Wits launches centre to map Africa's mineral wealth scientifically

The University of the Witwatersrand has opened a new research centre to transform speculation about Africa's underground treasures into solid data, potentially boosting exploration investments. Launched in November 2025, the African Research Centre for Ore Systems Science aims to bridge the gap between outdated estimates and actual mineral deposits. This initiative comes amid discussions at the 2026 Mining Indaba on revitalizing Africa's lagging exploration sector.

Africa is believed to hold about 30% of the world's known mineral wealth, but this figure relies on old and sparse data, making it largely speculative. Glen Nwaila, director of the African Research Centre for Ore Systems Science at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), noted, “It is speculative. It could be more than 30%, but no one knows.” The continent receives only about 10% of global exploration spending, much of it from junior miners, despite its vast geological potential.

To address this, Wits launched the centre and the Earth Observatory in November 2025 in Johannesburg's historic mining district. The facilities include advanced tools for geoanalytical techniques, such as sample preparation, geometallurgy, isotopic analysis, and geophysical studies. Nwaila explained during a tour, “The core of the lab is to simplify exploration and tell us what we have and where it is sitting.” The Earth Observatory features a mass spectrometry lab that dates rocks and builds geological models, functioning like a forensic lab to guide future searches.

Exploration spending in Africa has declined from 16% of the global total in 2004 to 10.4% in 2024, lagging behind Australia (19.8%) and Canada (15.9%), even though Africa offers the highest return on investment at 0.8 per dollar spent. Political risks, conflicts like the insurgency in Mozambique's Cabo Delgado—where exploration dropped from $25.5 million in 2014 to $1.4 million in 2024—and policy uncertainties in South Africa hinder progress. In South Africa, the share of global exploration has fallen to 1% from over 5% two decades ago due to application backlogs and delayed mining cadastre implementation.

Positive developments include Zambia's recent reforms under President Hakainde Hichilema and BHP's $500,000 investment in Orion Minerals' Northern Cape projects. At the 2026 Investing in African Mining Indaba in Cape Town, exploration remains a key theme, emphasizing its role in unlocking critical minerals for the global economy.

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Foreign investors Florentino Pérez and Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada at a German raw materials mine, with economists calling for EU export controls.
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Prominent investors target German raw materials

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Foreign investors like Real Madrid president Florentino Pérez and former Bolivian president Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada are involved in extracting critical raw materials in Germany. Despite the boom, there are no rules ensuring the resources benefit the EU economy. Economists call for greater state control over exports.

The African Mining Indaba 2026 began in Cape Town on 9 February, highlighting challenges in South Africa's mining industry amid US tariffs and logistics issues. The Minerals Council South Africa launched its 2025 Facts and Figures report, revealing profit gains but persistent hurdles in electricity, rail, and exploration. Industry leaders expressed cautious optimism for stabilisation in 2026.

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A new report from the Minerals Council South Africa highlights severe challenges facing the country's junior mining sector, noting that illegal operations are easier to run than legal ones. The document points to a lack of exploration investment, criminal threats, and regulatory hurdles as major barriers. It warns that without support, the sector's potential for jobs and growth remains untapped.

At the Investing in Africa Mining Indaba 2026, experts highlighted South Africa's land and mining crisis as a political and structural issue requiring community control. Discussions focused on governance challenges and proposed innovations for democratic land management. The event underscored the need for collective consent in mining and development.

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South Africa's Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources, Gwede Mantashe, stated that the pursuit of resources underlies many worldwide conflicts. He made these remarks at the 11th Africa Gas Forum in Cape Town amid ongoing geopolitical tensions. The forum provides a platform for leaders to address Africa's expanding energy sector.

Researchers and scientists from various key sectors in Kenya are urging the government to allocate at least 2% of the Gross Domestic Product annually for research, innovation, and development. This would be channeled through the National Research Fund, aiming to boost funding from Sh120 billion to Sh300 billion to address challenges like agriculture and climate change. The proposal emerged during a national conference held in Nairobi.

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Three young learners from South African schools will travel to China to showcase research projects on agriculture, environmental sustainability and food safety at the 2025 Beijing Young Science Creation Competition.

 

 

 

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