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Kamativi mine in Zimbabwe has been developed to process lithium as part of China’s bid to expand mineral supply in Africa. Photo: X/@ZANUPF_Official

China’s investment in Africa’s lithium mines begins to pay off with new mineral supply chains created

  • China’s investment in Zimbabwe’s Kamativi lithium mine has seen production of the essential mineral increase exponentially
  • It is part of Beijing’s plan to open up lithium supply, with the development of African processing plants helping secure the ‘white gold’
In northwest Zimbabwe, a mining site abandoned three decades ago is roaring back to life after a Chinese company pumped millions of dollars into a new lithium processing plant, amid the latest global rush for the “white gold”.

Development of the Kamativi lithium mine, located about 90km (56 miles) southeast of Hwange in Matabeleland North Province, is being done in two phases. The first phase is now up and running, with the mine producing an annual total of 300,000 tonnes of raw spodumene ore and 50,000 tonnes of spodumene concentrate.

Next month, it is expected that the second phase will get under way, when production will rise to 2.3 million tonnes of raw ore and 300,000 tonnes of spodumene concentrate each year. Spodumene is an ore rich in lithium. It is processed to extract that lithium, which is then used to produce lithium-ion batteries, used in a wide range of products from electric vehicles to solar panels.

Traditionally, Australia has been China’s main supplier of spodumene – it accounted for 79 per cent of China’s imports of spodumene in 2023, according to S&P Global Commodity Insights.

But as Australia and other top global lithium producers draw up their own critical mineral plans, with exports tightening, “China has continued to explore steady supplies of lithium, including in Africa,” a recent article by S&P said.

That is nowhere more apparent than in Zimbabwe. Kamativi is the fifth lithium processing plant to go live in the southern African country, which has recently become a hot destination for Chinese capital as Beijing ramps up imports of lithium and other critical battery metals, including cobalt and graphite.
Dominated by Chinese companies, the new lithium plants in Zimbabwe – along with many more in the pipeline in Mali, Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Namibia – will almost treble the output of mined lithium from Africa in 2024 compared with last year, according to analysts.
Hwange, Zimbabwe is the site of lithium mining which has seen a huge amount of Chinese investment. Photo: Xinhua

Kamativi mine is a joint venture between China’s Sichuan PD Technology Group, a subsidiary of a Chinese-listed entity Yahua Group, and local firm Defold Mine. It used to produce tin before it was shut down in 1994 when international tin prices plummeted to unsustainable levels.

“Underpinned by Zimbabwe’s abundant lithium resources, coupled with Yahua Group’s notable legacy hard-rock lithium mining, we are full of expectations and confidence to further increase our investment towards the development of Zimbabwe’s mining sector,” Meng Yang, chairman of Yahua Group, said.

The new Kamativi lithium processing plant joins a growing number of facilities built by Chinese companies that have invested billions of dollars into Zimbabwe’s lithium industry amid a global push to transition to green energy.

Major Chinese companies, including Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt, Sinomine Resource Group and Chengxin Lithium Group, all completed the construction or upgrade of lithium processing plants in Zimbabwe last year.

While the opening of new lithium supply chains is good news for China, it is also good news for the African countries involved.

London-based Benchmark Minerals estimates that lithium production from Africa will almost treble in this year. In 2023 Africa accounted for just 4 per cent of mined lithium globally, but it is forecast to account for 10 per cent of global supply this year, Benchmark said.

Benchmark forecasts that African lithium mines will produce 111,000 tonnes in 2024, up 201 per cent from the relatively small base of 37,000 tonnes produced the previous year.

It said Zimbabwe is expected to account for 80 per cent of the region’s output this year with Namibia coming in second in terms of mined lithium output in 2024, representing 17 per cent.

“China holds the majority of the world’s refining capacity. However, their domestic mine supply cannot keep up,” Claudia Cook, a lithium analyst at Benchmark, said. “What sets China apart is that it already has the supply chain to utilise African lithium resources, as well as the expertise and capital.”

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China-funded infrastructure across Africa force difficult decisions for its leaders

China-funded infrastructure across Africa force difficult decisions for its leaders

Beijing currently controls the global lithium-ion battery industry, while it also dominates much of the mineral’s processing, as well as others such as cobalt and graphite. To get the raw materials it needs, China has ramped up its procurement of battery minerals from Africa and other places.

But it has created disquiet from Washington over Beijing’s grip on critical metal supply chains.

That explains America’s recent initiatives in Africa to secure battery metals to cut its dependence on China. For example, the US has promised the DRC and Zambia to help them process their minerals domestically, and has also pledged to finance the rebuilding of the Lobito Corridor, which involves a major railway running from Zambia to Angola’s Atlantic Ocean port of Lobito.
In Mozambique, the United States is also supporting a graphite mining project, with the minerals to be processed in Louisiana. Graphite is essential in lubricants and products including batteries and fuel cells, and America’s moves in Mozambique are an effort to counter Chinese dominance of the mineral.

Observers at the United States Institute of Peace say it is an example of America looking to Africa to help overcome a critical mineral vulnerability. Currently, the US produces little to no natural graphite, meaning it is virtually 100 per cent reliant on imports for graphite supply, with China being the leading import source, the institute said.

“China’s 2023 export restrictions on graphite and the potential for trade restrictions on other critical minerals will likely intensify US and allied interest in Africa,” it said in a recent study.

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