The South African government has proposed a six month ban on the export of scrap metal to combat widespread theft and vandalism of public infrastructure

Africa’s export sector is undergoing structural transformation as global demand for critical minerals — including lithium, cobalt, graphite and rare earth elements — surges amid the global energy transition.

Countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Zambia, Namibia and South Africa are increasingly central to global electric vehicle and renewable energy supply chains.

Value Addition vs Raw Exports

Historically, Africa has exported raw minerals with limited domestic processing. Governments are now seeking to capture greater value by:

  • Developing local refining capacity
  • Encouraging battery precursor manufacturing
  • Negotiating beneficiation requirements

Export policy reforms aim to reduce the continent’s dependence on raw material shipments and increase domestic industrialisation.

Global Strategic Implications

Major global powers are intensifying engagement with African mineral-rich countries to secure long-term supply agreements.

For African economies, the key challenge is balancing foreign investment attraction with long-term industrial development goals.

The critical minerals export boom could redefine Africa’s position in global trade — provided infrastructure, governance and policy frameworks support sustainable growth.

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