Devils Below
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Analysis, daily updates on exploitation of Africa’s mineral wealth.

👀 Money flows, bribes, pollution - keeping you aware of what you would otherwise overlook.
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Reverse Stockholm syndrome

🇨🇩🇺🇸 Whatever one thinks of Trump, the documents show that the recent deal that shackles the DRC was in fact an initiative of Congo itself, and not only the result of the White House resident's love for “peace deals” with an economic twist.

ℹ️ The US Department of Justice website contains numerous filings showing that, from at least February 2025, DRC's Tshisekedi began carpet-bombing Washington with his lobbyists.

Here are just some examples:

📌 In late February Tshisekedi's main agent in Washington Aaron Poynton (US President of the USA-Africa Business Council) sent letters to US officials, including Secretary of State Rubio, proposing to give the US access to Congo’s minerals + create a Joint Strategic Mineral Stockpile (which is what was implemented in the Washington agreements of 4 December) + deploy US troops in the DRC.

📌 Tshisekedi's another important messenger was prominent Republican Karl Von Batten, who on 11 February arranged a video call between Tshisekedi and Brian Mast, the Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee (Congressman Mast looks like the main victim of these manoeuvres, since he was endlessly pestered by both Von Batten and Poynton). Von Batten was also preparing a visit by Tshisekedi to the US in February, which ultimately did not take place.

📌 Other lobbyists for Kinshasa included Joseph Szlavik, once a member of the George H. W. Bush administration, whose firm Scribe Strategies was receiving at least $70,000 a month from Congo’s budget for its services, and Ballard Partners, which was being paid $100,000 a month.

🔸 They all tried to lure Trump with minerals and military cooperation. However, in the end Congo successfully lobbied itself into a “Please, please, we would love you to come and take our minerals,” but US military help never arrived.

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You Don't Know What Real Bureaucracy Is 🖨

Three years after the relaunch of a flare-gas-for-sale programme, Nigerian officials have finally got around to printing 28 licences

🌐 Nigeria’s upstream petroleum regulatory commission has just issued permits to 28 companies to access and sell associated gas.

Associated gas is usually produced at oil fields together with crude but burned off in flares as oil producers deem it unprofitable — so the idea is to involve other companies in this task, so as to make the gas available to people and industry.

📈 At a ceremony on Friday, the head of the commission, Gbenga Komolafe, rushed to boast that measures aimed at commercialising associated gas would lead to:

🔴 The creation of 100,000 jobs

🔴 The production of 170,000 metric tonnes of liquefied petroleum gas annually to supply roughly 1.4 million households

🔴 And the attraction of up to $2 billion in investment


Most likely, such results are expected sometime around the year 2100 or 2300, since Friday’s event was about issuing licences to those who had submitted their applications back in 2022. Already in October 2023 the authorities said that 42 companies had successfully passed the same tender, but 14 apparently did not have the patience to wait.

🔸 Meanwhile, according to World Bank data, Nigeria remains one of the world’s top countries, alongside the US, Russia and Iran, in terms of the flared gas volumes. In 2023 and 2024 these volumes only increased.

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UAE Expansion Into Senegal

The UAE has staked out projects in Senegal’s most sweet sectors of gold, logistics and gas

🇸🇳 During a visit on 10 December, an Emirati delegation led by the UAE Minister of Foreign Trade sealed several agreements with Senegalese government and state-owned enterprises transferring the implementation of projects in Senegal's key resource sectors to Emirati companies.

Above all, the Senegalese state-owned Société des mines du Sénégal (SOMISEN) signed an agreement with the Emiratis to help create Senegal's new National Gold Trading Centre.

The National Gold Trading Centre announced on 12 November is Senegal's attempt to establish a national centralized hub for buying and selling gold, which will serve as an official bridge between production (above all, artisanal mining) and subsequent sales.


Besides, state-owned mining companies and Emirati firm Resources Investment agreed to develop jointly logistics infrastructure and iron mines.

Senegal's national gas distribution company Réseau gazier du Sénégal (RGS) signed several contracts with Emirati company Equiline Energies, which specialises in gas exploration.

🔸 The most important element is arguably the agreement on the National Gold Trading Centre. Now the Emiratis will help set up this centre, which means the UAE has managed to inserted itself into the country's main mining sector, which accounts for about 30% of Senegal's total extractive exports.

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Liberia Is Bringing Americans to Africa Again

Liberia has approved the entry of a US company linked to the Trump administration into its railway sector

🌐 Liberia’s parliament has endorsed granting access to the Yekepa–Buchanan railway to the US company Ivanhoe Atlantic. It is Liberia’s logistics backbone, and Ivanhoe Atlantic needs it to ship iron ore from neighbouring Guinea, where its largest iron ore asset is located (750 million tonnes).

📅 This decision crowns 6 years of negotiations accompanied by friction with global steel giant ArcelorMittal, which for a long time effectively held a monopoly over the management of this corridor.

🇺🇸 Washington has carefully nurtured the deal: it was singed on the eve of Trump's meeting with Liberia's president Boakai in July 2025, while a week before the deal was sent to the parliament Liberia’s foreign minister met with Marco Rubio to discuss US investment in the country.

🫂 Special attention from the US enjoyed by Ivanhoe Atlantic is not accidental. Ivanhoe Atlantic is chaired by Peter Pham, who had served Trump’s first administration as the US Special Envoy for the Sahel & Great Lakes Regions of Africa. Besides, Ivanhoe Atlantic itself is selling its projects to Washington as a way to circumvent Chinese control over supply chains.

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You Don’t Want To, But You Have To 🇲🇱

An unpleasant truth: sometimes peace also entails concessions
...

🌐 According to Reuters, a Malian court has ordered that 3 metric tonnes of solid, beautiful, shining gold worth about $400 million, confiscated in January 2025 from the Loulo-Gounkoto complex in Western Mali, be returned to the Canadian company Barrick.

👑 Reuters sources also claim that next week Barrick will regain operational control over the entire Loulo-Gounkoto gold complex, where a provisional administration was put in place in June.

⚔️ This points to a real de-escalation of the nearly two-year dispute between Bamako and the Canadian miner, following the settlement reached last month.

🥇 The very fact the confiscated gold was neither sold nor invested — though the temptation must have been great, given the record-high prices — suggests that Bamako never intended to break up with Barrick completely and wanted only to force it to abide by the rules.

🔸 Such an outcome makes it clear that the government, despite its somewhat unfriendly approach, has never sought to overhaul the previous system of partnerships with foreign companies. Since the coup, Mali has neither tried to nationalise active mining projects and run them itself, nor significantly changed the geography of its partners, which remain mainly European and North American companies.

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Looting Angola's Sovereign Wealth Fund 🇦🇴
[ Budget Hole ]


If a government does take money away from oil companies, that still doesn't mean it is able to spend it properly

💲 Countries that receive windfall revenues from resources often realise that simply spending them is not very wise and create special funds that are supposed to invest in the development of non-extractive sectors, such as construction or IT. Just as often, these funds end up overrun by corruption.

🛢 One such example was Angola’s Sovereign Wealth Fund (FSDEA), created to invest revenues from oil sales but in practice becoming a source of enrichment for elite circles.

💲 Angola established the FSDEA in 2012 with an investment of $5 billion. The fund’s goal was “to promote growth, prosperity, and social and economic development.”

🚮 That same year, Angola’s president, José Eduardo dos Santos, appointed his son, José Filomeno dos Santos, as chairman of the FSDEA. Since managing a state fund is always more enjoyable together with friends, the president’s son invited the firm of his friend Jean-Claude Bastos to manage the fund’s investments.

🥅 From there the scheme was simple: Jean-Claude Bastos' consulting company received fees for its services, which is already corruption. The consulting firm also advised the fund to invest in other projects of the Angolan prince’s friend.

💸 In total, at least $150 million was lost through such schemes. Another $3 billion remained under the management of Jean-Claude Bastos until 2019, when Angola’s new government began to untangle the fund’s affairs and regained control over its assets.

Both Bastos and the president’s son appeared before an Angolan court, but were later acquitted.

🛢 Angola is one of the largest oil producers in Africa, with production contributing about 50% of the nation’s GDP and >90% of its exports, yet it is simultaneously in the top-10 unequal countries in the world as measured by the Gini coefficient.

#BudgetHole

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Gabon Tries Again 🇬🇦

Gabon's government has engaged ore producers in building infrastructure, but risks falling into a half-century-old trap

🌐 Gabon’s president, Brice Oligui Nguema, received a delegation from Australian mining giant Fortescue, which is promoting the Belinga iron ore project in Gabon's North-East. The parties agreed on the construction of a new deep-water port in the Kobe-Kobe area of Gabon by 2030.

🛤 Given that weak infrastructure is the main obstacle to iron exports, including from Belinga, the project is likely conceived precisely as part of Fortescue’s future logistics chain.

🎰 In the 1970s Gabon already bet on infrastructure, but it played out differently than planned. Back then, the country intended to invest its oil revenues in the Trans-Gabon railway to ship manganese from deposits of the French company Ermet.

🛢️In the end, Gabon spent a significant share of its oil revenues, and the railway turned out to be loss-making! The country nearly went bankrupt and continued to incur losses until the railway was privatised in 1999.

With the new project, the authorities should therefore be cautious not to fall into the same trap again: if the Australian investor wants a deep-water port, it should also chip in itself

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Battle for Nigeria’s Market

Africa’s richest man mounts offensive against state officials over fuel policies

Africa’s richest man and Nigeria’s oil magnate Aliko Dangote usually keeps out of politics and relatively rarely comments on current affairs, with one exception – when it comes to his main brainchild and legacy: his fuel business in Nigeria.

🌐 One such case was yesterday, 14 December, when Dangote accused Farouk Ahmed, the head of the Nigerian agency that oversees the supply and sale of refined fuel, of corruption.

🏷 Aliko Dangote is Africa's wealthiest man and Nigeria’s industrialist and the founder of the Dangote Group, a conglomerate built around cement, sugar, flour, and other manufacturing.

His flagship project is Dangote Petroleum Refinery near Lagos, the largest refinery in Africa and the world's largest single-train refinery with 650,000 barrels/day capacity, undergoing expansion to to 1.4 million bpd.


In essence, the businessman’s main grievance is that the agency doesn't support his view of domestic oil refining and doesn't fight fiercely enough against cheap fuel imports.

Dangote’s dispute with officials has been going on since last year, but it sharpened in November when Dangote endorsed president Tinubu's idea of an additional 15% duty on imported fuel, yet on the recommendation of Farouk Ahmed among others, the government postponed its introduction.

🔸 The government is now in a tough position: on the one hand, Dangote is de facto steadily lobbying for a nation-scale monopoly for his refinery, but at the same time Nigeria is Africa’s leading crude producer which shamefully cannot get rid of fuel imports from abroad.

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Did School Teach Them Nothing? 🇬🇭

Most children who drop out of school in Ghana do so for illegal gold mining or betting

📖 70% of children who drop out of school in Ghana end up in either casinos or gold mines, a new survey suggests. The older the teenager, the more likely they are to abandon boring lessons in favour of blowing money or digging in the ground.

💧 In the end, children lose the already humble sums they have or expose themselves to lethal risks in the mines, polluting rivers and soil with mercury and lead.

🔸 At the same time, it would be wrong to blame gambling and gold alone for the dropouts. The choice in favour of what children see as quick-earning paths is driven by a perceived lack of opportunities for successful development and income within the normal economy – and this can only be addressed by boosting overall standards of life.

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Resources and Nation-Building 🚩

Somaliland plans to start selling its resources abroad by 2027

🌐 Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi “Irro” says Somaliland expects oil and mineral exploration to start by 2027.

🔸 Trying to attract foreigners to extract natural resources is a traditional pastime in parts of what used to be Somalia: amid constant conflict and devastation, selling resources abroad is the easiest way to make money and gain an advantage over one's opponents.

🤔 Foreigners, however, are not fools either. Since extracting anything onshore is extremely difficult due to elastic borders and political chaos, their favourite choice is offshore oil production – and here the Mogadishu government, together with Turkey, has had particular success.

Somaliland, for its part, is still content with cooperation with small companies from the UAE and the UK. By launching new extraction projects, Somaliland hopes to secure not only income but also international recognition.

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🌐 Weekly News Digest on Africa’s Mineral Industries [ December 8 – December 14 ]

This was a week of gas and American economic inroads.

💡Here are the key highlights:

🇧🇯🇹🇬🇨🇮 Benin, Togo & Côte d'Ivoire
- Benin, Togo and Côte d’Ivoire create a regional gas alliance


🇨🇩 DR Congo
- Congolese miners complain about the requirement to pre-pay cobalt royalties


🇬🇭 Ghana
- Chinese ambassador calls on Ghana to take the problem of illegal gold mining seriously


🇱🇷 Liberia
- US lawmakers accuse the State Department of advancing China’s economic agenda in Liberia
- The parliament endorses granting access to the Yekepa–Buchanan railway to the US company Ivanhoe Atlantic


🇲🇱 Mali
- Mali returns $400 million worth of gold to a Canadian company


🇳🇦 Namibia
- TotalEnergies has taken control of the largest oilfield in Namibia


🇳🇪 Niger
- Niger signed a memorandum with a Russian company on uranium


🇳🇬 Nigeria
- Nigeria reduces fees for oil licenses
- Nigeria issues permits to 28 companies to access and sell associated gas


🇸🇳 Senegal
- Senegal’s minister of energy declared plans to nationalise the Yakaar-Teranga gas field (subsequently refuted)
- Emirati companies get access to key resource sectors of Senegal


🇸🇱 Sierra Leone
- Two teenagers die in a mine collapse


🇿🇦 South Africa
- South Africa's chrome manufacturers get preferential electricity tariffs and avoid closures


🇸🇩 Sudan
- The RSF takes over the Heglig oilfield only to transfer it to the South Sudanese army


🇹🇿 Tanzania
- Tanzania’s president reassured the US ambassador of full commitment to cooperation with American investors


🇿🇲 Zambia
- The US promises Zambia financial support in exchange for reforms and “collaboration in the mining sector”


🇿🇼 Zimbabwe

- The president unexpectedly replaces mines minister with his deputy


#NewsDigest

Devils Below
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Giant Evictions, Giant Profits

📄 The UK OECD body has found the complaint by residents of eastern DRC over forced evictions to be well-founded and worthy of examination. The case concerns British company AngloGold Ashanti which, together with the notorious Barrick, owns the Kibali gold mine, one of the largest of its kind in Africa, in the northeast of Congo.

📍 Local residents first became an obstacle to gold mining as early as 2010, a year after the complex was launched. After the initial resettlements in 2010–2015, a cordon of so-called Exclusion Zones was drawn on the map around the complex. Living there was formally prohibited, even though the already existing settlements were also included into the zones.

🚧 At the same time, no significant work was carried out there and the zones were not fenced off – so, people who didn't spend their evenings reading municipal cadastral plans could not even have the idea that living there was forbidden.

⚠️ The turning point was reached in 2021, when the discovery of new deposits prompted the project expansion. "Waste dumps" needed to be created on the sites of the Exclusion Zones, and residents who still remained there began to be pushed out, while their houses were demolished. For locals this came as a surprise – far from everyone knew that their homes was part of some kind of special area.

🏘 The escalation turned into violent protests in the nearby town of Durba. On 22 October 2021 3 people were shot dead and 14 wounded by local security forces — which led to the suspension of resettlements. However, most houses had already been demolished by then, amounting to a total number of around 2,360 removed households.

⚖️ Since then, activists have been trying to achieve justice through local courts and foreign institutions. The initial attempt to go to court in Kinshasa went nowhere – the court ruled that the residents had not made sufficient efforts to resolve the dispute through dialogue with the miners. After that, activists lodged complaints with the non-judicial OECD mechanisms in Canada and the UK.

Unfortunately, their mandates only allow them to issue recommendations, which is what the Canadian body has already done and what the UK one is likely to do as well, despite having accepted the claims as well-founded.

#CostOfGreed

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Talk Left, Walk Right in South Africa 🇿🇦

For Pretoria, accusing Israel of genocide is not an obstacle to increasing coal supplies

🌐 South Africa, one of the fiercest critics of Israel’s actions in Gaza, has nearly doubled its coal exports to the Jewish state. The opportunity to send extra volumes opened up when Colombia, an active critic of Israel's actions in Gaza itself, banned its coal shipments to Israel.

🔨South Africa and Colombia have much in common. When South Africa was the first to file a complaint with the UN International Court of Justice in December 2023, accusing Israel of failing to prevent genocide in Gaza, Colombia was among the first countries who joined the initiative. At the same time, Colombia was Israel’s main coal supplier, while South Africa was in the top-3.

👋 However, the two countries diverged when it came to real action. In August 2024 Colombia (source of about 41% of Israel’s coal), banned exports and by September 2025 shipments had dropped to zero. South Africa, by contrast, imposed no such ban and its sales instead grew by 87% after Colombia’s shipments stopped.

Coal is not Israel’s main energy source — it generates some 10% of electricity today, and this share is declining. Even so, it is ironic to see that Colombia has ended up more concerned about the fate of Gazans than South Africa, a country that went through apartheid.

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Mozambique-Australia Chicken Game

🌟 Australian company South32 is threatening to shut down by March 2026 one of the largest aluminium smelters on the entire continent, located in Mozambique near Maputo. This is part of a long-running tug-of-war between Mozambique's government and the company.

South32 owns a 63.7% stake in Mozal Aluminium, the largest industrial enterprise in Mozambique. According to media reports, this single plant generates up to 3% of Mozambique’s GDP while consuming up to 50% of all the electricity produced in the country. Its nameplate capacity is >550,000 tonnes of aluminium per year.


📆 In earlier times, Mozambique’s government was generous in handing out preferential terms for investment. The Mozal plant was one of the beneficiaries: since 1997 it has paid no income tax, only 1% of turnover + dividends.

🔄 More recently, however, the policy has U-turned towards revising such contracts in order to squeeze more tax out of companies. One problem is that Mozal’s preferential contract runs until 2047.

💡 So, another pretext was found — the upcoming review of electricity prices, especially given that the power supply contract has to be renegotiated by March 2026. Assuming the smelter would have no choice, the government set a higher tariff and simply waited for day X.

🤔 However, at the Australian company’s office they realised that escalation can work both ways, and in turn announced they will simply halt production, which could lead to several thousands of people losing their jobs.

This is the curse of industrialization: with no domestic capital one has no choice but to lure foreign investors with lower taxes — and afterwards put up with absent revenues.

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Broke Up, But Not For Long 🤡

Guinea wants to supply ore to a company whose mine it nationalized

🌐 Insiders say that the Guinean government is in talks for state-owned Nimba Mining to supply bauxite to a plant of the Emirati company EGA.

🔨 The nuance here is that Nimba Mining is an asset taken from EGA itself back in July. The company failed to meet its deadline to build an aluminium smelter in Guinea, so the government decided that its bauxite mining project merits being taken away.

After that, Guinea and the company found themselves in the position of divorced spouses. Guinea had nowhere to send bauxites, while EGA could not find feedstock for its plant in the UAE (it did not build a smelter in Guinea, but somehow managed to build one at home). In the end, everything is returning to the status quo, except that Guinea now holds the mining asset.

Guinea has been consistently pushing for local processing. All bauxite miners are required to begin construction of plants by 2027 – in case of non-compliance, they can apparently also expect to part ways with their mines.

The only question is whether the government itself will invest competently in processing.

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🏜 When the way is far and the line is single-track, it is reasonable to use the longest possible train.

Considerations like this gave birth to this iron resemblance of a shai-hulud, crawling across the desert to the ocean.

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Devils Below
But can you guess where exactly such a thing runs?
A Three-Kilometer-Long Train

⚙️ A train of 200 cars, stretching 2.5–3 kilometers in length, is one of Mauritania’s landmarks. It's habitat is a 700-kilometer route between the iron ore mines of Zouerate and the port of Nouadhibou on the Atlantic coast.

📉 The mining industry, including the iron mines of Zouerate, accounts for up to 25% of the country’s entire economy. In a certain sense, the ore-carrying train is a legacy of an aging economic model centered on raw exports.

📈 On the other hand, as long as the locomotives keep going from the mines to the sea and back, they attract tourists, while locals hop on the train to travel and shoot TikToks — a interesting example of how modern economy can develop around an old industry.

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