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Kemcore is planning to build mining chemical plants on the continent of Africa in an effort to reduce imports

Kemcore, an African mining chemicals importer, is planning to build its processing plants in?Botswana?and Angola?to reduce the geopolitical risks associated with imports from China?and the Middle East?.

Africa is an important supplier of minerals that are critical to the energy transition. It's also a battlefield for the United States, as Washington tries to curb Beijing's dominance by securing the supply chains. Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo are the two countries that dominate Africa's production of copper, while Congo is the world leader in cobalt. This puts the central African copperbelt right at the center of the minerals competition for energy transition.

?Chemical inputs such as sodium metabisulphite and sulfuric acid, which are used to extract these metals, have to be imported. This exposes miners to supply disruptions - including geopolitical risks, most recently the war in Iran.

Calisto Radithipa, founder and chief commercial officer of Kemcore, said that the sulphuric acid price in Tanzania's Dar es Salaam port is higher than usual after the war interrupted sulphur shipments.

Radithipa stated that Kemcore Botswana's?plant? will be operational by?middle next year and feed copper and cobalt to producers in Zambia, and Congo.

The facility will produce SMBS and sodium hydrosulphide, as well as flotation collectors like xanthates - chemicals used to process copper and cobalt ores. The facility is expected to produce 57,500 tonnes annually by 2027 and ramp up to 250,000 tons in 2032, which will be around 25% of Africa’s demand.

Kemcore CEO Godfrey Johnson revealed that the total project costs are $103 million. A large part of this funding will come from Africa.

Johnson said that some U.S. agencies had also shown early interest in investing, as Washington tries to loosen China’s grip on Africa’s mining industry. Johnson?added that no commitments had yet been made. He declined to name the firms.

Washington will be focusing on partnering with countries to support transparency in their mining sector. This includes local processing when it is economical.

Johnson stated that Kemcore's goal is to capture 25% of the $500 million African metals market. Local production will reduce costs for miners.

A facility in Angola, already funded by the company and linked to a project for rare earths, is also being developed. The facility will produce a total of?88,000 tonnes of sulfuric acid per year and 50,000 tonnes caustic lime.

Johnson stated that "Africa can't continue to export raw materials and import the products required to process them." The raw materials, customers and technology are all here. (Reporting by Maxwell Akalaare Adombila & Olivia Kumwenda-Mtambo; Editing by Janane Venkatraman)

(source: Reuters)