China Backs Namibia's Domestic Processing of Critical Minerals and Uranium
Beijing pledges support to help Namibia add value to its natural resources through domestic processing
L'essentiel
- China pledged to support Namibia's domestic processing of critical minerals and uranium during talks in Beijing between Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Namibian counterpart Selma Ashipala-Musavyi.
- The joint communique aims to transform Namibia's natural resources into higher-value products, with focus on new energy, green hydrogen, oil and gas, mining and infrastructure.
- Namibia banned export of unprocessed lithium in 2023 to capture more value from the mineral supply chain.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Namibia banned the export of unprocessed lithium in 2023, following Zimbabwe's similar move, as African nations seek to capture more value from their critical mineral resources. China, the world's largest processor of lithium and rare earths, has been expanding its African partnerships to secure supply chains for clean energy technologies.
China is backing Namibia's bid to move beyond raw material exports by supporting the domestic processing of critical minerals and uranium. In a joint communique issued on Friday following talks in Beijing between Foreign Minister Wang Yi and his counterpart, Selma Ashipala-Musavyi, China pledged to help transform Namibia's natural resources into higher-value products through domestic processing and downstream cooperation. In 2023, Namibia followed Zimbabwe in banning the export of unprocessed lithium and other critical elements, aiming to capture more value from the mineral supply chain. With Beijing's support, Namibia aims to improve its industrialisation and local processing capacity to "promote Namibia's further integration into the global value chain", especially in new energy, green hydrogen, oil and gas, mining and infrastructure, according to the joint statement. "Cooperation between China and Namibia is of great significance for increasing the added value of key mineral resources, including uranium," the joint statement noted, with Namibia inviting Chinese firms to invest and do business in the country to jointly promote the smooth development of major economic cooperation projects. Aly-Khan Satchu, a sub-Saharan African geoeconomic analyst, said that as the United States behaved like a hegemon and seized resources, as seen in Venezuela and potentially Cuba, China was "playing a much smarter 21st century game".
Questions ouvertes
- What specific processing facilities will China help establish
- What are the terms of the investment deal
- How will this affect existing relationships with Western nations



