Who Owns Malawi’s Rare Earths? An Offshore Shuffle Raises Hard Questions for Investors

Feb 3, 2026

Highlights

  • ICIJ investigation found that Chinese state-linked firms quietly assumed majority control of a rare-earth-rich mining concession in Malawi through two ownership transfers (2023-2025) without legally required government approval, prompting an official probe.
  • The case illustrates how governance gaps, offshore structures, and weak regulatory oversight in frontier jurisdictions allow strategic rare earth assets to change hands before production begins—creating long-term supply chain leverage.
  • For investors, ownership risk and regulatory transparency can matter more than geology: opaque control shifts threaten social license, stall projects, and concentrate downstream processing power even further.

Rare Earth Exchanges reviews an International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ)-backed investigation (opens in a new tab) into ownership changes at a rare-earth–rich mining concession in Malawi. We separate verified facts from unresolved claims, assess governance risks, and explain why opaque control shifts in frontier jurisdictions matter for the global rare earth supply chain.

An investigation found that a major rare-earth mineral project in Malawi quietly changed hands, ending up under control of companies linked to the Chinese state—without the government’s required approval. Malawi is now investigating. For investors, the story is less about geology and more about governance, ownership risk, and who really controls future rare earth supply.

What the Investigation Found

Reporting by ICIJ partners (PIJ Malawi, Finance Uncovered, The Continent) alleges that entities linked to the Chinese state assumed majority control of Mawei Mining Company Ltd., holder of a heavy mineral sands concession near Lake Malawi. The deposit is believed to contain zircon, titanium, and monazite—an important source of rare earth elements.

The probe documents two ownership changes (2023–2025) at Mawei’s parent, Xinjin International Company Ltd. (BVI), culminating in majority control by Shandong Zhaojin Ruining Mining Industries and Hainan International Resources. Malawian officials acknowledged they were unaware of these changes, despite laws requiring notification and approval of beneficial ownership transfers.

Certified

Malawi law requires disclosure and approval of ownership changes; officials say they did not receive it. The government has launched a fact-finding exercise that could lead to fines or administrative action.

Unproven

Commercial viability, grades, timelines, and whether the ownership shift violated law remain to be determined by Malawi’s investigation. Claims of “350+ million tonnes” reflect estimates, not proven reserves.

REEx Investigates

Last month REEx reported the Malawi case is less about immediate rare earth supply and more about long-term control through governance gaps: Mawei Mining’s rare-earth-bearing heavy mineral sands deposit near Lake Malawi is geologically real but commercially dormant, with promised production timelines missed and no current output.

As the journalist consortia found, what did move was ownership—two quiet transfers between 2023 and 2025 consolidated control under Chinese state-linked firms without the legally required notification to Malawian authorities, prompting a belated government probe. REEx cautions against overstating this as instant “supply-chain capture”—there is no operating mine, no separation, no exports—but stresses the deeper pattern: weak registries, offshore structures, and under-resourced regulators enable governance arbitrage, allowing patient, state-backed capital to accumulate strategic optionality over decades. The takeaway for investors is clear: in rare earths, geology plus opacity can translate into leverage long before a single tonne is produced.

The Quiet Risk Investors Should Notice

As stated above, this is a governance story with supply-chain consequences. Rare earth projects in frontier jurisdictions often hinge on social license, regulatory clarity, and transparent ownership. When control shifts through offshore structures without oversight, projects stall, communities sour, and capital risk rises. The investigation also underscores how control of monazite-bearing sands—critical to downstream magnets—can change hands long before production begins.

Why This Matters for the Rare Earth Supply Chain

Global rare earth supply is already concentrated at the processing stage. If upstream assets are acquired through opaque pathways, downstream leverage only tightens. For Western manufacturers seeking diversification, ownership risk can be as decisive as geology.

REEx Takeaway: In rare earths, who owns the asset—and how—can matter more than what’s in the ground.

Source: Fergus Shiel, ICIJ partners (opens in a new tab), Feb. 3, 2026; Rare Earth Exchanges, Jan 24, 2026

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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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Investigation reveals Chinese firms took control of Malawi rare earth mine without approval, exposing critical ownership risks in supply chains. (read full article...)

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