Mining Other
With better co-ordination, Africa could be an architect of the net-zero economy
A clear message rang through the halls of the Cape Town International Convention Centre at this year’s Investing in African Mining Indaba: Africa’s mining sector holds enormous, untapped opportunity – but unlocking it will demand co-ordinated action across governments, investors, communities and the private sector.
That message landed at a pivotal moment. Renewable power capacity reached roughly 4 448GW at the end of 2024, with solar, wind and hydropower accounting for about 40% of global electricity generation. More than 90% of new power capacity additions now come from renewables. Yet, deployment rates still fall short of the COP28 goal to triple installed capacity to around 11TW by 2030.
Behind every gigawatt of clean power sits a minerals story. Lithium demand is expected to increase fivefold by 2040. Cobalt demand is projected to rise by 50%–60%, copper by around 30%, while graphite and nickel are set to at least double. Securing reliable, diversified supply chains for these materials has become a strategic priority for governments and corporates alike – and the geopolitical competition to secure them is intensifying.
Africa indispensable to energy transition
Africa sits at the heart of this equation. The continent holds about 30% of the world’s known reserves of key critical minerals. The Democratic Republic of Congo supplies over 70% of global cobalt. Zambia remains one of the world’s major copper producers. Zimbabwe has emerged as Africa’s leading lithium producer, while South Africa dominates global manganese output.
Little wonder, then, that the continent has become a focal point of geopolitical competition. The European Union’s Critical Raw Materials Act, which entered into force in 2024, sets binding targets to diversify supply away from single-country dependence. The United States has committed over $4 billion to the Lobito Corridor connecting the DRC and Zambia to Angola’s Atlantic port, with total global investment now exceeding $6 billion. China, meanwhile, has stakes in 15 of the DRC’s 19 cobalt mines and continues to expand its Belt and Road footprint across the continent.
For African producers, this convergence of competing interests creates both leverage and risk.
Yet, this enormous potential is stunted by persistent constraints. Regulatory uncertainty, infrastructure deficits in power and transport, skills shortages, environmental pressures and illegal mining all heighten risk. Despite its resource base, Africa attracts less than 10% of global exploration spending.
Without policy coherence, infrastructure investment and transparent governance, Africa faces what may be called a ‘green resource curse’: exporting raw ore while importing finished technology and foregoing industrialisation. Consider that the DRC exports cobalt at a fraction of the price battery-grade cobalt hydroxide commands on world markets. Zimbabwe ships raw spodumene while lithium hydroxide, the processed product automakers actually need, is refined almost entirely in China.
If the energy transition simply replicates old extractive patterns under a green label, Africa’s mineral wealth will once again benefit others more than its own citizens.
Co-ordination holds the key
Modern mining is no longer a purely extractive business. It is a data-driven, multi-stakeholder ecosystem that must integrate geological modelling, capital allocation, environmental performance, community engagement, logistics and global supply chain compliance. Technology is the co-ordination fabric that links these moving parts.
Integrated digital platforms now give stakeholders a shared view of reserves, project timelines, ESG (environmental, social & governance) metrics and logistics flows. By reducing information asymmetry, they de-risk capital deployment and improve trust between miners, governments, development finance institutions and private investors. In an era where climate finance and transition minerals funding depend on transparency, digital traceability is foundational.
Advanced analytics and artificial intelligence are reshaping core mining processes. Digital twins allow operators to simulate mine design, production scenarios and environmental impacts before committing capital. Predictive maintenance reduces unplanned downtime and extends asset life. Across major operations, these tools are compressing exploration timelines and lifting productivity measurably.
Equally important for African producers seeking to move beyond raw exports is supply chain integration. Digital commodity platforms that connect contracts, logistics, pricing and ESG attributes can help African refiners and processors demonstrate responsible sourcing at scale. This matters because the EU’s due diligence requirements and the US Inflation Reduction Act increasingly reward traceable, locally processed minerals with green premiums and preferential market access.
Technology thus becomes an enabler not just of efficiency but of beneficiation and in-country value addition.
Meeting operational and ESG demands
Enterprise technology platforms such as those offered by SAP play a strategic role by providing the operational backbone across planning, asset management, procurement, logistics and ESG reporting. When a mid-tier miner can compress its sustainability reporting cycle from weeks to days, or a junior explorer can present investors with independently verified ESG data alongside geological assays, the conversation with capital markets shifts.
Cloud enterprise resource planning systems that integrate production data with financials in real time, embedded business AI that flags maintenance risks before they become failures, and human capital management tools that track scarce skills and certifications all translate directly into bankability and investor confidence.
Crucially, the same platforms that manage production can also measure environmental and social impact. By combining operational and ESG data, mining companies can model emissions, water use and community outcomes and share evidence-based reporting with regulators and investors. In a capital-intensive sector where financing increasingly depends on sustainability credentials, this digital transparency becomes a competitive advantage.
Africa’s mining sector is therefore not just a supplier of transition minerals but a test case for how the energy transition can be aligned with industrial development. With the right policies, infrastructure corridors, skills programmes and digital co-ordination frameworks, critical minerals can underpin new refining capacity, regional value chains and millions of jobs.
The Indaba 2026 theme – “Stronger together: Progress through partnerships” – was well chosen. If Africa’s mineral potential remains constrained by fragmentation and mistrust, global decarbonisation will slow. If, however, stakeholders act in concert, using technology as the connective tissue and beneficiation as the organising principle, Africa can move from raw materials exporter to central architect of the net-zero economy.