
By Linda Kuvheya
Zimbabwe’s recent suspension of lithium concentrate exports has sent a clear signal through global battery material markets. Beyond the immediate price reaction, the move highlights a deeper shift in how mineral-producing countries are positioning themselves within the energy transition economy.
In late February 2026, Zimbabwe announced the immediate suspension of all exports of raw minerals and lithium concentrates. The market response was swift. Within hours of the announcement, the most actively traded lithium carbonate futures contract in China rose by roughly 5–6 percent and briefly surged more than 9 percent intraday as traders priced in reduced feedstock availability.
What matters about that movement is not the magnitude of the price shift alone. It is what the reaction illustrates. Policy decisions in mineral-producing countries are now capable of reshaping supply expectations and investment calculations across the global battery materials supply chain in real time.
This development sits within a broader pattern now emerging in Southern Africa. Namibia introduced policy restrictions on the export of unprocessed critical minerals in 2023, covering lithium, cobalt, manganese, graphite, and rare earth elements as part of a strategy aimed at encouraging domestic beneficiation.
Taken together, these developments signal a clear shift in economic strategy. The objective is no longer limited to resource extraction. Increasingly, governments across the region are seeking participation in the processing and industrial stages of the battery materials value chain.
A sector in structural transition
Our recently published industry market intelligence brief, Positioning Capital in Africa’s Emerging Lithium Value Chain, examines this transition in detail. The analysis suggests that Africa’s lithium sector is evolving from a commodity supply story into a broader industrial system in which policy direction, infrastructure capacity, and global battery demand increasingly interact.
Zimbabwe alone exported more than 1.12 million tonnes of spodumene concentrate in 2025 and has attracted over $1.4 billion in project investment since 2021. At the same time, global electric vehicle sales reached approximately 17 million units in 2024 and are expected to exceed 20 million units by 2026, while global battery deployment has already surpassed 1 terawatt-hour annually and continues to expand rapidly.
As demand accelerates and producing countries pursue greater industrial participation, investment dynamics within the sector are beginning to shift. Opportunities that once centred primarily on extraction are increasingly extending toward processing capacity, supporting infrastructure, and the technologies that enable industrial development across the value chain.
The mechanism is relatively clear. When export restrictions on unprocessed minerals take effect, global buyers begin competing for reduced raw material availability. Feedstock availability tightens, and prices for concentrates and intermediate materials adjust accordingly. Investment attention then begins to shift toward local processing capacity, the infrastructure that supports it, and the technologies that enable it to operate efficiently.
Returns that previously accrued primarily at the extraction stage begin to migrate toward processing, logistics, and operational services. This dynamic is not hypothetical. It is already visible in how capital is responding to the policy signals now emerging across the region.
Where new investment opportunities are forming
As policy shifts reshape Africa’s lithium sector, investment opportunities are beginning to emerge across several layers of the developing value chain. Our analysis identifies three broad approaches through which investors are positioning capital in the sector, each with a distinct exposure profile.
The most familiar entry point remains upstream participation. Investors can acquire equity stakes in mining projects, form joint ventures with operators, or secure long-term offtake agreements linked to production. These positions provide direct exposure to lithium supply and remain central for companies seeking long-term feedstock security.
A second layer of opportunity is forming in industrial participation. As governments encourage domestic beneficiation, investment is increasingly directed toward lithium processing facilities, chemical conversion plants, and the supporting infrastructure required to operate them, including energy supply, water systems, and logistics networks.
Beyond these industrial assets, a third layer is emerging across the broader ecosystem that supports the sector. As processing capacity expands, demand grows for specialized technologies and operational services that enable production to scale efficiently. These include recovery optimisation technologies, engineering and project services, logistics coordination, and traceability systems increasingly required by global battery supply chains.
Taken together, these layers illustrate how the opportunity set in Africa’s lithium sector is expanding beyond extraction into a broader industrial ecosystem. Several locations across Southern Africa are beginning to exhibit the conditions required for these layers of investment to emerge.
Within this evolving landscape, Namibia’s position in the regional value chain is attracting growing analytical attention. The country’s port infrastructure at Walvis Bay, its relatively stable institutional framework, and its advancing green hydrogen programme create conditions consistent with a potential regional processing hub role. Analysts, including Mitsui Global Strategic Studies, have highlighted this combination as a foundation for processing minerals not only from domestic deposits but also from neighbouring producing countries within an increasingly integrated regional value chain.
As global battery manufacturers and vehicle producers seek to diversify supply chains away from concentrated midstream processing geographies, Southern Africa’s combination of resource endowment, improving logistics infrastructure, and supportive policy direction is attracting increasing interest from institutional investors.
Interpreting the signal The developments unfolding across Southern Africa suggest that investment evaluation in the lithium sector is becoming more complex than a traditional assessment of geological reserves alone.
Regulatory direction increasingly shapes project economics and operational continuity.
Infrastructure readiness determines which processing models can be implemented at scale.
Partnership structures influence long-term access to opportunities as governments seek greater participation in downstream value chains.
In this environment, capital allocation based solely on resource quality risks overlooking where value is beginning to accumulate within the broader industrial system.
For investors tracking the sector, the policy shifts in Namibia and Zimbabwe signal a deeper structural repositioning in the lithium industry. This shift is beginning to redefine where durable returns in Africa’s emerging battery materials economy are likely to be found.
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This commentary draws on analysis presented in Positioning Capital in Africa’s Emerging Lithium Value Chain, an industry market intelligence brief published by RIAHSAH Co. in February 2026. The full brief examines policy trajectories, investor positioning frameworks, and value chain development scenarios across Africa’s lithium sector. For enquiries, contact RIAHSAH Co. directly.
Linda Kuvheya is Director of Innovation & Impact at RIAHSAH Co., a network social enterprise providing market intelligence, systems analysis, and strategic advisory services across East and Southern Africa. The author declares no financial interest in any company or project referenced in this article.
* Linda Kuvheya | Director of Innovation and Impact, RIAHSAH Co.




