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    Zimbabwe set to launch Africa’s first lithium sulphate plant 

    Zimbabwe is preparing to begin operations at Africa’s first lithium sulphate processing plant, a move expected to reshape how the country earns from its mineral resources by prioritising local beneficiation over raw exports.

    The facility is being developed by Prospect Lithium Zimbabwe in partnership with China’s Huayou Cobalt Co. and represents one of the country’s most significant recent industrial investments. 

    Located at Huayou’s Bikita Mine, the project has attracted about $500 million in funding and has entered the equipment commissioning stage, signalling that completion is near.

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    Once operational, the plant is expected to integrate Zimbabwe more deeply into the global clean energy supply chain by processing lithium into sulphate, a key material used in electric vehicle batteries and renewable energy storage systems. 

    The facility is designed to produce more than 60,000 metric tonnes of lithium sulphate annually, depending on its final configuration.

    Beyond industrial output, the project is projected to deliver broader socio-economic benefits. 

    Investments linked to the plant include upgrades to local infrastructure, environmental management initiatives, and support for healthcare and education, alongside job creation and community development.

    Huayou Cobalt previously announced that lithium sulphate production would begin in the first quarter of 2026. 

    Prospect Lithium Zimbabwe has described the project as a catalyst for economic transformation, highlighting its potential to strengthen Zimbabwe’s role in strategic global value chains.

    The plant marks a shift in Zimbabwe’s mining strategy, enabling the country to capture greater value from its lithium reserves by processing the mineral locally rather than exporting unrefined ore. 

    This transition is expected to reinforce Zimbabwe’s position in the global energy transition.

    Zimbabwe remains Africa’s leading lithium producer and is projected to reach output levels of about 160,000 tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent by 2030. 

    In the first half of 2025, lithium spodumene concentrate exports rose sharply compared with the same period a year earlier, despite a significant global drop in lithium prices.

    Chinese firms have been central to the expansion of Zimbabwe’s lithium sector, investing an estimated $1.4 billion since 2021. 

    Major players include Huayou Cobalt, Sinomine Resource Group, Chengxin Lithium, Yahua Group, and Tsingshan Holdings, with spodumene shipments reaching roughly one million tonnes in the first nine months of 2025.

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