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Global EconomyBlogsHow Africa Keeps Losing Despite China V. West Race for Minerals
How Africa Keeps Losing Despite China V. West Race for Minerals
Global EconomyUS EconomyMining

How Africa Keeps Losing Despite China V. West Race for Minerals

•February 25, 2026
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Naked Capitalism
Naked Capitalism•Feb 25, 2026

Why It Matters

The deal reshapes global supply chains but leaves African states with limited fiscal gains and constrained policy space, risking entrenched inequality in the emerging green‑tech economy.

Key Takeaways

  • •US secures DRC mineral stakes via $9B deal.
  • •Price floors protect investors, not African state revenues.
  • •No major African processing investment in FORGE or Vault.
  • •Agreements limit African policy flexibility and local content.
  • •Geopolitical leverage shifts from China to US, benefits unclear.

Pulse Analysis

Africa sits at the heart of the new strategic‑minerals race, supplying the lithium, rare earths and coltan that power electric vehicles, AI chips and defense systems. The U.S. ministerial in February 2026 signaled a coordinated effort to divert these raw materials from Chinese processing hubs toward Western refiners, using price‑floor guarantees and a massive stockpile to assure investors. By pairing diplomatic outreach—such as the 2025 Washington Accords with the DRC—with high‑value contracts, Washington aims to lock in supply while projecting a narrative of partnership.

Yet the architecture of these agreements prioritises investor certainty over host‑country development. Price floors stabilize market expectations for mining companies but do not translate into higher royalties or tax revenues for governments like Kinshasa. The contracts lack enforceable beneficiation clauses, and arbitration provisions can curb a state’s ability to revise mining codes or impose local‑content rules. Consequently, African economies continue to export unprocessed ore, missing out on the industrial jobs, technology transfer and fiscal windfalls that downstream processing could generate.

The geopolitical shift from Chinese to U.S. dominance may reduce Beijing’s leverage, but it also entrenches a new dependency on Western supply‑chain frameworks. Without deliberate investment in African refining capacity, training programs and stronger fiscal institutions, the continent risks remaining a raw‑material hinterland while the profits of the green and digital transitions flow to Europe, the United States and East Asia. Policymakers and civil society therefore face a critical choice: demand revenue‑sharing mechanisms, local‑processing incentives, and transparent governance clauses, or watch the pattern of resource extraction repeat itself under a different flag.

How Africa Keeps Losing Despite China v. West Race for Minerals

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