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As resource-rich nations introduce export bans and other limits, analyst says investment may not automatically follow

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Zimbabwe, Africa’s largest lithium producer, abruptly suspended exports of raw lithium minerals and concentrates, moving its 2027 deadline forward. Other African nations are also finding ways to assert greater control over their raw resources. Photo: EPA-EFE

Jevans Nyabiage

Resource-rich African nations are increasingly asserting control over critical minerals to maximise domestic returns, sending global prices soaring and exerting pressure on Chinese supply chains.

Zimbabwe, Africa’s largest lithium producer, last month abruptly suspended exports of raw lithium minerals and concentrates, moving its 2027 deadline forward.

Zimbabwe’s mines minister Polite Kambamura revealed in a post-cabinet briefing on March 3 that following notice of the intended ban, the industry had increased production and export volumes.

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“There was also an increased appetite for lithium export permits, and the rationale behind it was to export as much product as possible before the notice period,” Kambamura said, explaining why the deadline was brought forward a year.

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This decision hits Chinese battery producers hard, having invested billions into local mines and relying on Zimbabwe for nearly 20 per cent of their total lithium concentrate supply. Following the ban, lithium carbonate prices on the Guangzhou Futures Exchange rose sharply to 178,020 yuan (US$25,800) per tonne by late February, up from 119,000 yuan in January.

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