A. Issue in Brief
- A new report by the Africa Finance Corporation (AFC), Compendium of Africa’s Strategic Minerals (2026), argues that geopolitical tensions and supply-chain fragmentation are raising the strategic value of Africa’s minerals.
- Africa holds ~$29.5 trillion in mine-site mineral wealth (~20% of global total) but captures limited downstream value, largely exporting raw ores and importing finished goods.
- The report calls for a shift from raw-material exporter → selective processor at strategic chokepoints, backed by infrastructure and regional integration.
Relevance
GS 2 (IR)
- Resource geopolitics, Global South, China+1 strategy, minerals diplomacy.
GS 3 (Economy & Security)
- Critical minerals, supply-chain resilience, industrial policy, energy transition.
B. Core Argument of the Report
- Africa’s constraint is “conversion, not geology”—i.e., weak infrastructure, limited processing, and fragmented markets prevent value capture.
- Global concentration risk is high:
- China controls ~90% of rare earth & manganese processing and dominates battery-grade graphite.
- Advanced economies seek supplier diversification for critical minerals.
- Africa’s non-aligned geopolitics + mineral diversity provide leverage if used strategically means focusing on high-impact supply chain nodes, not full-spectrum industrialisation.
C. Economic Dimension
- Value addition potential is massive:
- $2.8T iron ore → ~$25.4T steel
- $874B bauxite → $5.2T alumina → $15.4T aluminium
- Current model = low-value exports + high-value imports, leading to:
- Forex leakage
- Limited job creation
- Commodity-dependence risks
- Mineral beneficiation can support industrialisation, manufacturing, and export diversification.
D. Infrastructure & Development Dimension
- Processing viability depends on power, rail, ports, and industrial clusters—often missing or unreliable.
- Three conditions rarely co-locate:
- Mineral resource
- Infrastructure
- Market demand
- Infrastructure is thus a development multiplier, not just a sectoral input.
E. Geopolitical / IR Dimension
- Critical minerals are now tied to national security and techno-industrial competition.
- Africa can gain bargaining power in a world seeking China+1 supply chains.
- Strategic positioning allows Africa to avoid overdependence on any one bloc.
- Minerals diplomacy is becoming central to Global South geopolitics.
F. Regional Integration
- National markets often too small for scale processing.
- Report stresses regional aggregation of demand under frameworks like AfCFTA.
- Success cases:
- Morocco (phosphates)
- Copperbelt (copper)
- North Africa (steel)
- Regional value chains improve economies of scale and investment attractiveness.
G. Gold as a Macro-Stabiliser
- Africa holds >$5T in gold resources but underutilises it for reserves.
- Gold can:
- Strengthen forex buffers
- Stabilise currencies
- Reduce dollar dependence
- GoldBod (Ghana) cited as institutional reform to formalise mining and build reserves (>$10B reserves, currency appreciation).
H. Governance Challenges
- Fragmented and outdated geological data systems deter investors.
- Policy inconsistency and regulatory uncertainty raise risk.
- Risk of “resource curse” if governance and transparency are weak.
I. Broader Development Linkages
- Minerals needed not just for energy transition but also for:
- Urbanisation
- Construction
- Fertilisers
- Vehicles
- Power infrastructure
- Thus minerals strategy must align with domestic development priorities, not only exports.
J. Way Forward
- Treat geological data as strategic infrastructure.
- Invest in reliable power and transport corridors.
- Promote selective beneficiation at chokepoints.
- Use AfCFTA to build regional mineral value chains.
- Strengthen governance to avoid resource-curse dynamics.
- Leverage gold for macro-financial stability.
K. Exam Orientation
Prelims Pointers
- Critical minerals are linked to energy transition, defence, and electronics.
- Supply-chain concentration creates geopolitical risk.
- Beneficiation = value addition through processing.
Practice Question (15 Marks)
- “Control over critical mineral supply chains is emerging as a key determinant of geopolitical and economic power.” Discuss with reference to Africa’s mineral potential and global supply-chain realignments.


