Dubai Telegraph - Export ban sparks rush to process lithium in Zimbabwe

EUR -
AED 4.301666
AFN 74.964245
ALL 96.098612
AMD 434.445807
ANG 2.096522
AOA 1075.268556
ARS 1634.551952
AUD 1.630204
AWG 2.108371
AZN 1.990446
BAM 1.957809
BBD 2.359448
BDT 143.766913
BGN 1.953876
BHD 0.442754
BIF 3500.747465
BMD 1.171317
BND 1.494434
BOB 8.125338
BRL 5.824022
BSD 1.171467
BTN 111.357269
BWP 15.902318
BYN 3.3136
BYR 22957.812186
BZD 2.356518
CAD 1.594092
CDF 2717.455481
CHF 0.916309
CLF 0.026959
CLP 1060.920313
CNY 7.998045
CNH 7.997576
COP 4351.079355
CRC 532.6443
CUC 1.171317
CUP 31.039899
CVE 110.378265
CZK 24.38108
DJF 208.654111
DKK 7.472136
DOP 69.67752
DZD 155.167832
EGP 62.698301
ERN 17.569754
ETB 182.962347
FJD 2.570982
FKP 0.862349
GBP 0.863993
GEL 3.139342
GGP 0.862349
GHS 13.11746
GIP 0.862349
GMD 85.506397
GNF 10281.506491
GTQ 8.953391
GYD 245.101511
HKD 9.175306
HNL 31.141708
HRK 7.537661
HTG 153.316566
HUF 362.780162
IDR 20375.292578
ILS 3.448351
IMP 0.862349
INR 111.423809
IQD 1534.666902
IRR 1539110.469778
ISK 143.39264
JEP 0.862349
JMD 184.559386
JOD 0.830504
JPY 183.936547
KES 151.232472
KGS 102.397114
KHR 4699.822729
KMF 491.953408
KPW 1054.185251
KRW 1723.463729
KWD 0.360707
KYD 0.976402
KZT 543.46768
LAK 25743.416637
LBP 104927.071037
LKR 374.360955
LRD 215.010633
LSL 19.593575
LTL 3.458594
LVL 0.708518
LYD 7.418581
MAD 10.828211
MDL 20.170698
MGA 4881.008653
MKD 61.632209
MMK 2459.472469
MNT 4189.420664
MOP 9.453401
MRU 46.821846
MUR 54.770607
MVR 18.1027
MWK 2031.784918
MXN 20.446745
MYR 4.630193
MZN 74.84353
NAD 19.59751
NGN 1609.026742
NIO 43.105585
NOK 10.838662
NPR 178.169547
NZD 1.989417
OMR 0.450374
PAB 1.171702
PEN 4.108992
PGK 5.095228
PHP 72.067028
PKR 326.462102
PLN 4.252156
PYG 7283.473945
QAR 4.270864
RON 5.194835
RSD 117.416326
RUB 88.404773
RWF 1713.157959
SAR 4.39501
SBD 9.41986
SCR 16.34319
SDG 703.374036
SEK 10.835911
SGD 1.493898
SHP 0.874506
SLE 28.812685
SLL 24561.926256
SOS 669.578514
SRD 43.872863
STD 24243.895949
STN 24.520242
SVC 10.252477
SYP 129.459787
SZL 19.593105
THB 38.18786
TJS 10.967254
TMT 4.105466
TND 3.409198
TOP 2.82025
TRY 52.946804
TTD 7.958166
TWD 37.051114
TZS 3039.567486
UAH 51.626376
UGX 4396.629516
USD 1.171317
UYU 47.188422
UZS 14057.425043
VES 572.706936
VND 30851.902759
VUV 139.127601
WST 3.180346
XAF 656.630802
XAG 0.015866
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.165542
XCG 2.111767
XDR 0.814803
XOF 656.630802
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.472035
ZAR 19.587344
ZMK 10543.254978
ZMW 21.940514
ZWL 377.163579
  • RIO

    -1.5500

    99.03

    -1.57%

  • RBGPF

    0.5000

    63.1

    +0.79%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3000

    16

    -1.88%

  • BTI

    -0.2400

    58.47

    -0.41%

  • CMSC

    -0.0140

    22.856

    -0.06%

  • GSK

    -0.6400

    50.97

    -1.26%

  • VOD

    -0.1050

    16.045

    -0.65%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    36.37

    +0.05%

  • NGG

    -1.0600

    87.42

    -1.21%

  • BCC

    -4.1500

    73.98

    -5.61%

  • CMSD

    -0.0350

    23.245

    -0.15%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    12.91

    -0.54%

  • AZN

    -1.1500

    183.59

    -0.63%

  • BCE

    -0.0750

    23.885

    -0.31%

  • BP

    0.3800

    46.79

    +0.81%

Export ban sparks rush to process lithium in Zimbabwe
Export ban sparks rush to process lithium in Zimbabwe / Photo: Sameer Al-DOUMY - AFP/File

Export ban sparks rush to process lithium in Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe's ban on raw lithium exports is forcing Chinese miners to rethink their strategy, speeding up plans to process the metal locally instead of shipping it to China's vast rechargeable battery industry.

Text size:

The country is Africa's largest lithium producer and has one of the world's largest reserves, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS).

Zimbabwe already banned the export of lithium ore in 2022 and in 2025 announced it would halt exports of lithium concentrates from January 2027.

But on Wednesday it imposed the ban with immediate effect, leaving unclear what the lithium mining sector will do in the short term as Zimbabwe currently has no facilities to process lithium concentrates.

The move, which also included a blanket ban on export of all raw minerals, aims to capture the added value of refining and processing, thus creating jobs and additional government tax revenue.

But critics say the push to refine should have come sooner, with Zimbabwe already having lost out on several years of revenues for the hard-pressed local economy.

Prospect Lithium Zimbabwe, owned by Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt, has spent $400 million on a processing plant that should be operational in the coming weeks, its representative Patience Chizodza told state broadcaster ZBC.

It will reportedly be the first factory in Africa to refine lithium concentrate into lithium sulfate -- a powdered form that is one step closer to the product used in batteries.

The facility should be capable of handling 400,000 tonnes a year of concentrate.

The Zimbabwe state-owned Mutapa Energy Minerals is set to start work in the coming months on a similar plant, chief executive officer Innocent Rukweza told reporters earlier this month.

"We expect that by mid-year -- around June at the latest -- construction of a concentrate-processing plant will be under way," Rukweza said.

The $270-million facility funded by Chinese firms would be able to process 600,000 tonnes annually, he said.

- 'Too little, too late' -

Bikita Minerals, Zimbabwe's largest lithium mine and owned by Sinomine Resources Group, is working on feasibility studies for the construction of a lithium sulphate plant in December, spokesperson Tinomuda Chakanyuka said.

"The project, which will be developed in phases, represents an estimated investment of approximately $500 million from shareholders," Chakanyuka told AFP.

He said the facility will increase local capacity to separate minerals and "contribute to Zimbabwe's broader industrialisation and export diversification objectives."

Global demand for the soft, white metal was up 20 percent last year from 2024, with a key factor being EV sales growth in China and Europe and increased demand for batteries, the USGS said.

Zimbabwe's exports of lithium concentrate rose to 1.5 million metric tonnes last year, generating government revenue of $571.6 million, the Minerals Marketing Authority of Zimbabwe (MMCZ) announced in early February.

The Zimbabwean government's moves to ban exports of raw minerals didn't impress its critics.

"Government is doing too little, too late," said Farai Maguwu, executive director of Zimbabwe's Centre for Natural Resource Governance (CNRG).

With the new rush for critical minerals around the world, "people are asking serious questions about the benefits to the producer country," he said.

"A country like Zimbabwe is exporting raw lithium and, in the process, enriching China at its own expense," Maguwu said.

Instead it should be building its own "mine-to-market ecosystem" that manufactures and markets lithium products, he added.

Economist Godfrey Kanyenze accused the government of a "deficit in policy implementation" when it effectively gave a five-year grace period on the 2022 lithium ore ban by allowing exports of raw concentrates.

Kanyenze said state oversight at Chinese-owned lithium mines was limited, making it difficult to determine how much companies actually produced and earned.

There have also been allegations of environmental damage and exploitation of workers, including by paying low wages.

"Zimbabwe must learn from countries like Norway, Botswana and Kuwait, which safeguard their natural resources through firm, consistent and strategic policy frameworks," he said.

F.A.Dsouza--DT