A major speech drops on Wednesday targeting how South Africa can cash in on the stuff the world desperately needs for batteries and green tech.
Deputy President's big Mining Indaba talk
Deputy President's big Mining Indaba talk
- Paul Mashatile steps up on 11 February 2026 for the keynote.
- His address targets smarter investments in critical minerals and local processing.
- The South African Youth Economic Council hosts its 4th Annual event.
- This forum puts young people at the centre of mining ownership conversations.
- It runs alongside the larger African Mining Indaba at Cape Town's convention centre.
- Government officials, investors, and youth voices discuss mineral-driven economic growth.
- Platinum, manganese, lithium, and copper power clean energy tech and electric vehicles.
- Mashatile zeroes in on energy security and turning raw materials into finished products.
- His remarks could shape how the country grabs opportunities in global green power.
- South Africa's Critical Minerals and Metals Strategy identifies high-priority resources.
- The plan targets platinum group metals, manganese, iron ore, coal, and chrome.
- Lithium, vanadium, and rare earths get flagged as strong potential additions.
- Local processing creates more value, jobs, and economic returns at home.
- Estimates suggest 2.3 million African jobs and 12% GDP lift if executed properly.
- The country aims for electric vehicle and renewable energy supply chain positions.
- Exploration ramps up to discover new deposits across the region.
- Research funding targets better processing methods and manufacturing techniques.
- Local factories will transform minerals into batteries, steel, and other products.
- Infrastructure upgrades cover roads, ports, and power grids supporting sector growth.
- Blended financing mixes government cash with private loans and community bonds.
- Old regulations sometimes discourage investors from committing resources.
- Global green mining standards ensure clean, fair practices meet world demands.
- Steady power supply needs balancing while shifting to solar and wind sources.
- Batteries storing green energy require the critical minerals South Africa possesses.
- Beneficiation keeps money and manufacturing jobs local instead of exporting everything raw.
- Spreading mine shares to youth, women, and black South Africans corrects past imbalances.
- Training programs and startup funds help young entrepreneurs enter the sector.
- This approach aims to build an industry lifting everyone, not just elites.
- The wider event runs from 9 to 12 February with a record 10,500 attendees.
- Partnerships can fix infrastructure gaps and attract investment for green growth.
- Africa's cobalt, manganese, and graphite stores prove critical for global energy transitions.
- South Africa's 2025 leadership created new critical minerals processing guidelines.
- Continental Free Trade Area goals align with local value-addition priorities.
- Price swings and geopolitics pose challenges, but cooperation promises massive wins.
- The sector currently employs over 500,000 people and contributes billions annually.
- Fresh skills for AI exploration and environmentally friendly mining attract young workers.
- New ties between government, major mines, and startups focus on factory construction.
- Beneficiation creates manufacturing jobs while fighting climate change.
- South Africa positions itself as a clean tech leader through strategic processing.
- Wednesday's address could unlock competitive advantages benefiting all citizens.