Africa’s Critical Mineral Wealth Faces Structural Barriers
Vast reserves, limited development
Africa holds more than a quarter of the world’s known critical mineral reserves, including some of the highest‑grade copper, manganese and bauxite deposits, as well as significant lithium resources, according to a 2024 McKinsey & Company analysis. Despite this geological advantage, less than 10 % of the continent’s critical‑minerals project pipeline has secured financing or progressed to feasibility or construction stages.
Why the gap between potential and progress?
The McKinsey report identifies a set of systemic obstacles that keep projects from moving beyond exploration:
- Aging rail networks and limited port capacity raise logistics costs.
- Permitting delays and regulatory uncertainty increase timelines.
- Community disputes and concerns over environmental and social impacts stall approvals.
- High financing costs, driven by perceived risk, deter investors.
- Weak project execution capabilities, including limited local expertise and technology adoption.
Exploration investment lags behind peers
While demand for energy‑transition minerals is projected to grow at an average annual rate of 4.5 % through 2035, Africa attracts only about US $1.2 billion in exploration spending each year—roughly half the annual inflow seen in Australia and Canada. This disparity limits the continent’s ability to convert its resource base into producing mines.
Lessons from South Africa’s Kalagadi manganese project
The report cites the Kalagadi manganese mine in the Northern Cape as a illustrative case. Despite being one of the largest untapped high‑grade manganese deposits globally, the project has struggled to secure financing, highlighting how infrastructure gaps, political‑security concerns, and execution risks can impede even the most promising assets.
What a competitive mining ecosystem requires
McKinsey argues that the next phase of the global critical‑minerals race will be won not by the countries with the richest ground, but by those that can build:
- Reliable transport and energy infrastructure.
- Streamlined permitting and transparent regulatory frameworks.
- Access to affordable capital through risk‑mitigation instruments.
- Wider use of digital technologies for exploration, monitoring, and operational efficiency.
- Strong community engagement models that share benefits and reduce conflict.
The stakes for Africa
Without targeted improvements in infrastructure, political stability, project delivery, and technology adoption, Africa risks missing a larger share of the global investment flow and value‑chain opportunities tied to clean‑energy technologies, AI hardware, and defense systems. The continent’s vast reserves could remain under‑utilized unless stakeholders address the structural barriers outlined above.
Sources: McKinsey & Company, “Critical Minerals in Africa: Unlocking Value Amid Structural Constraints,” 2024; International Energy Agency, “The Role of Critical Minerals in Clean Energy Transitions,” 2023.


