Driving sustainable investment in African Mining

Intergovernmental Summit Roundup MI26

25 Feb 2026 | Event News

Over two days of high-level dialogue, government officials discussed Africa’s minerals trajectory beyond 2030 and emerging geopolitical shifts shaping mining partnerships.

The discussions were guided by the African Mining Vision, Agenda 2063, and the Africa Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), with a shared recognition that Africa’s mineral wealth must serve as a catalyst for inclusive growth, industrialisation, and sustainable development.

1. Africa’s Minerals Future Beyond 2030

A central theme of the Summit was the strategic repositioning of Africa’s mining sector beyond extraction toward industrial transformation. Participants underscored that while Africa holds a significant share of the world’s critical minerals, long-term prosperity depends on:
  • Advancing value addition and beneficiation;
  • Developing mineral-based industrial clusters;
  • Strengthening regional value chains;
  • Enhancing technical skills and innovation ecosystems;
  • Translating policy frameworks into implementable projects.
The Continental Extractive Industries Programme (CEIP) and the Africa Mining Vision Private Sector Compact were highlighted as important frameworks to guide coordinated action. However, discussions emphasised that implementation, project preparation, and bankable investment pipelines remain the immediate priorities.

2. Resource Sovereignty and Investment Stability

The Summit acknowledged the evolving dynamics between African states and mining investors, particularly in light of rising global demand for critical minerals and growing assertions of resource sovereignty.
Participants recognised the legitimacy of national efforts to maximise local value and strengthen regulatory oversight. At the same time, there was broad consensus that capital-intensive mining projects require:
  • Predictable and transparent legal frameworks;
  • Contractual stability;
  • Clear and consistent fiscal regimes;
  • Strong institutional governance.
The discussions highlighted the need to maintain a balanced approach that safeguards national interests while preserving investor confidence and long-term partnership stability.

3. Industrialisation and Beneficiation

Industrialisation emerged as a recurring priority throughout the Summit. Speakers emphasised the need to move beyond raw mineral exports and retain greater value within the continent.
Key areas of focus included:
  • Local processing of critical minerals;
  • Development of battery and green mineral value chains;
  • Special economic zones and mineral-based industrial corridors;
  • Technology transfer and strategic off-taker partnerships.
While policy reforms are progressing in several jurisdictions, participants acknowledged that high energy costs, infrastructure gaps, and financing challenges continue to constrain large-scale beneficiation efforts.

4. Infrastructure Delivery at Scale

The Summit identified infrastructure—particularly energy transmission, logistics corridors, rail, and ports—as the principal enabler of mineral-based industrialisation. Deliberations highlighted several constraints to large-scale delivery at speed:
  • Weak governance and procurement inefficiencies;
  • Limited early-stage project preparation;
  • Regulatory uncertainty;
  • Inadequate community engagement and social risk management.
Participants emphasised that robust governance, transparency, and comprehensive feasibility studies significantly reduce capital costs and project risk. Early investment in project preparation and stakeholder alignment was recognised as critical to accelerating infrastructure delivery. Regional power pools and cross-border corridor initiatives were cited as strategic instruments for unlocking shared economic growth and strengthening Africa’s global competitiveness.

5. Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining (ASM)

The formalisation of artisanal and small-scale mining was widely discussed as both a governance challenge and a development opportunity. The Summit highlighted the importance of:
  • Clear and supportive licensing frameworks;
  • Financial inclusion and access to formal markets;
  • Responsible sourcing and international supply chain integration;
  • Environmental safeguards and reduction of illicit financial flows.
Participants agreed that ASM and large-scale mining can coexist within coherent regulatory frameworks, and that formalisation can significantly enhance livelihoods, local revenue, and sector legitimacy.

6. Community Participation and Social Licence

Ensuring fair and inclusive community engagement was identified as fundamental to sustainable mining development. Discussions emphasised:
  • Meaningful consultation in resettlement and project planning;
  • Long-term livelihood restoration;
  • Transparent revenue management;
  • Strengthened social risk management systems.
It was noted that social licence cannot be treated as a procedural requirement but must be sustained through ongoing engagement, accountability, and equitable benefit-sharing.

7. Governance and Transparency

The Summit underscored that governance excellence is a competitive advantage in attracting and sustaining investment. Participants highlighted the importance of:
  • Strengthening geological surveys and digitised cadastre systems;
  • Enhancing regulatory clarity and institutional capacity;
  • Promoting transparency in revenue flows and contract disclosures;
  • Safeguarding civic space and accountability mechanisms.
Transparency was recognised as essential not only for ethical governance but also for reducing financial risk and improving project viability.

8. Skills, Innovation and Human Capital

Africa’s minerals transformation agenda requires a strong skills base and innovation ecosystem.
The Summit stressed the need to:
  • Align education and training systems with industrial demand;
  • Develop specialised technical skills for green and critical mineral value chains;
  • Attract diaspora expertise;
  • Foster research, innovation, and knowledge-sharing across borders.
Reversing brain drain and building competitive human capital were identified as essential to post-2030 industrial ambitions.

9. Regional Integration and Collective Action

A recurring conclusion of the Summit was that continental integration is not optional but necessary for long-term resilience and bargaining power. Participants recognised that harmonised standards, coordinated policy approaches, and shared infrastructure can:
  • Strengthen Africa’s position in global mineral markets;
  • Reduce duplication and inefficiencies;
  • Enhance intra-African trade;
  • Promote collective economic security.

Conclusion

The Intergovernmental Summit at Mining Indaba 2026 reinforced a clear and consistent message: Africa’s mineral wealth represents an unparalleled opportunity, but its transformative potential will depend on governance, infrastructure readiness, policy coherence, industrial capacity, and regional cooperation.
The Summit concluded with a shared understanding that the next phase of Africa’s mining development must move decisively from aspiration to implementation - ensuring that mineral resources serve as a foundation for inclusive growth, sustainable development, and long-term prosperity across the continent.
 

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