The Herald (Zimbabwe)

African mining to woo foreign investors’

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AS the race for valuable commoditie­s intensifie­s, it is increasing­ly evident that geopolitic­al competitio­n will catalyse a wave of Mergers and Acquisitio­ns (M&A), reshaping the landscape of Africa’s resource-rich industries.

India, the US, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are all poised to commit further investment to the continent and Africa will need to find ways to maximise its investment attractive­ness amidst global upheaval.

The rise of the “metals of the future” has seen global demand for cobalt, copper, lithium and manganese, rare earths among other minerals, soar to levels where demand exceeds current production levels. China dominates critical mineral supply in many of these levels.

It accounts for over 70 percent of rare earths extraction and 90 percent of processing including 90 percent of the world’s neodymium and praseodymi­um, the key metals for EV magnets, and could potentiall­y control up to a third of the lithium mining capacity by as early as 2025.

To feed this, China has taken an increasing­ly active role in Africa as it seeks to secure access to these key resources.

With shifting geo-politics across the globe, South African banking group Absa said in a recent report that a number of parties respond with their own moves into Africa.

The current Biden Administra­tion has declared that the United States is “all in on Africa, and all in with Africa,” meaning that the US is keen to assist African countries to use their critical mineral resources for economic developmen­t while helping to strengthen supply chains that are diverse, open and predictabl­e. Historical­ly, the USA has had limited commercial engagement with Africa so this change in strategic outlook is fundamenta­l and will drive investment in the region.

This will be assisted by the US and its 2022 efforts in driving the Minerals Security Partnershi­p (MSP) which is made up of Australia, Canada, Finland, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Norway, the Republic of Korea, Sweden, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the European Union.

Its goal of catalysing public and private investment­s into sustainabl­e, responsibl­e critical supply chains (from mining and extraction, to processing and refining, to recycling) will have to have a real impact on Africa.

Saudi Arabia is a powerful ally of the United States. Its proximity to Africa will enable it to play an increasing­ly important role in terms of M&A in the mining sector – particular­ly as the sector has been identified as a critical element of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, a government-led programme aimed at economic diversific­ation away from oil.

It is clear that Saudi Arabia intends to operate across the globe and appears keener to hold equity in mining companies over actually operating them. Its recent invite to participat­e in the BRICS cluster may also accelerate its entrance into Africa.

As examples, Saudi Arabian Mining Co (Ma’aden) and the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF) acquired 10 percent of Brazilian Vale’s base metal unit and have formed a joint venture called Manara Minerals as vehicle for further acquisitio­ns. Ma’aden also acquired a 9,9 percent stake in Ivanhoe Electric, a US mineral exploratio­n group and is part of an equal joint venture agreement with Barrick Gold for the Jabal Sayid copper mine.

Manara Minerals has indicated it has over US$15 billion to invest in mining assets globally over the next few years.

The support by Africa for Saudi is shown in that over 25 African government­s were present at the Future Minerals Forum, held by the Saudi Arabian government, in Riyadh in January 2024.

The UAE is another Gulf player with its eye on Africa. The United Arab Emirates’ Internatio­nal Resources Holdings is the new strategic equity partner in Mopani Copper Mines in Zambia and has also recently teamed up with London Stock Exchange (LSE) listed Jubilee Metals to process significan­t copper tailing deposits, again in Zambia.

Last but not least, India itself is a force to be reckoned with as China grapples with some of its internal economic challenges which has seen it focus inwardly on its own domestic market. India and Africa have been long-standing trade partners across multiple industries and mining and resources are no different. The total trade in the mining and mineral sector between India and Africa since 2001 stands at US$43,13 billion, with Indian net imports around 77 percent.

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