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An assessment of whether the critical minerals boom and green transition can be leveraged for Zambia's industrialisation and economic development: spotlight on the Copper Mining Sector

This study assesses whether Zambia can leverage the critical minerals boom and the global green transition to drive its industrialisation and economic development. As a major copper producer, Zambia holds strategic importance in supplying minerals essential for renewable technologies such as electri...

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Main Author: Kanyama, Victor Amedzo
Other Authors: Smith, Michael
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kanyama, Victor Amedzo
author2 Smith, Michael
author_browse Kanyama, Victor Amedzo
Smith, Michael
author_facet Smith, Michael
Kanyama, Victor Amedzo
author_sort Kanyama, Victor Amedzo
collection Thesis
description This study assesses whether Zambia can leverage the critical minerals boom and the global green transition to drive its industrialisation and economic development. As a major copper producer, Zambia holds strategic importance in supplying minerals essential for renewable technologies such as electric vehicles, solar panels, and energy storage systems. However, the country's ability to capitalise on this demand hinges on strengthening productive linkages, integrating into regional and global value chains, and navigating geopolitical competition. The research examines historical policy shifts, the structural barriers that have limited Zambia's economic diversification, and the role of governance and industrial policy in unlocking value addition. The study evaluates Zambia's forward and backward linkages, identifying challenges such as weak local beneficiation, foreign dominance in mining procurement, and policy inconsistencies that constrain industrial growth. Regional collaboration, particularly through Zambia's partnership with the DRC, is explored as a potential avenue for enhancing midstream processing and attracting investment into battery precursor production. Additionally, the geopolitical landscape—marked by competition between the United States, China, and emerging investors—is analysed in relation to Zambia's strategic positioning in the global copper supply chain. Using semi-structured interviews and document analysis, the study outlines actionable policy pathways for Zambia, including industrial strategy refinement, local content enforcement, and institutional reforms. It argues that with coherent policy implementation, infrastructure investment, and a balanced geopolitical approach, Zambia can transition from a raw material exporter to a key player in mineral-based industrialisation, securing long-term economic benefits from the green transition.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:50:14.815Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher School of Economics
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42328 An assessment of whether the critical minerals boom and green transition can be leveraged for Zambia's industrialisation and economic development: spotlight on the Copper Mining Sector Kanyama, Victor Amedzo Smith, Michael Critical minerals Green transition Mineral-Based Industrialisation (MBI) Productive linkages Downstream Upstream Global Value Chains (GVCs) Regional Value Chains (RVCs) This study assesses whether Zambia can leverage the critical minerals boom and the global green transition to drive its industrialisation and economic development. As a major copper producer, Zambia holds strategic importance in supplying minerals essential for renewable technologies such as electric vehicles, solar panels, and energy storage systems. However, the country's ability to capitalise on this demand hinges on strengthening productive linkages, integrating into regional and global value chains, and navigating geopolitical competition. The research examines historical policy shifts, the structural barriers that have limited Zambia's economic diversification, and the role of governance and industrial policy in unlocking value addition. The study evaluates Zambia's forward and backward linkages, identifying challenges such as weak local beneficiation, foreign dominance in mining procurement, and policy inconsistencies that constrain industrial growth. Regional collaboration, particularly through Zambia's partnership with the DRC, is explored as a potential avenue for enhancing midstream processing and attracting investment into battery precursor production. Additionally, the geopolitical landscape—marked by competition between the United States, China, and emerging investors—is analysed in relation to Zambia's strategic positioning in the global copper supply chain. Using semi-structured interviews and document analysis, the study outlines actionable policy pathways for Zambia, including industrial strategy refinement, local content enforcement, and institutional reforms. It argues that with coherent policy implementation, infrastructure investment, and a balanced geopolitical approach, Zambia can transition from a raw material exporter to a key player in mineral-based industrialisation, securing long-term economic benefits from the green transition. 2025-11-25T08:28:28Z 2025-11-25T08:28:28Z 2025 2025-11-25T08:26:37Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42328 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Critical minerals
Green transition
Mineral-Based Industrialisation (MBI)
Productive linkages
Downstream
Upstream
Global Value Chains (GVCs)
Regional Value Chains (RVCs)
Kanyama, Victor Amedzo
An assessment of whether the critical minerals boom and green transition can be leveraged for Zambia's industrialisation and economic development: spotlight on the Copper Mining Sector
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An assessment of whether the critical minerals boom and green transition can be leveraged for Zambia's industrialisation and economic development: spotlight on the Copper Mining Sector
title_full An assessment of whether the critical minerals boom and green transition can be leveraged for Zambia's industrialisation and economic development: spotlight on the Copper Mining Sector
title_fullStr An assessment of whether the critical minerals boom and green transition can be leveraged for Zambia's industrialisation and economic development: spotlight on the Copper Mining Sector
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of whether the critical minerals boom and green transition can be leveraged for Zambia's industrialisation and economic development: spotlight on the Copper Mining Sector
title_short An assessment of whether the critical minerals boom and green transition can be leveraged for Zambia's industrialisation and economic development: spotlight on the Copper Mining Sector
title_sort assessment of whether the critical minerals boom and green transition can be leveraged for zambia s industrialisation and economic development spotlight on the copper mining sector
topic Critical minerals
Green transition
Mineral-Based Industrialisation (MBI)
Productive linkages
Downstream
Upstream
Global Value Chains (GVCs)
Regional Value Chains (RVCs)
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42328
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