Tuesday, February 10, 2026
  • about us
  • Privacy Policy
afronews
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
  • Egypt & Africa
  • World & Middle East
  • business
  • Sport
  • Culture
  • Influential African figures
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
afronews
  • Home
  • News
  • Egypt & Africa
  • World & Middle East
  • business
  • Sport
  • Culture
  • Influential African figures
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
afronews
No Result
View All Result
Home business

Sino-American saber-rattling echoes ferociously in the African minerals arena  

by Adham mohamed
February 9, 2026
in business, News
A A
Sino-American saber-rattling echoes ferociously in the African minerals arena  

The U.S. is using offtake deals and state-backed funding to compete in the short term with China in securing supplies of African copper, cobalt and other critical minerals, diplomats, executives and analysts said ahead of this week’s Indaba.

Washington’s focus is on Zambia, Guinea and Democratic Republic of Congo. The latter accounts for more than 70% of global cobalt supplies and produced some 3.3 million metric tons of copper in 2024.

You might also like

Somalia signs defence agreement with Saudi Arabia

Banditry by war : Sudanese nomads trapped .. 14 m displaced due to ethnic bloodshed

Over 100 delegates convene in Nairobi to Accelerate Agri-growth 

Instead of placing U.S. operators in high-risk countries, however, the U.S. is leaning towards offtake and other trading structures such as one it has with Mercuria and arrangements it has with Congolese state miner Gécamines, to edge output into U.S.-aligned value chains dominated by Chinese refiners.

Offtake is where a country or company secures rights to a share of a mine’s output in exchange for financing or other support.

“We’re already seeing U.S. engagement reshape mineral flows out of Africa,” said Thomas Scurfield, a senior analyst with nonprofit NRGI, ahead of the event in South Africa.

The U.S. is putting money behind its rhetoric, but it remains to be seen whether it can compete with China’s scale and speed,” Scurfield added.

Both Washington and Beijing are expected to seek new commitments at the Indaba mining event in Cape Town this week, with the U.S. sounding out officials on its minerals bloc.

Central to the change, Gécamines is preparing to ship around 100,000 tons of its Tenke Fungurume copper allocation to U.S. buyers this year after winning broader marketing rights in a 2023 renegotiation, opens new tab with China’s CMOC (603993.SS), opens new tab.

Xiao Wenhao, analyst at Shanghai Metals Market, said China’s cobalt supply chain also faces risks as Congo’s export restrictions collide with expanding U.S.–DRC cooperation.

Elsewhere, London-based Pensana (PRE.L), opens new tab ditched plans to build a rare earth refinery in Britain to process feedstock from its mine in Angola, shifting the project to the United States, citing stronger U.S. incentives and price guarantees.

“This is the U.S. deploying financial firepower rather than industrial presence,” said Vincent Rouget, analyst at Control Risks. “With offtake and trading channels, Washington can redirect Congolese copper to American buyers without taking on the political or operational risks of running mines in the DRC.”

Chinese firms still control many of Congo’s biggest copper and cobalt assets, including Tenke Fungurume and Kamoa-Kakula, and have routed most output to China for refining for more than a decade.

Beyond copper and cobalt, Congo is emerging as a supplier of zinc, germanium and gallium.

New offtake arrangements position Gécamines as a leading zinc exporter and principal buyer of germanium and gallium concentrates, with the company recently recording its first export of locally processed germanium.

KoBold Metals has staked more than 3,000 square kilometers in the lithium and copper belt, but will not advance projects which are entangled in disputes, stressing governance standards, its Congolese head Benjamin Katabuka told Reuters.

Chinese operators, by contrast, have proceeded on contested ground, reinforcing their speed‑to‑market advantage.

At Manono, one of the world’s largest undeveloped lithium deposits, KoBold says it will not move until ownership issues are resolved, even as Zijin advances infrastructure on the northern block.

If it secures the southern block cleanly, KoBold says production could start within three years.

In Guinea, China‑backed Winning Consortium Simandou pushed ahead with rail and port, opens new tab construction at the giant Simandou despite ownership disputes, effectively forcing Rio Tinto (RIO.AX), opens new tab to fall in line.

 

Washington Pivots to Africa to Break China’s Critical Mineral Stranglehold

Tags: Africa newsChinaDemocratic Republic of Congo.Guineasliderthe African mineralsThe U.S.trendingurgentZambia
Share234Tweet146Send

Related Posts

Somalia signs defence agreement with Saudi Arabia
News

Somalia signs defence agreement with Saudi Arabia

February 10, 2026
Banditry by war : Sudanese nomads trapped .. 14 m displaced due to ethnic bloodshed
News

Banditry by war : Sudanese nomads trapped .. 14 m displaced due to ethnic bloodshed

February 10, 2026
Over 100 delegates convene in Nairobi to Accelerate Agri-growth 
News

Over 100 delegates convene in Nairobi to Accelerate Agri-growth 

February 10, 2026
Accused it of fabrication and outright aggression ..Eritrea hits back at Ethiopia
News

Accused it of fabrication and outright aggression ..Eritrea hits back at Ethiopia

February 9, 2026
Opens new diamond unit , Angola seeks 20%-30% stake in De Beers
business

Opens new diamond unit , Angola seeks 20%-30% stake in De Beers

February 9, 2026

the most visited

Banditry by war : Sudanese nomads trapped .. 14 m displaced due to ethnic bloodshed

Banditry by war : Sudanese nomads trapped .. 14 m displaced due to ethnic bloodshed

February 10, 2026
Somalia signs defence agreement with Saudi Arabia

Somalia signs defence agreement with Saudi Arabia

February 10, 2026
afronews

© 2025 afro news website - your eye on africa news.

menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Egypt & Africa
  • World & Middle East
  • business
  • Sport
  • Culture
  • Influential African figures
  • Opinion

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Egypt & Africa
  • World & Middle East
  • business
  • Sport
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Influential African figures
  • Privacy Policy
  • about us

© 2025 afro news website - your eye on africa news.