Aysha Lotter
Legal & Policy Consultant World Resources Forum
Aysha Lotter is an environmental and mineral law consultant and researcher focusing primarily on the Anglophone African countries. Her research focuses on Extended Producer Responsibility, Integrated Environmental Management and Transformative Negotiations.
She is currently pursuing an interdisciplinary PhD (Private Law & Chemical Engineering) at the University of Cape Town (UCT). Her doctorate focuses on product and material stewardship in South Africa, working towards establishing a circular economy of metals on the African continent. Her expert knowledge has guided the development of the South African e-waste policy and the national norms and standards in collaboration with the Sustainable Recycling Industries (SRI )Initiative. The SRI initiative is supported and funded by the World Resources Forum and the Swiss Federal Laboratories for Material Science and Technology Research. She is also the project manager for the multidisciplinary Community of Practice: Waste to Value across three South African universities, the UCT, the University of the Western Cape as well as the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal, funded by the National Research Foundation.
Previously, Aysha was a researcher South African Research Chair: Mineral Law in Africa based in the Faculty of Law, and the Minerals to Metals Initiative based in the Chemical Engineering Department at the UCT. Aysha chaired and coordinated the Cape Town branch of the social initiative, ‘Students for Law and Social Justic’ where her flagship project was a legal referral clinic in Khayelitsha.
2025 Agenda Sessions
Exploration with extraction – investing into the next generation of African mines.
- Whilst the continent remains under-explored, are African nations well equipped to ramp up their exploration activities to meet global minerals demand?
- What supportive policies, incentives and partnerships are there available to engage with the public sector?
- Developing domestic capability - what can be done to drive further investment into African exploration projects?
- How can governments utilise this increased drive for mineral exploration to promote further development of industry & local communities?
Monday 03 February 16:30 - 17:15 CTICC2
Intergovernmental Summit
- Whilst the continent remains under-explored, are African nations well equipped to ramp up their exploration activities to meet global minerals demand?
- What supportive policies, incentives and partnerships are there available to engage with the public sector?
- Developing domestic capability - what can be done to drive further investment into African exploration projects?
- How can governments utilise this increased drive for mineral exploration to promote further development of industry & local communities?