Zimbabwe Suspends Export Shipments of Strategic Minerals
Zimbabwe announced an immediate suspension of exports of all raw minerals and lithium concentrates, including shipments in transit. The government cited national interest and concerns over malpractices, a move that may reshape lithium supply chains & local beneficiation plans.
February 26, 2026Clash Report
Zimbabwe's Minister of Mines & Mining Development Polite Kambamura
Zimbabwe’s abrupt suspension of raw mineral and lithium concentrate exports marks a decisive policy acceleration. The measure, announced Wednesday by Mines and Mining Development Minister Polite Kambamura, applies with immediate effect and covers “all minerals currently in transit.”
The export ban on lithium concentrates had previously been scheduled for January 2027. That timeline was intended to pressure miners to establish domestic refining capacity. The government has now moved ahead of its own deadline. In a February 17 letter to the Zimbabwe Chamber of Mines seen by Reuters, the ministry cited “continued malpractices during the exportation of minerals” and said it would realign export processes. The ministry added that the review formed “part of a broader effort to curb leakages and enhance efficiency within our systems.”
Officials emphasized that the suspension remains in place “until further notice.”
Kambamura said Zimbabwe “will be engaging the industry in the near future on new expectations and way forward.”
Zimbabwe holds Africa’s largest lithium reserves and has rapidly expanded output of lithium-bearing spodumene concentrate. Official figures show exports reached 1.128 million metric tonnes in the year ended December 2025, an 11 percent increase from the previous year.
The bulk of this material is shipped to China for conversion into battery-grade chemicals, underscoring Zimbabwe’s role as a critical upstream supplier within global electric vehicle and energy storage supply chains.
The immediate suspension disrupts that flow at a sensitive moment for mineral-producing states seeking greater capture of downstream value. Harare’s policy aligns with a broader resource-nationalist trend among countries tightening export controls on strategic minerals used in smartphones, green energy systems, and military equipment.
Zimbabwe’s lithium boom has been driven largely by Chinese investment. Key players include Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt, Sinomine, Chengxin Lithium Group, and Yahua.
Huayou recently completed a $400 million processing plant designed to convert concentrates into lithium sulphate, an intermediate product that can be refined into lithium hydroxide or lithium carbonate.
Sinomine has announced plans for a $500 million lithium sulphate facility at its Bikita mine.
These projects illustrate the government’s core objective: moving from raw concentrate exports toward domestic chemical processing. Mining remains Zimbabwe’s second-largest contributor to gross domestic product at 14.3 percent of output, according to World Bank data, amplifying the economic stakes of regulatory shifts affecting export earnings and investment confidence.
The government’s framing of the decision in the “national interest” signals that policy priorities now favor tighter control over mineral flows and stronger enforcement of domestic processing strategies.
Sources:
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