ECA tips green minerals to drive industrialisation

BUSINESS REPORTER

The world must decarbonise its growth models and shift to renewable energy sources to meet the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement, the SDGs and Africa’s Agenda 2063, Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) acting executive secretary Antonio Pedro (pictured) has said.

Speaking at a panel discussion, Building a regional battery mineral value chain in Africa,’ Pedro said the shift to renewable energy sources was a resource-intensive path that required greater production of a variety of minerals that are central to decarbonisation.

“We have clear opportunities not only from the global green mineral boom but also from our domestic achievements, such as the African Continental Free-Trade Area to facilitate the development of regional value chains for these green economy products,” Pedro said at the session jointly organised by ECA and Afreximbank on Sunday.

The session was held in Niamey, Niger, ahead of the 9th Africa Regional Forum on Sustainable Development which runs from February to March 2.

The organisers wanted to present the specifics of the lithium-ion battery initiative to a wider audience.

Africa is home to many of such minerals. The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), for example, produces over 70% of the world’s cobalt. DRC and Zambia together supply 10% of global copper while Mozambique and South Africa hold significant reserves of graphite, platinum metals, lithium and more.

“In the last two decades we have seen that without the right enabling policies and incentives, commodity super-cycles come and go, leaving our countries dependent on resource extraction,” Pedro said.

He deplored the fact that about 70% of the region’s exports are unprocessed commodities, a situation that can change with the right policies that prioritise industrialisation and value-addition in mining and other resource sectors.

Oluranti Doherty, Director of Export Development at the Afreximbank noted that it was disappointing that Africa has not been able to make energy transition, despite Africa being endowed with an array of minerals from copper, magnesium, nickel and cobalt.

Doherty said the bank is promoting industrialisation on the continent and is facilitating the emergence and expansion of industrial parks and Special Economic Zones in Zambia and the DRC, underlining the bank’s commitment to promoting an inclusive battery and electric vehicle value chain,, underlining .

“We are working on a framework agreement for special economic zones for the production of batteries, electric vehicles and accessories and we will facilitate the commencement of studies to facilitate the development of this facility,” Doherty said.

According to a Bloomberg NEF study, the DRC is a favourable location for producing sustainable battery materials for high-nickel batteries due to its abundant cobalt resources and access to hydroelectric power.

The study, which was supported by the ECA, Afreximbank, the African Development Bank, the Africa Finance Corporation, the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa , the African Legal Support Facility and the UN Global Compact, suggests that battery precursors produced in the DRC would be cheaper, environmentally sustainable and more competitive than material produced in China, the US and elsewhere.

The report estimates the global market opportunity for electric vehicles at $7 trillion by 2030 and US$46 trillion by 2050

Jean-Marie Kanda from the University of Lubumbashi highlighted that African countries need to own such projects and commit investment and appropriate funding for research on the battery technology.

“Africa needs to develop standards as far as batteries are concerned. We need to focus on the assembly of these batteries and focus on mineral exploitation as well as on recycling.” Kanda said.

Jean Luc Matsaki Namegabe, a Senior Economist at the ECA told participants that the DRC presented an opportunity in the development of electric batteries and vehicles not to be missed because it would move Africa up the value addition ladder as Africa was the only region that did not manufacture electric batteries.

Rabani Adamou, Director of the West African Science Service Centre in Climate Change and Adapted Land Use at Abdou Moumouni University, said in promoting the development of value chains for minerals, African countries must invest in research and development to understand the exploitable quantity of the minerals. In addition, he said Africa needed to invest in training and capacity building to tap the full benefits of the minerals.

He underscored the need for supportive policies that will attract investment and at the same time prevent corruption, which hinders development projects in Africa.

Marit Kitaw, interim director of the African Minerals Development Centre, a specialised agency of the African Union, said the battery and electric vehicle initiative was a huge opportunity for Africa, which has triggered a huge surge of investment coming into Africa for green minerals.

Kitaw said the Centre was in the process of developing a mineral strategy for Africa and called for the institutionalisation of the initiative as well as harnessing of innovative financing for its realisation.

Pedro described the initiative as one of the most transformative projects for Africa, noting that it has received wide publicity and interest. Pedro called for the development of an ecosystem that taps capacities, expertise and partnerships that exist in Africa.

 

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