China’s Critical Minerals Playbook in Africa: A Value-Chain Fortress the West Still Struggles to Breach

Dec 10, 2025

Highlights

  • China's decades-long strategy has secured control over 87% of global mineral refining.
  • China holds control over 70% of rare earth mining.
  • China has captured African upstream assets through vertically integrated infrastructure.
  • The Belt and Road Initiative has created a logistical lattice binding African minerals to Chinese refineries.
  • Diversification is structurally challenging for Western supply chains.
  • Western firms like UK-based Pensana and U.S. investors are gaining traction in Africa.
  • Nations impose export controls, signaling potential shifts in mineral geopolitics.

Chinaโ€™s dominance of Africaโ€™s critical minerals sector is neither accidental nor suddenโ€”it is the result of decades of upstream acquisition, midstream consolidation, and downstream industrial integration. The Africa Center for Strategic Studies via All Africa (opens in a new tab) outlines a system that is vast, vertically aligned, and extremely difficult to dislodge. For Rare Earth Exchanges readers, the strategic question is simple: What does Chinaโ€™s mineral empire in Africa mean for the future of rare earth diversification?

The Long Shadow of Beijingโ€™s Mineral Strategy

The article accurately notes Chinaโ€™s overwhelming control of refining capacityโ€”87% of global processing, nearly 70% of rare earth mining, and 93% of permanent magnet manufacturing. These figures track with known REEx research and global assessments. Also accurate is Chinaโ€™s push into African upstream assetsโ€”Goulamina lithium (Mali), Ngualla rare earths (Tanzania), and Khoemacau copper (Botswana). These acquisitions give Beijing raw material certainty through the 2030s.

ย What stands out is the infrastructure dimension: Chinaโ€™s Belt and Road Initiative isnโ€™t just ports and railโ€”it is a logistical lattice binding African minerals to Chinese refineries, from the Lobito Corridor to Dar es Salaam. This is the part most mainstream reporting misses, and it is correctly emphasized here.

Where the Narrative Needs Nuance

The claim that China โ€œweaponizesโ€ export controls is partially accurateโ€”Beijing has restricted gallium, graphite, and magnet production inputs. The articleโ€™s framing is strong but not misleading. REEx would simply caution investors: export restrictions are asymmetricโ€”they hurt Chinaโ€™s customers, but they also pressure Chinaโ€™s own manufacturers, who depend on global demand.

Similarly, the discussion of environmental violations is grounded in real events (e.g., Zambiaโ€™s Kafue spill). Yet the article risks implying this is unique to Chinese firms. Historically, Western mining houses also operated with poor oversight in Africa. The issue is enforcement capacity, not nationality.

Why This Matters for Rare Earth Supply Chains

The central takeaway for investors: Chinaโ€™s dominance is structural, not incidental. Africaโ€™s enormous magnet-metal potential (NdPr, Dy, Tb) remains tied to Chinese capital, smelting capacity, and rail-port corridors. Western or Japanese attempts to build โ€œChina-freeโ€ value chains must confront this geography of influenceโ€”not just geology.

ย Still, pockets of opportunity are emerging. UK-based Pensana, operating in Angola, has become a standout example of a Western company successfully localizing operationsโ€”working with African financiers, building local business partnerships, and demonstrating that non-Chinese actors can gain traction on the continent. Pensanaโ€™s progress represents a meaningful breach in what has long been viewed as a near-unshakeable Chinese stronghold in African rare earths and critical minerals.

At the same time, nations like Malawi, Tanzania, and Namibia are asserting greater control through export restrictions aimed at keeping more value on the continent. Whether these moves spark genuine diversification and industrial empowermentโ€”or simply reshape old patterns of dependencyโ€”remains one of the defining questions for the next decade of global mineral geopolitics.

President Donald Trump,ย recently brokering a Central African peace dealย between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, along with the U.S. government, is encouraging collaboration in central Africa. ย And as Rare Earth Exchanges has reported, U.S. investors are pivoting toward Africa in search of critical minerals and rare earth value.

Note UK-based Pensana Plc (opens in a new tab) operating in Angola has done a good job localizing, collaborating with African financial partners, and local businesses at the mine. Pensana is on the move representing a Western breach in the Chinese African critical mineral and rare earth dam. Nations like Malawi, Tanzania, and Namibia are imposing export controls to capture more value at home. Whether this becomes meaningful diversification or another cycle of dependency remains an open question.

ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโ„ข โ€“ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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