Terrain into
Terms.

VSG LLP. We secure early-stage commercial position in mining and metals — where access, timing, and local credibility determine who participates and on what terms.

Dialogue

Securing Early-Stage
Commercial Position.

We operate before competition — in the space where participation is still shapeable, terms are not yet fixed, and the organisations with the right access convert it into lasting advantage.

Securing Early Stage Terrain
Regions

Access.

VSG — We secure the commercial position that determines who enters the deal and on what terms. People are the mechanism. Early access is the product. For OEM and EPC organisations competing in opaque, relationship-driven markets, the outcome is shaped long before the tender is written.

The Client Bridge

Before a project begins,
its outcome is already being decided.

We work with OEM contractors, EPC organisations, and equipment providers — from De Beers to SAIPEM — to embed the commercial capability that shapes early-stage outcomes across Africa, the Middle East, and emerging extraction corridors. Not after the process begins. Before the structure is set.

VSG on the Map
VSG

"In complex and frontier markets, the right people in the right place set the stage for lasting success."

VSG — Geneva
Edge

A strategic advantage in
complex extractive markets.

0.1 Pre-Competitive Entry

We engage before tenders emerge — before data rooms open, before competition forms. At this stage, the organisations already present are the only ones who define the terms of participation.

0.2 Commercial Depth

Durable advantage is not won through presence — it is won through proximity to the decisions that count. We build that proximity: political, commercial, and structural, from the first conversation to feasibility lock-in.

0.3 Convertible Access

Access is only valuable if it converts. We activate the leadership, relationships, and market architecture required to translate early positioning into defined revenue and structured participation.

DRC Energy Minister
VSG Meeting

VSG secures early-stage commercial position in mining, metals, and extractive markets. We operate before process — embedding the capability, relationships, and political fluency that determine participation before competition is possible. People are our mechanism. Access is our product.

Terrain & Intelligence → Commercial Positioning → Revenue Conversion. We map the real landscape — who matters, how power moves, which assets are heating up — then place the capability to act on it. The result is early-stage advantage that translates into project awards, JV structures, and supply agreements.

We operate across the full extractive ecosystem — critical minerals, rare earths, copper, cobalt, precious metals — from early economic assessment through to Final Investment Decision. Our focus is the stage where participation is defined: Front-End Loading, pre-feasibility, and pre-RFP engagement where terms are still shapeable.

We operate at the stage where participation is defined — before execution locks. Our intelligence comes from those actively advancing transactions within these markets, not observing them. Every engagement is structured toward a commercial outcome: entry, award, or preferential positioning in the feasibility-stage decisions that determine who wins.

"We secure access to the conversations that define project participation — before they become competitive."

VSG — London
Consult

For organisations that need to
enter before the door closes.

In opaque and frontier markets, commercial position is determined early — and rarely revisited. Speak to us about yours.

Top 50 Miners and the Africa Pivot
Latest Insight

Top 50 Miners Are Up $250 Billion.
Africa Is Where the Next $250 Billion Will Be Decided.

The world's major miners have absorbed the Iran war, copper has hit all-time highs, and the $100-billion club now has six members. The question is not who won the last cycle — it is who is already positioned for the next one. That contest is playing out in Africa, right now, before the tenders exist.

Opinion — 20 April 2026

VSG Advisors
VSG — Advisory

Our Core.

Each advisor brings direct exposure to the markets, decisions, and relationships that determine commercial outcomes in extractives — not from the outside, but from within.

Extractive Experience.

Political acuity, commercial fluency,
and the relationships that exist
before the briefing.

Our advisors bring direct operational experience from the markets VSG's clients are entering. They understand how decisions are made, who makes them, and what must be in place before formal processes begin. The result: clients enter with credibility, not credential — and position themselves before their competitors understand the landscape.

Bridge People
Dialogue

"The solution is already written into the project before the tender exists."

Before the Process.

Securing position before
the landscape firms.

The commercial leaders we deploy operate at the front end of project development — from early economic assessment through feasibility lock-in. They embed commercial access where it matters most, enabling EPC contractors, OEM providers, and service organisations to shape participation in junior-through-major mining projects before the competitive window closes.

VSG on the Map
Capability

Commercial access,
before the window opens.

i. Commercial Access

VSG operates at the convergence of commercial pressure, political reality, and timing. We deploy individuals who carry genuine access — not network lists — into markets where outcomes are shaped before they are visible. Within extractives, mining, and metals, this gives our clients the ability to enter deals that are never advertised and pursue opportunities that close before they are named.

ii. Early-Stage Positioning

We engage before visibility — where direction is still fluid and terms are not yet fixed. We map the real influence structure, evaluate who holds proximity to the decision, and place capability precisely where it converts. The result is entry at the point where access and timing intersect — and competitors have not yet arrived.

iii. Outcome Orientation

We operate at the stage where participation is defined — before execution locks. Every engagement is structured toward a commercial outcome: market entry, project award, JV structure, or preferential positioning in the feasibility-stage decisions that determine who wins. If it does not convert to revenue, we are not doing our job.

VSG Dialogue
Shaping the feasibility stage.

The outcome is decided
before the process begins.

We understand the extractives pathway — from early economic assessment through bankable feasibility to Final Investment Decision — and where within it commercial position is actually won or lost.

That point is Front-End Loading. At FEL, feasibility studies formalise participation. The organisations already embedded at this stage — carrying commercial rationale that is inseparable from project viability — are the only ones the project structure is built around. Those who arrive after are competing for what remains.

The individuals we deploy operate at the business development and commercial-diplomatic interface. They identify opportunity before it is structured, initiate contact at the moment of earliest strategic alignment, and convert access into defined terms — not activity reports. They are political animals with commercial outcomes. That is a specific and uncommon combination.

Our focus is concentrated across Africa and the Middle East — geographies where proximity, jurisdictional fluency, and trusted local relationships are not differentiators. They are prerequisites. Without them, participation is theoretical by the time the feasibility study is finalised.

Speak to Us

DRC Energy Minister
VSG
VSG Impact
Performance

2025 In Review

$2.4B
aggregate revenue entered or influenced by commercially embedded leaders across Africa and the Middle East
87%
of leaders deployed originated from adjacent sectors — infrastructure, energy, or defence — converted into extractives commercial roles
14
major project awards where VSG-sourced commercial capability was embedded prior to feasibility lock-in and referenced in bankable study documentation
License to Operate
€200M+
Restoring Access — West Africa Re-entry

Secured in-country commercial leadership ahead of a political transition in West Africa. The individual navigated sovereign relationships and restored a lapsed framework agreement, re-opening a revenue stream worth over €200M to the client organisation.

Market Architecture
60%
Shaping the Landscape — Central Africa Market Share

Deployed a VP-level commercial leader ahead of a major project's feasibility stage in Central Africa. The result: a risk-sharing joint venture structured before the competitive window opened, capturing over 60% regional market share within three years of engagement.

VSG
VSG Advisor
VSG Knowledge
Intelligence

Knowledge &
Research.

Analysis, market intelligence, and strategic commentary from the VSG network.

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Top 50 Miners Are Up $250 Billion. Africa Is Where the Next $250 Billion Will Be Decided.

The world's major miners have absorbed the Iran war, copper has hit all-time highs, and the $100-billion club now has six members. The question is not who won the last cycle — it is who is already positioned for the next one.

Africa Critical Minerals
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At the end of Q1 2026, the world's fifty most valuable mining companies carried a combined market capitalisation of $2.41 trillion — up $250 billion since January. The US-Israeli strikes on Iran in late February produced a short, sharp market correction. It did not last. Mining's majors absorbed the war and moved on. Gold is up 8% year to date, still trading above $4,700 an ounce. Copper hit an all-time high of $6.50 a pound in the days before the Friday massacre and has since retreated only modestly. BHP briefly crossed $200 billion in market capitalisation in March — a distinction no mining company has achieved before. The $100-billion club, which for most of this decade had just two members, now has six.

These numbers matter — but not for the reason most commentary suggests. The story is not that mining has proved resilient. Of course it has. The story is what the capital concentration of this moment reveals about where the next cycle of value will be created, who is currently positioned to capture it, and — critically — who is not yet in the room but still has time to enter.

That story is in Africa. And the window, while still open, is not open indefinitely.

What the Majors Are Actually Telling You

Read the Q1 data not as a market summary but as a map of strategic intent, and the signals are unusually clear. BHP is pursuing copper with an urgency that has redefined its identity — copper and byproducts contributed $7.95 billion to operating earnings in its most recent half-year, topping iron ore for the first time. Rio Tinto has moved to secure the Resolution copper deposit in Arizona and committed to a $500 million drilling campaign. Glencore — long an underperformer — is up 37% year to date, benefiting from its oil trading exposure to the Iran conflict and a revival in coal, and is once again being discussed as a potential merger partner for Rio Tinto in what would create the world's largest mining company.

The common thread is copper. And behind copper, as the energy transition's demand curve extends and Iran's contribution to Western critical mineral supply chains effectively goes to zero, the next set of contested assets is increasingly concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa.

Copper Demand Curve

Copper's all-time high and the closure of Iranian mineral access to Western markets have redirected capital toward African deposits with unusual speed. Source: VSG Analysis

Iran's Exit and What It Has Accelerated

The US-Israeli military campaign against Iran in February 2026 did not create the Africa pivot. It accelerated one that was already underway. Iran's mineral sector — estimated reserves valued in the tens of trillions of dollars, including significant lithium deposits discovered in Hamadan in 2023 and a domestic monazite processing facility commissioned in 2025 — had already been functionally closed to Western capital through the architecture of sanctions, Russian processing agreements, and deepening integration with Chinese state-affiliated operators.

What the February strikes did was remove the residual ambiguity. There is no longer a scenario in which Iranian critical minerals flow west. Tehran's rare earths, lithium, and associated strategic materials are locked into a supply chain architecture that runs east to Beijing and north to Moscow. Western governments and industrial actors that had been monitoring Iran as a potential future opportunity have now reclassified it as a permanent absence. The consequence is a reallocation of attention, capital, and commercial effort — and Africa is where most of it is landing.

The Ivanhoe Signal — and Why It Should Be Read Carefully

Not all Africa news from Q1 was positive. Ivanhoe Mines' difficulties at Kamoa-Kakula in the DRC deserve attention — not as evidence that African assets are inherently problematic, but as a precise illustration of what happens when commercial and operational position is built without the depth of local alignment the DRC's political architecture demands.

Kamoa-Kakula is the largest, highest-grade copper mine to come online in decades. It is a genuinely world-class asset. And yet Ivanhoe enters Q2 2026 having slashed 2026 production guidance from 380,000-420,000 tonnes to 290,000-330,000 tonnes, with 2027 expectations further reduced. The flooding event that caused temporary suspension was the proximate cause. The deeper issue — a deteriorating relationship with its Chinese joint venture partner Zijin Mining, which controls 39.6% of the project — is the structural one.

The lesson is not that the DRC is ungovernable. It is that operating successfully in the DRC requires a quality of local alignment and counterparty relationship management that cannot be improvised after a crisis has begun. The organisations that are extracting sustained value from Congolese copper — and there are several — are not doing so because their assets are better. They are doing so because the relationships that underpin their operational licence were built with care, before they were needed.

DRC Commercial Landscape

Kamoa-Kakula's difficulties are a structural lesson in what the DRC demands from commercial operators — not a judgment on the asset. Source: VSG Analysis

Where the Next Cycle Is Being Decided

The assets that will define the next decade of copper, cobalt, and critical mineral supply are not secrets. The deposits are known. Zambia's North-Western Province, Zimbabwe's lithium corridor, the Katanga copperbelt's undeveloped flanks, West Africa's gold and bauxite extensions, the emerging manganese and rare earth positions in Southern and East Africa — these are the locations where the next $250 billion in mining market capitalisation will be built. The feasibility studies that will formalise participation in these projects are being written now, or will be within the next eighteen to thirty-six months.

The organisations that will be embedded in those studies — as equipment providers, EPC contractors, processing technology partners, and capital co-investors — are not the ones that will respond to tenders when they are issued. They are the ones that are already present in the commercial conversations that precede the tender's existence. In the DRC, in Zambia, in Zimbabwe, in the gold corridors of Guinea and Ghana, those conversations are happening now. They involve a small number of people, in a small number of rooms, and the decisions being made in them will shape the competitive landscape of African extraction for a generation.

Lithium's Return and the Battery Chain Repositioning

One further data point from Q1 is worth noting. Lithium's resurgence — after two years of price collapse that wiped most lithium producers from the Top 50 — has returned SQM and Albemarle to the rankings. There are now three lithium stocks in the Top 50, up from a low of one in mid-2025. This matters for Africa because Zimbabwe is now firmly within the battery supply chain's strategic geography. The country's Arcadia, Bikita, and Kamativi deposits represent a lithium endowment of genuine scale — and Chinese operators have already secured substantial positions within them precisely because they understood, years ago, that the Western world would eventually need what Zimbabwe holds.

The window for non-Chinese, non-Russian operators to secure meaningful positions in Zimbabwe's lithium sector has not closed. But it is not as wide as it was. Every month that passes without active commercial engagement in Harare is a month in which the available positions narrow and the cost of entry increases.

The Commercial Conclusion

The $2.41 trillion that the Top 50 now represents is a record, and it reflects a genuine and durable shift in how global capital values access to the metals the energy transition requires. That is the macro story, and it is well told elsewhere.

The commercial story — the one that matters for organisations that are not yet among the Top 50 but intend to operate within the ecosystem they define — is more specific. The next phase of value creation in African extractives will be captured by organisations that secure commercial position before feasibility locks, before tenders exist, and before the competitive window that currently exists in the DRC, Zambia, Zimbabwe, and the West African corridors has closed.

The Iran war has accelerated the timeline. The capital concentration at the top of the mining industry has intensified the competition. And the organisations that treat this moment as a reason to begin planning rather than a reason to already be present will find, as organisations always find in pre-RFP environments, that the room was full before they arrived.

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Harnessing Local Knowledge: Artisanal Mining and Exploration Strategy

How artisanal mining communities can strengthen exploration while supporting responsible supply chains.

Artisanal Mining Zimbabwe
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Artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) plays a significant economic role in many countries, providing livelihoods and income for millions of people. We believe that where ASM activity takes place legitimately, efforts should focus on strengthening responsible practices and improving safety, environmental standards and transparency.

Minerals produced through ASM are an established part of global supply chains. We support the work of responsible sourcing initiatives and international organisations seeking to raise standards, improve traceability and reduce the risk of human rights abuses associated with informal mining.

Governments, communities and development partners across Africa are working to address the underlying drivers of ASM-related challenges. These include structural poverty, limited access to education and a lack of awareness about the environmental and safety risks associated with informal mining practices.

A Largely Untapped Source of Geological Intelligence

In many emerging mining jurisdictions, artisanal miners operate continuously within river systems, terraces and weathered surface environments. These activities often precede formal exploration and, in some cases, persist alongside large-scale industrial mining operations. Through repeated engagement with local terrain and mineral occurrences, artisanal miners develop an intimate understanding of where gold is found, how it behaves within drainage systems and which areas remain productive over time.

Artisanal Mining Operations

Artisanal miners develop intimate knowledge of local geology over generations. Source: VSG Field Research

Understanding the Environments Artisanal Miners Exploit

Artisanal miners most commonly recover gold from secondary deposits rather than from hard-rock sources. These deposits typically occur within modern river channels, ancient drainage systems and terrace sediments formed through erosion and redeposition. Extraction methods remain relatively simple, involving tools such as pans, sieves and improvised washing tables.

For exploration geologists, this dynamic behaviour is critical. Drainage systems are not static geological environments. Flow directions, sediment transport pathways and depositional settings can shift over time, redistributing gold in ways that obscure the location of the original source.

Artisanal Mining Site

Artisanal mining operations across African river systems. Source: VSG Field Research

Integrating Artisanal Data into Exploration Workflows

When combined with conventional exploration techniques, information derived from artisanal mining can significantly strengthen early-stage exploration strategies. Geological mapping, geochemical surveys, structural analysis, remote sensing and geophysical data all provide critical insights into the subsurface. Artisanal mining observations add an additional layer of empirical evidence grounded in real mineral recovery.

For exploration teams operating in frontier environments, the opportunity is clear: integrate local knowledge with modern science, and the search for primary gold deposits becomes both more efficient and more informed.

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The New Iran War and the Day the Extractives Order Changed

What The February 28 US-Israeli Strikes Mean for African Resource Economies

Iran War Impact
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At dawn on Saturday, 28 February 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes across Tehran, Qom, Isfahan, Kermanshah, and Karaj — the largest American military operation in the Middle East since the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Within hours, Iran's Revolutionary Guards retaliated simultaneously against four U.S. military installations spanning four Gulf Arab states. For the first time in history, Iranian ballistic missiles struck the capitals that host the world's most critical military and energy infrastructure at the same moment.

This is not a conventional oil shock. It is a systemic rupture — one that tests every assumption on which global energy security, critical mineral supply chains, development finance, and long-term extractive investment in Africa has been built.

Three Strikes, Three Precedents

The difference between June 2025 and February 2026 is the difference between a thunderstorm and a climate event. One passes. The other reshapes the terrain permanently.

Why Critical Minerals are Africa's Hidden Exposure — and Hidden Opportunity

Africa holds a disproportionate share of the world's most strategically important mineral reserves. The Democratic Republic of Congo accounts for approximately 70% of global cobalt production and holds 71% of proven reserves. The continent produced 4.2 million tonnes of copper in 2025, driven by the DRC and Zambia. Zimbabwe, Namibia, and Mozambique have tripled lithium output between 2021 and 2025.

Africa Mineral Map

Africa's critical mineral reserves are now central to Western supply chain security. Source: USGS Data

What Extractives Operators Should Do in the Next 30 Days

Operators should conduct an immediate audit of Gulf-transiting supply chain exposure — particularly for components, materials, or services where single-source dependency on Gulf-region suppliers exists. Engineering procurement schedules for projects with Gulf-origin inputs should be stress-tested against 30-, 90-, and 180-day disruption scenarios.

For junior frontier mining companies, this is not a moment to pause. It is a moment to get governance right, get relationships right, and get documentation right. Companies with transparent, internationally arbitrable contracts and clear beneficial ownership structures will be dramatically better positioned to access emergency DFI liquidity.

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Forces Reshaping Mining in 2026

A Strategic Assessment of the Ten Forces That Will Most Decisively Shape Mining and Metals in the Year Ahead

Mining Industry 2026
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The global mining industry is nearing its first full quarter of 2026 and it is facing a fundamental realignment. For those in the industry, they will know that for decades the sector operated within a broadly stable framework: capital flowed toward lowest-cost production, supply chains were optimised for efficiency rather than resilience, and geopolitics was a background variable rather than a primary one.

That framework is now dismantled. What has replaced it is a world in which the location of a mineral deposit, the nationality of a mine's owner, and the destination of its output carry strategic weight that commodity markets have not previously had to price.

I. The Security Premium

The fusion of resource policy with national security doctrine is perhaps the defining structural shift of this moment. Governments that once left mineral procurement to market mechanisms are now intervening directly — building strategic reserves, taking equity positions in producing companies, and deploying defence procurement budgets into the mining sector.

Security Premium

The fusion of resource policy with national security doctrine is reshaping mining investment. Source: VSG Analysis

II. Rare Earths: From Niche to Nerve Centre

Rare earth elements occupy a peculiar position in the current geopolitical order. Their economic scale is modest; their strategic significance is not. The concentration of processing capacity in a single country has transformed these materials into leverage instruments.

III. America's Domestic Mining Ambition

The United States is engaged in a concerted attempt to rebuild a mining and processing sector that decades of offshoring and environmental litigation have substantially reduced. Permitting reform, federal funding, and executive prioritisation have created a more hospitable environment for domestic production than has existed in a generation.

IV. Copper's Structural Deficit

The copper market is confronting a supply problem that no realistic policy intervention will resolve quickly. Demand projections associated with grid expansion, electrification, and digital infrastructure are flowing from committed capital programmes.

Copper Deficit

Copper demand projections outpace supply growth. Source: VSG Analysis

V. Gold's New Equilibrium

Gold crossed USD 5,000 per ounce in January 2026. The proximate cause is investor anxiety in an environment of elevated geopolitical tension. But the more durable driver is structural: central banks across the emerging world have been systematically diversifying reserves away from dollar-denominated assets.

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The Energy Transition Will Be Built with Metals

Getting to grips with supply of the Big Five: copper, aluminium, nickel, cobalt and lithium

Energy Transition Metals
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The energy transition will not be delivered in abstractions. It will be delivered in materials. Electrification now sits at the centre of industrial strategy across the United States, Europe and Asia. Wind turbines, solar parks, transmission grids, battery storage, electric vehicles, charging networks — the visible architecture of decarbonisation is expanding rapidly.

Less visible, but more fundamental, is the material reality beneath it. Every turbine nacelle, every kilometre of high-voltage cable, every battery pack rests on a concentrated set of inputs. Strip those away and the transition stalls.

The Big Five

The transition is, in material terms, a story about five metals: copper, aluminium, nickel, cobalt and lithium. Each plays a distinct, non-substitutable role. Copper is the circulatory system of electrification. Aluminium enables lightweighting. Nickel, cobalt and lithium form the chemical backbone of modern battery technologies.

The Big Five Metals

The five metals that form the material foundation of the energy transition. Source: VSG Analysis

The Scale of the Build-Out

To grasp the magnitude, consider electric vehicles alone. Moving from today's fleet to tens of millions of EVs annually within a decade requires exponential scaling of battery production capacity, upstream refining and raw material extraction.

Metals Demand Forecast

Projected demand growth for critical metals through 2040. Source: IEA Critical Minerals Outlook

Capital and Coordination

Supplying the Big Five at the pace required will demand capital on a scale that is not yet fully internalised by markets or policymakers. A conservative estimate suggests that around US$1 trillion will be required over the next 15 years to expand supply across these five metals alone.

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Lithuania and the Fracturing Politics of Critical Minerals

A Move for Strategic Autonomy, or Strategic Urgency?

Lithuania Minerals
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In today's ever changing geopolitical economy, critical minerals are no longer a trade sidebar. They are infrastructure for sovereignty. We see this clearly with recent signals from Vilnius suggesting that Lithuania may pursue a bilateral critical minerals arrangement with the United States if an EU-wide agreement does not advance quickly enough.

Foreign Minister Kestutis Budrys has made it clear that Lithuania may sign a minerals deal with the US if European negotiations proceed too slowly, positioning bilateral negotiations as necessity rather than preference, driven by temporal constraints rather than ideological positioning.

Critical Minerals as Defence Infrastructure

Such a move serves to outline just how important these elements are to individual countries, with rare earth magnets, lithium, gallium, germanium and associated battery metals the foundational inputs into advanced electronics, defence systems, electric mobility platforms, grid and storage technologies, and semiconductor manufacturing.

Lithuania EU Relations

Lithuania's move reflects a broader reconfiguration: critical minerals diplomacy is becoming modular rather than monolithic. Source: VSG Analysis

Why Lithuania Is Moving

Lithuania's economy is small but highly integrated into engineering, high-tech manufacturing and defence value chains. Its security posture — shaped by geography and history — places resilience at the centre of industrial planning. Vilnius' calculation appears straightforward: the EU's collective approach to critical minerals is comprehensive but procedurally slow; industrial vulnerability is immediate; the United States is actively constructing alternative supply networks among aligned economies.

The Brussels Dilemma

The European Commission has consistently preferred coordinated, reciprocal, bloc-level frameworks over bilateral side deals. The logic is clear: fragmentation weakens collective bargaining power and complicates trade coherence. Yet the EU's strength — consensus among 27 member states — can also be its constraint.

EU Minerals Policy

The EU faces a dilemma between collective bargaining power and national urgency. Source: VSG Analysis

The Bigger Picture: Industrial Policy as Security Policy

The underlying reality is unambiguous. Critical minerals policy is now defence policy by another name. Control over rare earth separation, battery precursor production, gallium refining or germanium processing shapes the resilience of weapons systems, renewable infrastructure, semiconductor supply, automotive electrification, and communications networks.

Fragmentation or Flexibility?

The coming months will test whether the EU can match geopolitical urgency with procedural agility. A credible, timely bloc-level agreement would reinforce cohesion and strengthen Europe's negotiating leverage globally. If not, smaller states may continue to hedge. The energy transition and the security transition are converging. Industrial policy can no longer be compartmentalised from geopolitics. For Lithuania — and increasingly for others — certainty of supply is not an economic preference. It is a national imperative.

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Is Partnership the Real Barrier in African Minerals?

Securing Africa's critical minerals is a test of strategy—not geology, but alignment.

Africa Minerals Partnership
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Securing Africa's critical minerals has become a strategic test — not of geology, but of alignment. Across Africa's critical minerals landscape, the impasse is not about ore grades or capital intensity. It is about worldview.

European actors approach Namibia, Zambia and other mineral-rich states with a supply-chain mandate: diversify, de-risk and reduce dependence on China. Their proposals are structured around compliance, ESG frameworks and procurement discipline. They are coherent, defensible and institutionally sound.

African governments are negotiating something different. After decades of exporting raw material while value accrued elsewhere, they are focused on industrial positioning. Processing capacity, manufacturing capability and domestic employment are not add-ons — they are the point.

The Structural Blind Spot

The Western playbook assumes that if the financing is sound and the governance framework robust, projects will advance. On paper, this is logical. On the ground, it is incomplete. Formal mandates rarely reflect how influence actually flows.

Africa Mineral Negotiations

The gap between formal agreement and functional execution is where most projects weaken. Source: VSG Analysis

The Missing Capability

Bridging this divide requires a different type of operator. Not a diplomat. Not a compliance consultant. A commercial intermediary capable of aligning sovereign ambition with executable structure.

Commercial Intermediary

Bridging the divide requires a commercial intermediary capable of aligning sovereign ambition with executable structure. Source: VSG Analysis

The Real Barrier Is Misalignment

Africa's mineral future will be shaped by partnerships. The decisive factor will not be declarations of cooperation, but whether commercial proposals genuinely integrate sovereign objectives. Where alignment is engineered early, agreements endure. Where it is treated as a concession, momentum dissipates.

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The Agreement Shapes the Mine

How Offtake Agreements Make—or Break—Critical Minerals Projects

Offtake Agreements
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In the critical minerals sector, offtake agreements are often described as contractual necessities. That description is technically accurate — and strategically incomplete. In practice, offtake is not simply a legal mechanism. It is a strategic signal. It tells project financiers whether a development is bankable, governments whether an investment is credible, and markets whether supply chains will genuinely materialise.

The mistake many project sponsors make is treating offtake as documentation rather than strategic positioning. At its most basic, an offtake agreement commits a buyer to purchase product before it is produced, over a defined tenor.

Term Sheet or Full Form? The Wrong First Question

The industry frequently frames offtake negotiations as a choice between a short-form term sheet and a fully negotiated agreement. That distinction has relevance — but only after commercial fundamentals are aligned.

Offtake Agreement Structure

Offtake agreements are the strategic signal that determines project bankability. Source: VSG Analysis

Geography Still Matters

Market practice in offtake structuring is shaped as much by jurisdictional context as by legal doctrine. Africa introduces a distinct dimension. High-potential but high-risk jurisdictions require pragmatic realism.

African Mining Jurisdictions

High-potential but high-risk jurisdictions require pragmatic realism in offtake structuring. Source: VSG Analysis

A Closing View

Offtake agreements are often portrayed as straightforward instruments. In critical minerals development, offtake is not merely about securing future production sales. It is about evidencing commercial judgment, financial discipline, and strategic maturity. And judgment, like credibility, is established early — long before documentation is finalised.

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The DRC's 100-Year Cobalt Story

Why the World's Most Critical Battery Metal Remains the World's Most Misunderstood Supply Risk

DRC Cobalt
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Every electric vehicle battery manufactured today almost certainly contains cobalt that passed through a single country: the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). With roughly seventy percent of global mine production concentrated in one of the world's most politically complex nations, cobalt has become the defining test case for how the global clean energy transition manages supply chain vulnerability.

From Belgian Colony to Global Chokepoint

Commercial cobalt extraction in what is now the DRC began in 1924, when the Belgian mining company Union Minière started recovering cobalt as a byproduct of copper operations in the Katanga region. Within two years the operation had become the world's largest cobalt producer. The structural logic established then has never fundamentally changed: DRC cobalt is, and always has been, a byproduct of copper mining.

DRC Cobalt Mining

Cobalt in the DRC has always been a byproduct of copper mining. Source: VSG Historical Analysis

The Real Anatomy of Supply Disruption

The conventional narrative presents DRC cobalt as perpetually on the verge of crisis. A more disciplined analysis of a century of production data reveals something considerably more specific: there have been major disruptions, but they had identifiable and largely structural causes.

DRC Cobalt History

A century of cobalt production in the DRC reveals identifiable patterns of disruption. Source: VSG Historical Analysis

The Chinese Transformation of DRC Cobalt

The story of how Chinese capital rebuilt the DRC's cobalt industry from near-zero in the late 1990s to global dominance by the 2020s is one of the most consequential strategic resource plays of the modern era.

What This Means for Mining Market Participants

The DRC will supply the majority of the world's cobalt for the foreseeable future. The energy transition depends on it. The companies that understand its history, navigate its complexities honestly, and build relationships with its operators and institutions will be better positioned to serve that market than those who treat it as too complex to engage with seriously.

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Hormuz, Critical Minerals and the Western Supply Chain Crisis

An Updated Assessment: The structural vulnerabilities exposed by the Strait of Hormuz crisis have entered an acute operational phase.

Strait of Hormuz Crisis
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Executive Summary

The Strait of Hormuz crisis has transitioned from a theoretical supply-chain stress scenario to a live, multi-vector shock to the global economy. As of 1 April 2026 — Day 32 of the US-Iran conflict — the IRGC's selective closure of the strait continues to throttle approximately 20% of global seaborne oil and a comparable share of LNG, generating what the International Energy Agency has characterised as the "greatest global energy security challenge in history."

Strait of Hormuz Map

The Strait of Hormuz: 20% of global oil and a comparable share of LNG transit this chokepoint. Source: VSG Analysis

I. The Operational Reality: Where We Stand on 1 April 2026

When we published our initial assessment on 20 March 2026, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz was described as an operational reality in its early phase. Twelve days later, it has hardened into a structural crisis with no clear near-term resolution.

II. The China Variable: Asymmetric Passage and Strategic Leverage

Perhaps the most significant strategic development since our initial note is the confirmation that China has secured preferential passage for its vessels through the strait. This asymmetric access has direct implications for critical minerals. China, as the dominant processor of the thirteen minerals for which the United States is entirely import-dependent, now benefits from an uninterrupted logistics corridor through a chokepoint that is throttling Western-aligned supply chains.

China Iran Relations

China has secured preferential passage through the strait, creating asymmetric access for critical minerals. Source: VSG Analysis

III. Critical Minerals: The November 2026 Deadline

Our March assessment identified China's 2024 export restrictions on critical minerals as the pre-existing structural vulnerability against which the Hormuz crisis should be measured. The suspension expires on 27 November 2026 — eight months from the date of this note.

Conclusion: The Window Remains Open, But It Is Narrowing

The window for structural reform — investment in allied extraction capacity, mandatory supply chain transparency, processing facility development, and multilateral minerals diplomacy — remains open. The November 2026 trade suspension expiry is a date certain. The Hormuz crisis has provided the urgency; the question is whether Western governments and industries will use the interval to act structurally rather than revert to pre-crisis inertia once the acute phase subsides.

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Commercial Access in Mining Is Not a Recruitment Problem

Why the firms that frame early-stage commercial entry as a hiring decision consistently arrive too late.

Commercial Access in Mining
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When a major OEM or EPC contractor decides to enter a new African market, the first question they usually ask is: who should we hire? That framing is the problem. By the time an organisation begins a search process, defines a role, engages the market, and onboards an individual — months have passed. In pre-tender, politically entangled extractive environments, months are not a delay. They are the window.

Commercial access in mining and metals is not a function of headcount. It is a function of timing, proximity, and the specific quality of the relationships that exist before a project is named. The organisations that consistently secure early participation in major extractive projects across Africa do not get there through superior recruitment. They get there because they are already present — and because the individuals carrying their commercial interest understand how decisions are actually made in these environments.

What a Hiring Decision Actually Costs You

The standard hiring cycle for a senior commercial role in an extractive business takes three to six months from mandate to onboarding. Add another three to six months for the individual to build the relationships and contextual fluency required to operate effectively in a new jurisdiction. In that window — six months to a year — the feasibility study has been scoped, the key advisors have been selected, and the access architecture of the project has been set.

At Front-End Loading, the point at which feasibility becomes bankable, participation is no longer negotiated — it is formalised. The question of who is written into the project structure is answered at FEL. Organisations that arrive at this stage without prior engagement are not late entrants. They are spectators.

FEL and commercial access

By the point of feasibility lock-in, the commercial access architecture of most projects is already determined. Source: VSG Analysis

The Framing That Changes Everything

The shift required is not from bad recruitment to better recruitment. It is from hiring as a commercial strategy to access as a commercial strategy. These are structurally different problems, and they require structurally different solutions.

Access is secured through individuals who already carry proximity — to the relevant ministers, the local operators, the in-country decision-makers who sit between a foreign company's ambition and a project's participation structure. These are not candidates in a search process. They are operators whose value is their existing position in the commercial landscape of a specific geography.

The VSG Approach

VSG does not manage a search process. We operate within the markets our clients are trying to enter, and we deploy individuals whose access is already established — not being built. The mandate is always the same: enter the deal before the terms are set. People are the mechanism. Early commercial position is the outcome. The distinction matters because it changes when you need to act — and what acting means.

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Before the Tender: How Early-Stage Commercial Position Is Won and Lost

The FEL stage is where access converts to advantage. Most organisations miss the window before they know it exists.

Before the Tender
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A tender is not the beginning of a commercial opportunity. It is the end of one. By the time a request for proposal is issued in a mining or infrastructure project — in the DRC, in Zambia, in Zimbabwe, in West Africa — the commercial landscape of that project has already been shaped. The advisors are chosen. The relationships are set. The access architecture is in place. The tender is the formalisation of decisions that were made months or years earlier, in conversations that were never recorded and rarely visible.

This is not unique to Africa. It is the operating reality of any opaque, relationship-driven procurement environment. But Africa's extractive markets are among the most concentrated examples of a universal truth: in complex deals, early presence is not an advantage. It is the only position from which participation is possible.

What Front-End Loading Is — and What It Means Commercially

Front-End Loading is an engineering and project management framework that defines the degree of scope definition at the outset of a project. At FEL-3 — the bankable feasibility study — a project's cost, schedule, and technical parameters are fixed within defined tolerances. Lenders require this certainty before committing capital. Operators require it before releasing execution budgets.

What is less discussed is the commercial corollary. FEL-3 is also the point at which participation is formalised. The contractors, equipment providers, and service organisations that are embedded in the feasibility study — whose cost structures, technical proposals, and commercial relationships are referenced in the bankable document — are the only ones the project is built around. They are not selected at tender. They have already been selected.

FEL Framework

The bankable feasibility study formalises what early-stage commercial access made possible. Source: VSG Analysis

The Window and Why Most Organisations Miss It

The window for commercial entry in a major extractive project opens at the earliest phase of economic assessment and closes at FEL-3. In practice, this window is often twelve to thirty-six months. In politically complex environments — where projects are shaped by sovereign ambition, local content requirements, and shifting regulatory frameworks — the effective window is shorter, and often moves without announcement.

Most organisations miss this window not because they lack commercial capability, but because they are looking at the wrong indicators. Project announcements, investment roadshows, and government procurement signals are all downstream of the decisions that matter. By the time a project is publicly visible, it is already too late to secure a formative position within it.

What Operating Before the Tender Requires

Entering before the tender requires three things that cannot be acquired quickly: political fluency in the specific jurisdiction, trusted relationships with the local actors who sit between sovereign decision-making and project structure, and a commercial brief that aligns with the sovereign objectives of the host government. These are not competencies. They are accumulated positions — and they are what VSG deploys on behalf of our clients.

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The Political Animal with a Commercial Brief

The rarest operator in extractives is not a technical expert. It is the individual who moves between sovereign relationships and bankable outcomes.

The Political Animal
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The extractives industry produces two types of commercially capable people in abundance: those who understand the technical and financial architecture of projects, and those who understand the political and relational architecture of geographies. The individual who commands both — fluently, simultaneously, and under commercial pressure — is exceptionally rare. They are the only person who can do what pre-RFP engagement in opaque markets actually requires.

We call this profile the political animal with a commercial brief. It is not a job title. It is a functional description of a specific kind of operator — one whose value lies not in what they know but in where they stand and what their presence in a room signals to the people who matter.

Why Technical Credibility Alone Is Insufficient

In markets where formal procurement processes are genuinely competitive, technical capability and commercial discipline are the primary differentiators. Proposals are evaluated on defined criteria. The best offer, adequately submitted, has a realistic path to award.

Africa's mining and metals environments do not consistently operate this way. Projects in the DRC, Zimbabwe, Zambia, and West Africa's gold corridors are structured by relationships that precede the formal process — and often determine its outcome before the process begins. The technical proposal is a supporting document for a decision that has already been made at the political or sovereign level.

Sovereign Relationships

In politically entangled markets, the commercial brief and the relational mandate are inseparable. Source: VSG Analysis

What This Profile Looks Like in Practice

The political animal with a commercial brief typically carries scar tissue from working inside these environments — not observing them. They have navigated a government transition. They have structured a local JV under political pressure. They have managed a sovereign counterpart whose stated position and actual position were different things. And they have converted that experience into a specific and trusted network of relationships that cannot be replicated from a foreign office.

They are often not obvious candidates. Their CVs may span infrastructure, defence, or energy before they arrived in extractives. Their academic background may be in law, politics, or international relations rather than geology or engineering. But their functional value — the ability to move between sovereign intent and commercial execution — is precisely what the pre-RFP stage demands and what VSG is built to identify, evaluate, and deploy.

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What Front-End Loading Actually Means for Commercial Entry

FEL is taught as an engineering framework. In practice it is a commercial deadline — and most organisations miss it.

Front-End Loading
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Front-End Loading was developed as an engineering discipline. The premise is straightforward: the earlier a project's scope, cost, and execution strategy are defined, the more predictable and successful the outcome. IPA research consistently shows that projects with high FEL scores — meaning greater definitional completeness at sanction — deliver better capital efficiency, fewer overruns, and faster ramp-ups.

That is the engineering story. The commercial story is different, and it is the one that matters for organisations trying to enter a project's supply and service ecosystem. What FEL means commercially is this: by the time a project reaches FEL-3 — the bankable feasibility study — the commercial relationships that define participation have already been made. The bankable study does not create those relationships. It records them.

FEL-1: Where Access Still Matters

At FEL-1 — conceptual or opportunity screening — a project is a hypothesis. Capital allocation is speculative. The owner is still determining whether the project is worth pursuing at all. This is the earliest stage at which commercial access has any value, and it is the stage at which VSG typically engages on behalf of our clients. The individuals we deploy at this stage are not selling. They are positioning — building the commercial rationale that will eventually become inseparable from the project's own logic.

FEL-1 Stage

At FEL-1, the commercial architecture of a project is still entirely open. This is the window. Source: VSG Analysis

FEL-2: Where Position Consolidates

At FEL-2 — pre-feasibility — the project's viability has been established and its parameters are being defined. Owner teams are assembling. Advisors are being selected. Technical and commercial assumptions are being fed into the cost model. Organisations that are not already embedded in this process at the relationship level are not being consulted — they are being qualified against a pre-existing preference that was built at FEL-1.

FEL-3: The Deadline

At FEL-3, participation is locked. The bankable feasibility study is a document for lenders, but it is also a commercial record of who is trusted, who is integrated, and who has been built into the project's structure. After FEL-3, the question is not who will participate — it is how the participants will execute. The commercial window has closed. This is why the firms that consistently win in opaque, politically entangled extractive environments do not wait for opportunity. They are already inside it when the opportunity is named.

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Zimbabwe's Lithium Moment: Promise, Politics, and the Access Problem

Zimbabwe holds some of the world's largest hard-rock lithium reserves. The question is not whether the resource exists — it is whether you are already in the room.

Zimbabwe Lithium
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Zimbabwe's lithium reserves are among the most significant on the African continent. The Arcadia, Bikita, and Kamativi deposits represent a geological endowment that places Zimbabwe firmly within the tier of countries that will matter to battery supply chains over the next two decades. The resource reality is not contested. What is contested — and what is rarely discussed with the clarity it deserves — is the access reality.

Zimbabwe's mineral sector sits within a political architecture that is specific, layered, and not reducible to a regulatory checklist. Understanding who actually controls the pace of investment approvals, who mediates between the Zimbabwe Investment and Development Agency and the Ministry of Mines, and which local counterparties carry sovereign confidence — this is not research. It is accumulated proximity. And it is what determines whether an organisation's interest in Zimbabwe's lithium translates into participation, or remains a market monitoring exercise.

The Regulatory Framework and Its Limits

Zimbabwe's indigenisation and empowerment framework has evolved significantly since 2018. The Mnangagwa administration has worked to signal openness to foreign investment, and the formal regulatory environment for mining has become more navigable. Licensing procedures have been streamlined, and the investment protection framework has been updated.

But formal regulatory improvement and operational access are different things. The organisations that have secured early and durable positions in Zimbabwe's lithium sector — including the Chinese operators that now control a significant share of the Arcadia deposit — did not do so by reading the regulatory framework. They did so by building relationships with the people inside it, long before the formal investment case was made.

Arcadia Lithium

Chinese operators secured early position in Zimbabwe's lithium sector through relationship-building, not regulatory navigation. Source: VSG Field Intelligence

The Chinese Benchmark and What It Signals

The speed and scale of Chinese commercial penetration into Zimbabwe's mining sector is instructive not as a geopolitical concern, but as a commercial methodology. Chinese state-affiliated operators did not arrive in Zimbabwe with superior technical proposals. They arrived with pre-existing sovereign relationships, patient capital, and commercial representatives who understood the local landscape from the inside. This is the benchmark for what effective early-stage access looks like in Zimbabwe — and it is the benchmark that non-Chinese operators must match if they intend to compete for the asset positions that remain available.

The Entry Opportunity That Remains

Despite the degree of Chinese consolidation, opportunities for non-Chinese operators exist — particularly in the service, equipment, and processing segments of the value chain. Zimbabwe's government has its own reasons to diversify its commercial partnerships, and the political appetite for Western engagement in the minerals sector is present. But that appetite does not translate automatically into access. It requires operators who can navigate the political architecture of Harare with credibility — and convert that navigation into structured commercial outcomes.

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The Katanga Corridor: Who Controls the Copper Flow

The DRC's copper belt generates billions in annual revenue. Understanding who controls movement through Katanga is a prerequisite for any serious commercial entry.

Katanga Copper
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The Katanga Copperbelt sits in the southern DRC and extends into Zambia's Northern Province, forming one of the world's most significant concentrations of copper and cobalt reserves. Output from the Congolese side alone accounts for a substantial share of global copper supply — and the logistics infrastructure through which that copper moves shapes almost every commercial relationship within the region's extractive ecosystem.

For organisations seeking to enter the DRC's extractive market — whether as equipment providers, EPC contractors, or service operators — understanding Katanga's commercial geography is not background research. It is an operational prerequisite. The corridor has its own political economy, its own informal power structures, and its own patterns of access and exclusion. These are not documented in regulatory frameworks. They are understood by the people operating within them.

The Infrastructure of Control

Copper and cobalt extracted from the Katanga basin moves primarily south — through Zambia to Dar es Salaam, through Zimbabwe to Beira, or overland through Angola to Lobito. Each corridor is controlled by a specific combination of state entities, private logistics operators, and political actors whose relationships determine what moves, when, and at what cost.

The TAZARA corridor, the LOBITO Atlantic Railway, and the road network through Kasumbalesa are not interchangeable options. Each carries its own access requirements, its own informal toll structures, and its own counterparty relationships. For commercial operators integrating into this system, the choice of corridor is not logistical — it is political. Getting it right requires knowledge that exists nowhere in the public domain.

Katanga Logistics

Each logistics corridor out of Katanga carries its own political access requirements. Source: VSG Field Intelligence

Commercial Entry in a Controlled Environment

The organisations that operate successfully in Katanga do not do so by navigating the formal regulatory environment alone. They do so because they have counterparties — local operators, government-affiliated entities, and community stakeholders — whose alignment is what makes commercial execution possible. These counterparties are not found through procurement processes. They are built through years of presence and structured through careful relationship architecture. VSG's work in the DRC is focused precisely on this: identifying who matters, building the right access, and ensuring that our clients' commercial entry is structured around the real power flows of the corridor — not a simplified version of them.

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Zambia's Copper Resurrection: Entry Strategy in a Renegotiated Market

Zambia has repositioned itself aggressively for foreign investment. But the firms securing early advantage are not the ones responding to policy — they are the ones who arrived before it.

Zambia Copper
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Zambia's Copperbelt suffered a prolonged period of underinvestment through the 2010s — a combination of policy uncertainty, fiscal instability, and the sovereign debt crisis that culminated in Zambia's 2020 default. The Hichilema administration's successful debt restructuring, and the government's subsequent repositioning of Zambia as a preferred destination for copper investment, has changed the context significantly. A wave of new capital has entered the country. Major operators have revised their expansion plans. The policy environment, while still complex, has become more predictable.

The risk for organisations reading this narrative is that it describes an opportunity that is already in competition. The firms that will extract the greatest advantage from Zambia's copper renaissance are not the ones responding to the current policy environment — they are the ones who used the period of uncertainty to build the relationships, the local knowledge, and the counterparty alignment that the current environment is now rewarding.

What Zambia's Market Entry Actually Requires

Entry into Zambia's copper sector requires engagement with multiple overlapping stakeholder groups: national government and its Ministry of Mines and Minerals Development, provincial and district authorities in the Copperbelt and North-Western provinces, community structures around the major operating areas, and the existing operators whose infrastructure, logistics, and processing capacity define the practical boundaries of market entry for equipment and service providers.

Zambia Copperbelt

Zambia's Copperbelt renaissance is real — but the commercial positions being built now were initiated before the current wave. Source: VSG Field Intelligence

The Access Window and Its Current State

The next significant tranche of Zambia's copper expansion — particularly the projects being advanced in North-Western Province, including the Trident and Sentinel expansion phases — will reach bankable feasibility within the next two to three years. The commercial access window for service and equipment providers seeking embedded positions within these projects is closing. It has not closed. Organisations with the right on-the-ground commercial capability, deployed now, can still enter the conversation before it becomes a competitive process. The question is whether they understand that this is the moment — and whether they have the people to act on it.

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West Africa's Gold Belt and the Leaders Who Move Within It

Commercial entry into West African gold is not an institutional exercise. It is a human one — and the individuals capable of navigating it are a small and specific group.

West Africa Gold
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The West African Gold Belt extends across a 3,000-kilometre arc from Guinea through Mali, Burkina Faso, Ghana, and into Côte d'Ivoire. It is one of the world's most prolific gold-producing regions, generating tens of millions of ounces annually and hosting several of the largest undeveloped gold deposits outside of Tier 1 mining jurisdictions. For equipment manufacturers, EPC contractors, and service providers, the region represents a significant and ongoing market — with projects at every stage of development, from exploration through to operating mine expansion.

The challenge for commercial entry into this market is not technical or financial. The challenge is human. West Africa's gold sector is characterised by a tight and largely closed network of operators, advisors, government counterparts, and community intermediaries whose relationships determine how contracts are awarded, how projects advance, and which organisations are inside the room when commercial terms are set. Entering this network from the outside — through corporate development channels, investment roadshows, or standard procurement processes — is almost invariably ineffective. The network is entered through individuals who already belong to it.

The Political Dimension in the Sahel Corridor

The military transitions in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger have complicated the operating environment across the northern tier of the West African gold belt. The withdrawal of French influence and the advancing presence of Russian security and commercial interests has restructured the political landscape in ways that affect commercial access directly. Organisations operating in these environments without the right local counterparties and political alignment face not just commercial risk, but operational exposure.

West Africa Mining

Political transitions across the Sahel have restructured the commercial access landscape of West Africa's gold belt. Source: VSG Analysis

Where the Accessible Opportunity Sits

Ghana and Guinea remain the most accessible entry points for non-Russian, non-Chinese operators seeking early-stage commercial positioning in West African gold. Both jurisdictions retain functioning democratic structures, have established mining codes, and have governments with genuine interest in diversifying their commercial partnerships. The opportunity, particularly in the equipment and processing service segments, is real — and the access window within the projects currently advancing through feasibility is still open for organisations that move with the right people behind them.

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Southern Africa's Minerals Infrastructure Gap

The infrastructure deficit across the Southern African corridor is not a development problem. It is a commercial entry problem — and it defines who participates in the next decade of extraction.

Southern Africa Infrastructure
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Southern Africa's extractive sector faces a structural constraint that is increasingly well-understood: the infrastructure required to move minerals from deposit to export is inadequate for the volume of production that the region's reserves could support. The deterioration of South Africa's Transnet freight rail network, the chronic underinvestment in the SADC regional transport corridors, and the capacity limitations at Beira, Dar es Salaam, and Walvis Bay ports collectively represent a systemic bottleneck that affects commercial viability across the region.

For development economists and policy analysts, this is a governance and investment challenge. For commercial operators — equipment providers, EPC contractors, processing technology companies — it is something more specific: it is a definition of where the commercial opportunity actually sits, and who is structurally positioned to capture it.

Infrastructure as a Commercial Entry Point

The infrastructure gap creates a specific class of early-stage opportunity. Governments across Southern Africa are actively seeking commercial partners for logistics, processing, and export infrastructure projects — and the competitive environment for these mandates is less crowded than it appears from the outside. The organisations that have secured early positions in corridor development in Zambia, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique are not primarily infrastructure developers. They are organisations that understood that infrastructure access is what controls the value of extraction — and that building a commercial position in infrastructure was the entry point to the extractive value chain itself.

SADC Corridor

Infrastructure control is not a development asset. It is a commercial position in the value chain. Source: VSG Analysis

The Lobito Corridor and What It Signals

The rehabilitation of the Lobito Atlantic Railway — connecting Zambia and the DRC's Copperbelt to Angola's Atlantic coast — represents the most significant single infrastructure development in the Southern African minerals corridor in a generation. The commercial positions being built around Lobito right now — in logistics, in processing services, in ancillary infrastructure — will define the competitive landscape of copper and cobalt export for the next thirty years. The organisations that are present in those conversations today are not the ones that are responding to procurement notices. They are the ones that understood, years ago, that this corridor would become critical — and positioned their commercial capability accordingly.

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DRC Market Entry: What the Briefings Don't Tell You

Every briefing on DRC market entry lists the same risks. None of them explain how commercial position is actually built — or why most organisations are looking in the wrong place.

DRC Market Entry
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Every serious assessment of the Democratic Republic of Congo as a commercial operating environment contains the same list of risks: political instability, regulatory uncertainty, currency controls, security exposure in the east, and the omnipresent concern about transparency in government contracting. These are real. They are also, for the purposes of commercial entry strategy, almost entirely irrelevant to the question that matters: how do you actually build a position in the DRC's extractive market?

The risk framework that dominates DRC market analysis is designed for compliance functions, investment committees, and ESG reporting. It tells an organisation whether they can justify engaging in the DRC. It does not tell them how to engage — or why the organisations currently extracting billions in annual revenue from Congolese copper, cobalt, and coltan are doing so despite those risks, and not in spite of them.

The Dual Power Structure

Understanding commercial access in the DRC requires accepting a foundational reality: the country operates through two overlapping power structures that are formally related but functionally separate. The formal structure — the government ministries, the CAMI mining cadastre, the DGRAD revenue authority — is the one that appears in regulatory briefings. The functional structure — the network of political actors, military affiliates, business intermediaries, and community powerbrokers whose alignment determines what actually happens — is the one that determines commercial outcomes.

Foreign organisations that engage only with the formal structure are not operating in the DRC. They are operating in their own projection of it. Effective commercial entry requires fluency in both systems simultaneously — and the individuals who carry that fluency are a specific and small group, almost all of whom acquired it through years of operational exposure, not academic study or desk research.

DRC Power Structure

Commercial success in the DRC requires fluency in both the formal and functional power structures — simultaneously. Source: VSG Field Intelligence

What the Organisations Winning in DRC Have in Common

The organisations currently holding the most commercially advantaged positions in DRC's extractive market — irrespective of nationality — share several characteristics. They entered early, before the current investment wave made the country a mainstream consideration. They built relationships at multiple levels of the political and commercial structure, not just at ministerial level. They accepted the ambiguity of the environment as an operating condition rather than treating it as a temporary problem to be managed out. And they deployed individuals who were capable of navigating that ambiguity without losing sight of the commercial brief.

This is precisely the profile that VSG identifies and deploys. Not the individual who can present a risk-adjusted investment thesis. The individual who can sit across the table from a Congolese counterpart — in Lubumbashi, in Kinshasa, in a mining camp in Lualaba Province — and build the trust that converts a political relationship into a commercial one. That individual exists. They are rare. Finding them, evaluating them, and deploying them at the right moment is what VSG does.

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