of voting rights in a Finnish target are acquired by a foreign investor – ie, a natural or legal person not domiciled/registered in Finland or in the EU or one of the EFTA member states, depending on the sector in which the Finnish corporate target operates.
For acquisitions in the defence and security industry, a mandatory, pre-closing approval must be sought from the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment of Finland. With respect to a Finnish target that, based on its industry, business operations or commitments, is considered critical for securing vital societal functions, the acquisition can be voluntarily notified pre- or post-closing. The Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment of Finland also has the power to request such a notification within three months after becoming aware of the specific acquisition in case no notification has been submitted.
A few transactions in the exploration and mining sectors have been notified under the Screening Act, and it is therefore recommended to conduct an assessment pursuant to the Screening Act when other criteria of application are met. The obligation to comply with the Screening Act’s notification obligation rests with the foreign investor – ie, the acquiring party.
The timeline of FDI screening process varies depending on the sector involved. For a mandatory application, there is no prescribed timeline for decision-making. For a voluntary notification, Phase I is six weeks and potential Phase II is three months (both calculated from the receipt of complete information), at the end of which the notified foreign corporate acquisition must either be approved or referred to the Finnish government for decision-making with no prescribed timeline. The confirmation of a foreign corporate acquisition may only be refused if it is necessary due to a key national interest, but the acquisition may also be approved subject to commitments. A notification fee is charged to the investor.
Finland does not have investment protection agreements concerning the mining sector specifically, but Finland has both bilateral trade agreements and multilateral trade agreements as part of the EU. Some of these agreements mention a common goal for promoting the mining sector.
One example is the free-trade agreement between Canada and the EU and its member states, CETA. CETA is a remarkably investor-friendly agreement due to the wide protection it offers to foreign investors. It includes an investment-protection clause, the purpose of which is to ensure that Canadian investments are treated in the EU on an equal footing with European investments.
Another noteworthy example is the free-trade agreement that is currently being negotiated between Australia and the EU. These negotiations began in 2018 but are currently stalled due to disagreements over agricultural products.
Many companies operating in exploration and mining projects in Finland are owned by foreign companies and often have a group parent company listed in a foreign exchange – eg, in Canada, Australia, Sweden or London. The operations are then financed by the foreign parent company who raises financing through the foreign exchange. There is not enough domestic capital funding available in Finland for the mining sector, which is why a large part of the capital comes from abroad. Foreign companies have also invested in Finland. Many companies finance exploration and development, as well as construction and mining with financing raised from industrial, institutional or private investors. Public sources of financing in Finland are – eg, Business Finland or Sitra for research, development and innovations and Finnvera for loans and guarantees. EU financing may also be available for research and development projects.
Other sources of financing for running operations in the mining sector in Finland include – eg, different types of loans and facilities from commercial banks or other lending institutions, receivables finance or reverse factoring arrangements, prepayment arrangements, leasing arrangements and financing arrangements to cover environmental guarantee obligations. Financiers operating in Finland for the mentioned purposes are both local and foreign banks, other lending institutions and financiers and insurance companies and sureties.
Financing for many exploration and mining projects in Finland is raised through foreign exchanges – eg, in Canada, Australia or Sweden. Some companies are dual listed in Finland but in general the securities market in Finland is not considered to be as strong as, for example, in Sweden.
The permit-holder can pledge the right to exploit mining minerals, based on a mining permit, or the privilege under an exploration permit. The right to pledge becomes effective when the mining authority receives written notification of the pledge from the permit-holder. The mining authority issues the permit-holder with a certificate of receipt of the notification. The security package related to a mining project may consist of the permits, the properties owned by the permit-holder and a floating charge.
Energy transition, green transition and the challenges of EU self-sufficiency will support demand for domestic raw material and refining operations.
It is likely that mining companies’ interest to increase production and exploration of the critical minerals needed for the green transition will continue. As a result, interest towards exploration and production of – eg, cobalt, copper, nickel, lithium and graphite can be expected to continue. Critical minerals are also likely to impact mergers and acquisitions, when companies continue to prepare their operations for the green transition. Companies will also aim to reduce their own carbon emissions.
Key challenges for mines, in relation to environmental issues, are likely to be discharge into water bodies and the impact of environmental objectives for water management in relation thereto, extractive waste management, including guarantees, and requirements for land use planning.
Ongoing Legislative Projects
National preparatory legislative work to implement the EU’s Critical Raw Minerals Act (2024/1252/EU) is currently ongoing. The aim is to set measures to streamline the permitting procedures of strategic raw material projects (including mining projects) by giving such projects certain priorities – eg, by setting binding timelines for the permitting.
In addition, there is currently a “single-window approach” legislative project in progress aiming to ensure that in future a single environmental authority with national competence will be responsible for co-ordinating the permitting process. The intention is to enable different stages of the permitting procedure to be co-ordinated in terms of time, and to the extent possible, handled at the same time allowing applicants to submit and process several permits simultaneously resulting in a single decision and single appeal possibility. The aim is for the one-stop service to enter into force on 1 January 2026.
There are also legislative proposals regarding the EIA procedure, environmental permit revision procedure as well as the environmental objectives for water management and related deviations.
According to the Finnish government programme, the government is planning to revise mining mineral tax as of the mid-term policy review session in spring 2025 and introduce another tax category. The revision is planned to increase the tax revenue by EUR15 million annually.
Bulevardi 1 A
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tarja.pirinen@hpp.fi www.hpp.fiSustainability and Circular Economy as Drivers for the Mining Industry
The green transition has become a central theme in Finland’s legislative and political landscape, reflecting broader European and global trends towards sustainability and climate neutrality. The current Finnish government’s legislative programme outlines a comprehensive plan to transform the Finnish economy into a sustainable, circular and low-carbon model. The outlined legislative initiatives include streamlining and facilitating of permitting processes and increased financial support for projects advancing the green transition, such as direct state aid and tax credits – all aimed at accelerating the shift towards a more sustainable economy and meeting both national and international environmental targets. This development also impacts the mining industry.
The green transition such as in electric transport, the use of renewable energy and the storage of electrical energy results in an increased need for minerals required for the relevant implementing technology, such as battery minerals. Finland has good potential for battery minerals such as cobalt, nickel, lithium and graphite as well as for rear earth metals, which appears as interest in and as activity in exploration for such minerals. Finland is also the only producer of cobalt in the EU and is also a major producer of copper, which is essential in the energy transition.
Finland has expertise in the whole production chain of battery minerals, from the mining industry to the further processing of battery raw materials and production of battery chemicals as well as the technology related to manufacture, use and charging of batteries, and recycling.
EU Critical Raw Materials Act to Implement Priority and Binding Timelines for Permitting of Strategic Projects
The EU Critical Raw Materials Act (2024/1252/EU, the CRMA) is intended to support sustainable sourcing of raw materials aiming to ensure the supply of critical raw materials to European industry and to significantly reduce the EU’s dependence on individual non-EU raw material suppliers. One of the aims of the regulation is also to promote the recycling of raw materials, for example by encouraging the recovery of critical raw materials from waste sites in the extractive industries.
The EU’s list of critical materials was announced in connection with the CRMA in the Spring of 2023. Critical raw materials refer to raw materials that are important to the national economy and are subject to a significant risk of intake. Strategic raw materials are the raw materials on the list of critical raw materials, which are also essential raw materials for the EU’s defence, aerospace or space industries, the green energy transition, or the digital transition. Strategic raw materials are also very difficult to replace with other raw materials, it is difficult to grow their production globally, and their predicted global need is growing very strongly.
The mineral potential in Finland includes many minerals, such as cobalt, copper, lithium, battery-quality nickel, and graphite, which are on the EU’s list of critical materials and, except for lithium, also on the list of strategic minerals. Further, there are several mines in Finland that produce such critical or strategic raw materials. New mining and exploration projects are also targeted at mineral deposits containing these raw materials. Mining production and mining projects focus especially on nickel, copper, cobalt, platinum group metals, lithium and phosphorus. In addition, many other mineral deposits containing critical raw materials have been identified in Finland.
The CRMA regulates the establishment of a point of single contact authority for the permitting of critical raw material projects which is responsible for facilitating and co-ordinating the permitting process for projects involving critical raw materials and for providing information, including the acknowledgement that an environmental permit application is complete. Further, the CRMA regulates the priority status of the so-called Strategic Projects. Strategic Projects under the CRMA are initiatives that are crucial for reducing dependence on imports and securing the EU’s supply of critical raw materials. These raw materials are vital for key sectors, such as renewable energy and digital technologies. The status of a strategic project can be obtained, for example, by a mining project or a circular economy project. Projects with the status of Strategic Project must be given the highest possible national status and be treated accordingly in the permitting procedures. The co-ordination of permit processes and communications between the operator and authorities is to be conducted by one national authority (the single point contact) to simplify the process. Further, the CRMA sets binding timelines for the permitting of Strategic Projects.
The national implementation of the CRMA regulations streamlining permitting procedures and timelines for Strategic Projects under the CRMA is currently ongoing in Finland. Provisions of the CRMA will be specified in a new draft legislative proposal on national implementation of the CRMA, whereby Finland will take advantage of the possibility offered by the CRMA to extend the permitting timelines for strategic projects if the requirements for the extension governed by the CRMA are met. The proposed changes require new provisions to be added to the existing national legislation and are expected to enter into force in Finland during 2025. Efficient implementation of the CRMA is also defined as one of the six main objectives in the National Mineral Strategy of Finland which was published in December 2024.
It should be noted that the proposed legislation and the facilitation measures it provides for the Strategic Projects will, however, not amend any permit requirements, which would continue to be stipulated by the Mining Act, Environmental Protection Act, and the Water Act, for example. In addition, the objectives for water management (the aim of good status of bodies of surface water and groundwater and the prohibition to cause deterioration thereof) will apply in permitting of Strategic Projects.
In addition to facilitating permitting, the CRMA includes an obligation for member states to draw up national exploration programmes and regulations aimed at improving the re-use of critical raw materials from extractive waste, as well as other measures to improve sustainability and the circular economy. This will result – eg, in obligations on the members states to record the decommissioned extractive waste areas in a public database and to consider the economic recoverability thereof through various means.
The operators who are obliged to prepare an extractive waste management plan must also submit to the authorities a preliminary economic evaluation study of the potential for extractive waste recovery
Introduction of New Permitting Authority and Single-Window Approach to Speed Up and Streamline Permit Processes
The Finnish government has acknowledged that smooth permit procedures are a prerequisite for attracting investments and especially for transitioning into a clean economy. Projects with environmental impacts may require many separate permits or approvals, which are currently applied for and granted by different authorities as governed by different environmental laws. Subsequently, the Finnish government proposes several measures to tackle the current problem of prolonged and expanding permitting processes.
One of these planned solutions is the establishment of a new national permit and supervisory authority. In the new draft legislative proposal, it is proposed that the new authority would replace the current permitting authorities and supervisory authorities with a single national permitting and supervision authority.
A legislative proposal to integrate various permit application processes is also being prepared, with the aim of making the permitting process faster and more efficient. This includes introducing a “single-window approach” (yhden luukun periaate), allowing multiple permit applications for the same project to be processed in one combined process. The intention is that this streamlined approach will enforce joint hearings for different permits and result in a single permit decision and appeal process, instead of separate ones for each permit.
The draft legislative proposal also highlights the existing challenges related to the ever-expanding scope of the environmental impact assessment (EIA) procedures and the excessive level of detail required in documents related thereto. The draft proposal calls for significant development in practices, which could be implemented as a part of the single-window approach project.
The aim is to ensure that the EIA procedure focuses only on the significant environmental impacts of projects, thereby speeding up the procedure and reducing the administrative burden placed both on the operators and relevant environmental authorities. Further, co-ordination of the permit procedure and the EIA procedure is promoted by expanding the scope of the joint hearing of the EIA report and the permit application.
The current estimation is that the new national environmental authority will be established on 1 January 2026, in conjunction with the enforcement of the single-window approach legislation.
Binding Environmental Objectives for Water Management and Process for Deviating Therefrom
The legislative change regarding environmental objectives for water management and related deviations was entered into force on 1 January 2025. The binding nature of the environmental objectives for water management as set out in the EU’s Water Framework Directive (2000/60/EC) was recorded in law as outlined in the court practice of the Court of Justice of the European Union. The objective is to achieve good groundwater status and good ecological status or, where relevant, good ecological potential of a body of surface water and to prevent deterioration of the status of a body of surface water or groundwater. This is also expressly regulated as a condition for granting of an environmental or water permit which cannot be granted for a project that endangers the achieving of these objectives.
The legislative change also sets out the process for deviating from the environmental objectives in connection with environmental and water permits. The scope of application of the deviations is likely to remain fairly limited also in continuance, since the requirements for granting a deviation would be not changed. Accordingly – eg, deviation due to discharge of wastewater is only possible if a body of surface water would deteriorate from high status to good status as a result of new sustainable human development activities. The deviation is more likely to be applied in the case of new modifications to the physical characteristics of a surface water body.
The time set for achieving the good status of groundwater and good ecological status of bodies of surface waters cannot be postponed after 2027. The possible impact of this on the classification of bodies of surface waters and the permitting of projects that discharge waste waters to bodies of surface water not in good status is to be seen.
Proposal to Restore the Procedure for the Revision of Environmental Permit Regulations
One legislative change that is being prepared and may in the future impact permitting of mining projects is the proposal to restore the procedure for the revision of permit regulations under the Environmental Protection Act.
The revision would be intended to focus only on the necessary permit provisions for emissions from operations and monitoring of operations and their impacts, such as emission limit values. In view of the uncertainty of the impacts, in particular permit regulations for discharges into water could be subject to revision. The proposed procedure would involve a more extensive revision of the permit than allowed under the current Act, based, among other things, on the novelty of the technology to be introduced in the operation.
The revision, as proposed, could only be applied once after the commencement of a new activity. However, an order for revision regarding the same activity could be reissued if, as a result of a substantial change in the activity, the relevant permit had to be amended. The amendment is planned to enter into force on 1 January 2026.
This change could impact environmental permitting of mines since long-term modelling of – eg, impacts of emissions from mines to bodies of surface waters or groundwater is challenging and, despite careful modelling and expert estimations, there may remain uncertainties in relation thereto in the permitting phase. With the revision of the environmental permit regulations, one could avoid the granting of the permit only for a fixed term or, in the worst case, rejection of the permit application due to such uncertainties based on the precautionary principle.
Advancing the Circular Economy
Traditionally, Finland is known as a pioneer of the circular economy, given that it drafted the world’s first national roadmap to a circular economy in 2016. More recently, Finland promotes the circular economy through legislation and aims to increase Finland’s material efficiency and carbon-neutrality.
This mindset is further reflected in the Ministry of the Environment’s initiative to replace the existing Waste Act with a new Circular Economy Act ‒ the main purpose of which is to clarify legislation in the waste sector and strengthen the life cycle perspective of the regulation. The aim is to reduce the regulatory burden, clarify the relationship between waste regulation and product and chemical regulation, and to develop the operating and investment environment for circular economy operators. At the same time, it will be assessed whether some parts of the current Waste Act should be divided into separate Acts. The working group responsible for outlining the reform was established in the summer of 2024 and will operate until the end of 2025. Planning of incentives for the introduction of the best technologies and circular economy solutions is also defined as one of the six main objectives in the National Mineral Strategy of Finland which was published in December 2024.
The circular economy is a particularly good opportunity for the mining industry because it generates various side streams. According to Statistics Finland, in 2022 mining and quarrying produced circa 76% of Finland’s total waste load measured in tonnes.
Making the use of extractive waste more efficient is an important theme that operators in the field have the will and ability to grasp. The social order is strong because the mining industry is under excessive pressure to act sustainably and responsibly. On the other hand, more efficient use of extractive waste would also make it possible to curb the consumption of virgin natural resources, as called for in the national circular economy programme. At the same time, energy would be saved, and carbon dioxide emissions would be reduced once excavated and crushed rock would be exploited, not to mention natural values and biodiversity.
In a study commissioned by the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment, mining mineral tax has been considered as one feasible way to influence exploitation of waste rock. The mining mineral tax took effect in Finland on 1 January 2024. The revenue collected from the mining mineral tax was estimated to be around EUR25 million annually, but the view of the mining sector appears to be that the estimated revenue was already exceeded in 2024. In the study the mining mineral tax was considered to affect the equation of how rich/poor ore is still worth exploiting as one of the cost factors. It was considered that by keeping the mining mineral tax at a competitive level, it would be possible to improve the chances of exploiting waste rock. On the industrial side, however, it was stated in this regard that waste rock is, after all, an economic definition. The cost level as a whole, including taxes, influences decision-making about mining and, thus, also the formation and amount of waste rock. Increasing costs is not likely to increase the exploitation of the ore and reduce the amount of resulting waste rock.
However, according to the Government Programme, Finland is planning to revise the mining mineral tax as of the government mid-term policy review in middle of 2025 and introduce another tax category for mining mineral tax. The revenue increase has been estimated to be EUR15 million annually. Thus, it cannot be ruled out that the tax burden of mining will be further increased in the coming years.
Impact of the Increased Corporate Sustainability Regulation
The increase of corporate sustainability regulation in the EU also affects the mining industry. The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (2022/2464/EU) entered into force in 2023, and the first in-scope companies will report regarding the financial year 2024 in 2025 according to the implementing national legislation. The reporting is made in accordance with the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), which require detailed information on environmental, social, and governance aspects. The ESRS introduces a double materiality concept that serves as a basis for sustainability disclosures. In addition to the traditional financial materiality concept, an issue may also be material and should therefore be included in the reporting based on materiality of impacts, thereby requiring in-scope companies to assess the impacts caused by their operations.
Furthermore, EU regulations will introduce corporate due diligence obligations that will also reflect on the mining sector. The Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (2024/1760/EU) has entered into force and is now being implemented into national legislation. The obligations will be applied to the first in-scope companies in 2026. The directive establishes a corporate due diligence duty on large companies and thereby requires them to identify and address potential and actual adverse human rights and environmental impacts not only in the company’s own operations, but also in its business partners’ operations in its chain of activities. As companies in the mining sector, if not in scope themselves, may be relevant upstream business partners, the due diligence duty may – eg, increase the need for information on impacts of their operations.
The new Batteries Regulation (2023/1542/EU), which entered into force in 2023 and started to apply in part in 2024, includes obligations as regards battery due diligence policies and risk management that will apply from 18 August 2025 to economic operators that place batteries on the market or put them into service. Such obligations specifically include information on upstream actors in the supply chain and raw materials. The Batteries Regulation also includes obligations regarding – eg, battery carbon footprint declarations, battery performance, durability and labelling, battery removability and replaceability, substance restrictions, recycled content requirements, and extended producer responsibility.
State Aid Schemes for Large Investments in Clean Transition
To improve Finland’s competitiveness and attract green investments, the Finnish government is planning to introduce financial measures to support clean transition projects and investments. Preparatory legislative work is currently going on for the purpose of introducing two parallel state aid schemes for significant investments in the clean transition which are both based on the European Commission Temporary Crisis and Transition Framework for State Aid (2023/C 101/03) Crisis and Transition Framework. Both the Direct Aid and the Tax Credit can be obtained for investments in strategic sectors for the transition to a climate-neutral economy. Such investments are considered to include the production of equipment and components essential for the transition to a climate-neutral economy, as well as the production or recovery of related critical raw materials necessary for the production of the equipment and components. Critical raw materials refer to the raw materials listed in Annex 4 of Commission Regulation (EU) 2014/651 declaring certain categories of aid compatible with the internal market, such as lithium, cobalt and nickel.
According to the draft decree, Direct Aid could be awarded if the eligible costs of the investment project in Finland are at least EUR30 million. The Tax Credit would be granted only for new projects and the minimum size of an eligible investment would be EUR50 million (each investment considered individually). The application of both state aids must be submitted no later than 31 December 2025, and prior to commencement of works on the investment project. The purchase of land and preparatory works, such as obtaining permits and conducting preliminary feasibility studies, are not considered as the commencement of works.
The amount of Tax Credit is 20% of the costs approved as the basis for the credit, but no more than EUR150 million per company or group of companies. The full amount of the Tax Credit is therefore obtained with investment costs of EUR750 million. The amount of Direct Aid may not exceed 15% of the eligible costs and may not exceed EUR150 million per company. The Direct Aid and the Tax Credit can be used only within the framework of the EU state aid regulation’s so-called cumulation rules.
The Direct Aid would be granted by the end of the year 2025. Tax Credit can be deducted from the company’s income tax as of tax year 2028 and the following 19 tax years. However, the Tax Credit can be deducted in the tax year in which the investment is completed, at the earliest. For each tax year, the Tax Credit can be deducted by up to 10% of the total Tax Credit granted to the company. Because the Tax Credit is deducted from the company’s income tax, the use of the Tax Credit requires that the company makes a taxable profit.
It is possible that some changes may still be made to both state aids during the legislative process. Furthermore, the European Commission must find both state aids compatible with the single market before they can enter into force.
Bulevardi 1 A
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+358 403 507 797
tarja.pirinen@hpp.fi www.hpp.fi