TITLE:
Case Study Topic—Emphasis on Value Over Volume: Africa’s Push for Local Resource Processing Amid Global Competition
AUTHORS:
Samuel Otis Pratt
KEYWORDS:
Mineral Value Addition, African Industrialization, Processing of Local Resources, Extractive Economies, Strategic Negotiation Framework, Beneficiation Policy, Public-Private Partnerships (PPP), African Mining Vision (AMV), Global Supply Chains, Resource Sovereignty, Raw Materials, Precious Stones, Foreign Investors, STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics), African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA)
JOURNAL NAME:
Beijing Law Review,
Vol.16 No.2,
June
30,
2025
ABSTRACT: Value Over Volume: Africa’s Initiative for Domestic Resource Processing in the Context of Global Competition. Africa is at a critical juncture in its economic development. Although Africa possesses abundant natural resources, it has always functioned at the lowest tier of the global value chain—exporting raw materials and importing costly finished goods produced from those resources. This disparity has impeded the continent’s capacity to fully capitalize on its natural resources’ economic benefits. Over 600 million Africans lack access to electricity, and approximately 900 million are without clean cooking gas, highlighting a significant disparity between resource richness and home development. As global events alter trade routes and strategic interests, African leaders are redefining their position in international resource markets, promoting policies emphasizing processing and value addition within the continent before exportation. The ongoing conflict in Ukraine, escalating geopolitical tensions, and the worldwide transition to renewable energy have focused attention on Africa’s huge mineral and energy resources. The region is progressively recognized as a crucial provider for the global industrial shift, encompassing renewable hydrogen and rare earth metals. Global powers—Developed countries—have intensified their engagement by providing investments and trade agreements. Nonetheless, numerous encounters continue to be inherently extractive. African leaders advocate a decisive a la carte negotiation style that prioritizes sovereignty, infrastructure development, and equitable involvement in the value chain. This method advocates for limiting the export of unrefined resources, necessitating international partners to endorse local refining, processing, and manufacturing endeavors. Executing this strategy necessitates a sophisticated and cooperative method for international negotiation. It necessitates reconciling the continent’s immediate developmental requirements with the overarching objective of economic change. Infrastructure deficiencies, governance issues, environmental obstacles, and external pressures from international firms hinder progress. However, transitioning from volume-centric extraction to value-oriented production offers a unique opportunity to reinvent Africa’s economic future. This case study invites stakeholders—students, policy leaders, and investors—to examine how Africa may utilize global competition to exert dominance over its natural resources and redefine the parameters of international trade.