A fast-tracked lithium export ban just landed in Zimbabwe after miners allegedly gamed the transition window meant for building local processing capacity.
Zimbabwe slams the door on raw lithium
Zimbabwe slams the door on raw lithium
- Constantino Chiwenga endorsed the immediate raw-exports prohibition.
- Originally, the ban was penciled in for 2027.
- Miners reportedly stockpiled ore during the grace period.
- Some allegedly smuggled lithium to a neighboring country.
- His tour featured a blunt warning about wasted resources.
- Chiwenga called exporting unprocessed minerals genuinely foolish.
- Future generations would basically despise today's leaders, he said.
- Roads got wrecked by trucks hauling raw lithium.
- Sandawana Mine is fast-tracking a lithium concentrator plant.
- That facility carries a price tag of around US$275 million.
- Processing capacity targets three million tonnes yearly.
- December 2027 is the expected commissioning date.
- Mutapa Investment Fund holds Sandawana Mine.
- Polite Kambamura flagged rampant abuse of the transition window.
- Environmental damage and trashed infrastructure yielded zero payoff.
- Chiwenga framed industrializing rural communities as non-negotiable.