President Bola Ahmed Tinubu Wednesday cautioned against the dire consequences of Africa’s long-standing profile as a supplier of raw minerals to other continents.
Delivering a keynote address during the African Minerals Strategy Group (AMSG) meeting on the sidelines of the ongoing 79th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in York, United States, the president said extracting raw minerals in Africa has continued to keep the continent in a state of poverty, making it even more underdeveloped.
The president, who was represented by Vice President Kashim Shettima, said while Africa holds a significant portion of the world’s mineral reserves, including 92% of global platinum, 56% of cobalt and 54% of manganese, these resources have been primarily extracted and exported to foreign countries for refining and manufacturing.
The president stressed the need for Africa to break free from dependency because extraction of raw minerals without local processing only deepens continent’s underdevelopment and prolongs its economic challenges.
“A situation in which the raw minerals are extracted from our countries, exported, refined, and sold to us as finished products merely consolidates the foundations of our misery and pushes us further down the depths of underdevelopment,” he said.
The Nigerian leader called on African nations to adopt a new agenda that prioritises local value addition as a key to industrialising the continent and providing sustainable economic growth.
He said the persistent practice of extracting African resources without local value addition has left the continent at the mercy of foreign markets, forcing it to repurchase finished products at much higher prices.
On the evolution of lithium-ion technology, the president said the development has enabled the swift production and manufacturing of portable consumer electronics such as laptops, computers, cellular phones and electric cars.
“We live in a world of electronic mobility in which lithium-powered batteries provide higher specific energy, higher energy density, higher energy efficiency, longer cycle life, and longer calendar life.
“The global need for new battery technology has triggered a new scramble for Africa’s critical minerals. Africa possesses 92 percent of global reserves of platinum, 56 per cent of Cobalt, 54 per cent of Manganese and 36 per cent of Chromium. These are the minerals employed in the manufacturing of the new batteries. In short, the world needs Africa today more than ever,” he said.
The president emphasised Africa’s determination to move beyond the historical exploitation of its resources, advocating the localisation of the entire mineral value chain within the continent.
He assured of his administration’s commitment to adding local value to Nigeria’s mineral resources as part of the Africa Minerals Strategy Group’s (AMSG) vision chaired by Nigeria’s Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Mr Dele Alake.
The president, who drew attention to Nigeria’s vast market of over 226 million people, said the success of the country’s $10 billion telecoms market is proof of its growth potential “in the manufacturing of Lithium batteries, concentrates and components to set up their business and domesticate the value chain from extraction to production in Nigeria.”
He said the AMSG is focused on transforming Africa from a supplier of raw materials into a global mining industry stakeholder.
Also speaking, Nigeria’s Minister of Solid Minerals, Mr Dele Alake, who also spoke at the event in his capacity as the chairman of the Africa Minerals Strategy Group, laid out the group’s vision to transform Africa’s mining industry through local value addition and industrialization.
The minister criticised the traditional model of mineral extraction in Africa where raw materials are exported for processing abroad, resulting in lost economic opportunities and jobs on the continent.
He said this pattern of trade has left African nations vulnerable, as they are forced to import finished goods at inflated prices.
The minister also proposed a shift towards local value addition — processing raw minerals into finished goods within Africa — as a strategy for enhancing the continent’s economic independence and contributing more significantly to its GDP.
“We are moving from commercialisation to industrialisation. By processing and manufacturing raw minerals into finished goods, we can increase employment, reduce our reliance on imports, and ultimately raise the contribution of the solid minerals sector to our GDP,” he said.
He said although the continent faces significant developmental challenges, Africa’s natural wealth provides a pathway to prosperity if leveraged correctly.
While setting the mood for the important conversation on how Africa’s natural resources should benefit the people, reduce poverty and create wealth for the people of the continent, the General Secretary of AMSG, Mr Moses Michael Engadu, called for a new vision and political will among African leaders to ensure value addition becomes a sacrosanct condition to granting mineral license to any investor.
The roundtable had representatives from investors, development partners, multilateral institutions and major financial institutions in attendance.