• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Security
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Legal
  • Technology and Science
  • Opinion
  • Columns
  • Exposé
  • World
  • Lifestyle
Mali’s Junta Takes Over Canadian-Owned Gold Mine In Tax Row

Africa Doesn’t Need Aid. It Needs Control Over Its Critical Minerals

11 months ago
Senegal: PM Alleges ‘Unfair’ Gas Deal, Freezes Firm’s Assets

Senegal: PM Alleges ‘Unfair’ Gas Deal, Freezes Firm’s Assets

21 hours ago
Middle East Crisis: Kenya’s Meat Exporters Count Losses As Ramadan Shipments Drop

Middle East Crisis: Kenya’s Meat Exporters Count Losses As Ramadan Shipments Drop

22 hours ago
South Africa: Ramaphosa Deploys 2,200 Troops To Fight Crime In 5 Provinces

South Africa: Ramaphosa Deploys 2,200 Troops To Fight Crime In 5 Provinces

24 hours ago
2025: Joshua Sets Sight on Another World Title

Anthony Joshua Relocates To Dubai, Joins Wealthy Britons Fleeing High UK Taxes

1 day ago
Migrants

Nigerian Govt Seeks Explanation Surrounding Arrest Of 42 Citizens In Mozambique

2 days ago
Saturday, March 14, 2026
  • About
  • HT Management
  • Privacy Policy
Heritage Times
No Result
View All Result
Translate |
  • Login
  • Politics
    35-Year-Old Rapper Set To Become Nepal’s Youngest Prime Minister

    35-Year-Old Rapper Set To Become Nepal’s Youngest Prime Minister

    Nguesso Set To Extend 4-Decades Rule As Congo Republic Votes Sunday

    Nguesso Set To Extend 4-Decades Rule As Congo Republic Votes Sunday

    Trump Says Appointment Of New Iran’s Supreme Leader “Big Mistake”

    Trump Says Appointment Of New Iran’s Supreme Leader “Big Mistake”

    Trump Threatens 25% Tariffs On iPhones Not Produced In US

    Trump Says New Iran’s Leader Can Only Last With Washington’s Approval

    Guinea: Junta Leader Doumbouya Takes Early Lead In Presidential Poll

    Guinea: President Doumbouya Dissolves 40 Political Parties

    Macky Sall

    Senegal: Opposition Pushes Back Against Macky Sall’s Bid For UN Secretary-General

    Somalia: TikTok Users Arrested Over Dance Video “Insulting” President Mohamud

    Somalia: Lawmakers Vote To Extend President’s Tenure, Shift Election

    Sudan Slams Uganda For Hosting RSF Paramilitary Commander

    Sudan Slams Uganda For Hosting RSF Paramilitary Commander

    Tunisia: President Said Jails Lawmaker Who Mocked Him On Facebook

    Tunisia: President Said Jails Lawmaker Who Mocked Him On Facebook

  • Economy
    Senegal: PM Alleges ‘Unfair’ Gas Deal, Freezes Firm’s Assets

    Senegal: PM Alleges ‘Unfair’ Gas Deal, Freezes Firm’s Assets

    Middle East Crisis: Kenya’s Meat Exporters Count Losses As Ramadan Shipments Drop

    Middle East Crisis: Kenya’s Meat Exporters Count Losses As Ramadan Shipments Drop

    2025: Joshua Sets Sight on Another World Title

    Anthony Joshua Relocates To Dubai, Joins Wealthy Britons Fleeing High UK Taxes

    Nearly Half Of South Africans Feel Underpaid — Recruiter

    Nearly Half Of South Africans Feel Underpaid — Recruiter

    Gabon: President Nguema Places Ban On Social Media Over “False Information”

    Gabon Submits Request For Borrowing Programme — IMF

    5,000 Lufthansa Pilots Plan Two-Day Strike

    5,000 Lufthansa Pilots Plan Two-Day Strike

    IPMAN To Suspend Fuel Distribution In Eastern Nigeria

    Middle East Crisis Triggers Fuel Price Hike In Nigeria, Egypt

    17.97% Increase In Air Fares Recorded In February- NBS

    Africa Records World’s Highest Aviation Accident Rate In 2025 – IATA Report

    Tunisia Plans $1 Billion Expansion Of Carthage Airport

    Tunisia Plans $1 Billion Expansion Of Carthage Airport

  • Security
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Metro
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Legal
  • Tech & Science
  • Opinion
  • Exposé
  • Exclusive Videos
  • Niger Delta
  • World
  • Politics
    35-Year-Old Rapper Set To Become Nepal’s Youngest Prime Minister

    35-Year-Old Rapper Set To Become Nepal’s Youngest Prime Minister

    Nguesso Set To Extend 4-Decades Rule As Congo Republic Votes Sunday

    Nguesso Set To Extend 4-Decades Rule As Congo Republic Votes Sunday

    Trump Says Appointment Of New Iran’s Supreme Leader “Big Mistake”

    Trump Says Appointment Of New Iran’s Supreme Leader “Big Mistake”

    Trump Threatens 25% Tariffs On iPhones Not Produced In US

    Trump Says New Iran’s Leader Can Only Last With Washington’s Approval

    Guinea: Junta Leader Doumbouya Takes Early Lead In Presidential Poll

    Guinea: President Doumbouya Dissolves 40 Political Parties

    Macky Sall

    Senegal: Opposition Pushes Back Against Macky Sall’s Bid For UN Secretary-General

    Somalia: TikTok Users Arrested Over Dance Video “Insulting” President Mohamud

    Somalia: Lawmakers Vote To Extend President’s Tenure, Shift Election

    Sudan Slams Uganda For Hosting RSF Paramilitary Commander

    Sudan Slams Uganda For Hosting RSF Paramilitary Commander

    Tunisia: President Said Jails Lawmaker Who Mocked Him On Facebook

    Tunisia: President Said Jails Lawmaker Who Mocked Him On Facebook

  • Economy
    Senegal: PM Alleges ‘Unfair’ Gas Deal, Freezes Firm’s Assets

    Senegal: PM Alleges ‘Unfair’ Gas Deal, Freezes Firm’s Assets

    Middle East Crisis: Kenya’s Meat Exporters Count Losses As Ramadan Shipments Drop

    Middle East Crisis: Kenya’s Meat Exporters Count Losses As Ramadan Shipments Drop

    2025: Joshua Sets Sight on Another World Title

    Anthony Joshua Relocates To Dubai, Joins Wealthy Britons Fleeing High UK Taxes

    Nearly Half Of South Africans Feel Underpaid — Recruiter

    Nearly Half Of South Africans Feel Underpaid — Recruiter

    Gabon: President Nguema Places Ban On Social Media Over “False Information”

    Gabon Submits Request For Borrowing Programme — IMF

    5,000 Lufthansa Pilots Plan Two-Day Strike

    5,000 Lufthansa Pilots Plan Two-Day Strike

    IPMAN To Suspend Fuel Distribution In Eastern Nigeria

    Middle East Crisis Triggers Fuel Price Hike In Nigeria, Egypt

    17.97% Increase In Air Fares Recorded In February- NBS

    Africa Records World’s Highest Aviation Accident Rate In 2025 – IATA Report

    Tunisia Plans $1 Billion Expansion Of Carthage Airport

    Tunisia Plans $1 Billion Expansion Of Carthage Airport

  • Security
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Metro
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Legal
  • Tech & Science
  • Opinion
  • Exposé
  • Exclusive Videos
  • Niger Delta
  • World
No Result
View All Result
First with the News

Africa Doesn’t Need Aid. It Needs Control Over Its Critical Minerals

African countries can break aid dependency by simply capturing the full value of their mineral resources.

April 16, 2025
in Opinion, Top Stories
0
Mali’s Junta Takes Over Canadian-Owned Gold Mine In Tax Row
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

By Maxwell Gomera

The decision of US President Donald Trump’s administration to suspend foreign aid and shut down the USAID agency has sent shockwaves across the development industry. In 2024, nearly a third of the $41bn in US foreign aid went to Africa, helping support various sectors from healthcare to education and sanitation.

Relatedreading

Senegal: PM Alleges ‘Unfair’ Gas Deal, Freezes Firm’s Assets

Middle East Crisis: Kenya’s Meat Exporters Count Losses As Ramadan Shipments Drop

But as aid organisations sound alarm bells and government officials wring their hands over suspended programmes, we are missing the bigger picture: Africa’s continued dependence on foreign aid is a choice, not a necessity. Our continent sits atop some of the world’s largest reserves of the very minerals that will power the future, yet we remain trapped in cycles of aid dependency. It is time to change that.

Let us be clear about what is at stake. The Democratic Republic of the Congo supplies 70 percent of the world’s cobalt – the essential ingredient in electric vehicle batteries. South Africa produces 75 percent of the world’s platinum and 50 percent of palladium. Mozambique and Madagascar possess some of the largest graphite deposits globally. Zimbabwe has the largest deposits of caesium, a critical metal used in GPS and 5G systems.

More than just rocks and metals, these are the keys to the global clean energy transition. Every electric vehicle, solar panel, and wind turbine depends on minerals that Africa has in abundance.

Yet here we are, still exporting raw materials like colonial-era vassals while begging for aid from the same countries that profit from our resources. The math is infuriating: We sell raw cobalt for $26-30 per kg (2.2lb), while battery-grade processed materials fetch $150-200. We’re giving away more than 80 percent of the value chain to foreign processors and manufacturers. This isn’t just bad business – it’s economic malpractice.

The global battery market alone will reach $250bn by 2030. The renewable energy sector is growing at breakneck speed, with solar installations increasing 26 percent annually.

Clearly, Africa’s mineral riches represent the greatest economic opportunity of our generation. But instead of positioning ourselves to capture this value, we are debating how to patch the holes left by suspended aid programmes.

Critics will say we lack the infrastructure, expertise, and capital to process these minerals ourselves. They are right – for now. But this is precisely where we should be investing our resources and focusing our political will. The Chinese understood this decades ago, which is why they have poured nearly $58bn into securing control of critical mineral supply chains across Africa. They saw the future while we were busy filling out aid application forms.

The solution is not complicated, though it is challenging. We need to build processing facilities, not just extraction sites. We need to establish special economic zones focused on mineral beneficiation, not merely export terminals. We need to invest in research and development facilities that can adapt and improve processing technologies. Most importantly, we need to think and act regionally.

Imagine a Southern African Development Community Battery Materials Initiative, where countries pool resources and expertise to build integrated value chains. Picture an East African Rare Earth Elements Cooperation Framework that turns our mineral wealth into high-tech manufacturing capabilities. These are not pipe dreams – they are missed opportunities every day we continue business as usual.

The environmental critics will say mining is dirty and destructive. They’re not wrong about the risks, but they’re wrong about the solution. The answer isn’t to leave our minerals in the ground; it’s to set our own high standards for sustainable extraction and processing. We can build a mining and processing industry that protects our environment and benefits our communities. We must, because the alternative is watching foreign companies do it their way while we deal with the consequences.

The aid suspension has created human suffering that cannot be ignored. HIV treatment programmes, educational initiatives, and food security projects are all at risk. But if these programmes are essential – and many of them are – why should we depend on the political whims of foreign governments to fund them? Our minerals would pay for these programmes many times over once we capture their full value.

What we need now is political courage and unity of purpose. We need leaders who can look beyond the next election cycle and envision an Africa that finances its own development. We need business leaders who can build processing facilities instead of export terminals. We need educational institutions that train chemical engineers and metallurgists instead of aid programme administrators.

The current crisis must serve as our catalyst for transformation. Every suspended aid dollar should drive us to capture tenfold value from our minerals, and every diplomatic slight should strengthen our resolve to build African solutions. The choice is clear: We can spend the coming decades haggling over aid budgets, or we can finally take control of our destiny through the strategic development of our mineral wealth.

It’s time for Africa to transform from the world’s raw materials store into its manufacturing powerhouse. By turning our mineral wealth into lasting prosperity, we can make foreign aid what it should have been all along: unnecessary.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Heritage Times editorial stance.

The opinion piece Africa Doesn’t Need Aid. It Needs Control Over Its Critical Minerals first appeared on Aljazeera

ShareTweetSend
Previous Post

Sudan Aid Summit Raises Funds, Fails To Forge Path To Peace

Next Post

PwC Exits Nine African Nations in Major Business Shift

Related Posts

Senegal: PM Alleges ‘Unfair’ Gas Deal, Freezes Firm’s Assets

Senegal: PM Alleges ‘Unfair’ Gas Deal, Freezes Firm’s Assets

March 13, 2026
Middle East Crisis: Kenya’s Meat Exporters Count Losses As Ramadan Shipments Drop

Middle East Crisis: Kenya’s Meat Exporters Count Losses As Ramadan Shipments Drop

March 13, 2026
South Africa: Ramaphosa Deploys 2,200 Troops To Fight Crime In 5 Provinces

South Africa: Ramaphosa Deploys 2,200 Troops To Fight Crime In 5 Provinces

March 13, 2026

Anthony Joshua Relocates To Dubai, Joins Wealthy Britons Fleeing High UK Taxes

Nigerian Govt Seeks Explanation Surrounding Arrest Of 42 Citizens In Mozambique

Eritrea: Cartoonist Freed After 15-Year Detention Without Trial

Next Post
PwC Exits Nine African Nations in Major Business Shift

PwC Exits Nine African Nations in Major Business Shift

  • About
  • HT Management
  • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Heritage Times (HT) Media.

No Result
View All Result
  • Welcome
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Security
  • Exposé
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Legal
  • Technology and Science
  • Columns
    • Opinion
  • World
  • __________________
  • Make a Donation
  • Photo Speaks
  • Videos
  • You-Report
  • Whistleblower
  • Advertise
  • HT Events
  • HT Management
  • About HT
  • Contact us

© 2025 Heritage Times (HT) Media.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In