Anne-Marie Fleury
Responsible Sourcing Director, battery materials Glencore International AG
AnneMarie Fleury is a sustainability professional with extensive expertise in environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues across global mineral supply chains. At Glencore, she leads responsible sourcing for cobalt, lithium, and batteryrelated nickel. She has deep knowledge of sustainability standards and certification, having led standards and assurance for the jewellery sector’s most widely used certification programme during her tenure at the Responsible Jewellery Council. She also served on the Board of the ISEAL Alliance, the global association that defines credibility principles for sustainability standards for global supply chains covering products such as coffee, tea, cocoa, textiles, fruit, aluminium. AnneMarie is highly experienced in supply chain traceability. She developed the Chain of Custody Standard for the jewellery sector and is part of the UN Transparency Protocol pilot under the Responsible Minerals Initiative. Throughout her career, she has specialised in multistakeholder collaboration, working closely with commodity associations and partnering with NGOs, including initiatives such as the Fair Cobalt Alliance and conservation organisations like IUCN.
2026 Agenda Sessions
Dual-use dilemma: Balancing reliable mineral access and ensuring responsible supply chains for green
Africa stands at the heart of the global race for minerals, essential for the green energy transition, advanced robotics, Artificial Intelligence, and defense technologies. In this context of high market demands, ensuring reliable mineral access is critical. Moreover, with vast (untapped) reserves, Africa has the potential to shape the future of clean energy and technological innovation through supplying the minerals that are in high demand globally, while also stimulating sustainable development for its population through building responsible and reliable mineral supply chains. It will also address the question: is there an opportunity for African markets, including ASM? This session will be run as an interactive workshop. Looking at the full value chain, it explores the competing demands across sectors; scrutinizes the (complementary) roles and responsibilities of different actors, including governing institutions, up-, mid- and downstream companies, as well as artisanal and small-scale mining; and examines the connection between responsible investment and building secure supply chains.
Tuesday 10 February 14:00 - 16:00 Okavango Delta Stage (CTICC2 - Level 1)








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