HARARE
Zimbabwe has exported processed lithium for the first time, putting Africa at the start of a battery materials value chain it has long supplied only as a raw material source.
Prospect Lithium Zimbabwe, a unit of China’s Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt, shipped the consignment of lithium sulphate from its Arcadia mine in Goromonzi, it said in a post on X on April 27. The volume was not disclosed.
The shipment is the direct output of a $400 million processing plant that Huayou completed in October 2025 through its processing arm at Arcadia, Arcadia Technology Zimbabwe.
The facility carries a nameplate capacity of at least 50,000 metric tonnes of lithium sulphate annually, a material refined into battery-grade lithium hydroxide or lithium carbonate for electric vehicles and energy storage systems.
“This is more than just a shipment; it is a testament to Zimbabwe’s innovation and Africa’s growing role in the global energy transition,” Henry Zhu, general manager of Prospect Lithium Zimbabwe, said in the company’s announcement.
Zimbabwe suspended lithium concentrate exports in February 2026, citing revenue leakages, and introduced a 10% levy on concentrate shipments while exempting processed products. A full concentrate export ban takes effect in January 2027.
The Southern African country exported 1.13 million metric tonnes of spodumene concentrate in 2025, generating $513.8 million in export revenue, according to the Minerals Marketing Corporation of Zimbabwe.
The country holds Africa’s largest lithium reserves and ranks fourth globally among mined lithium producers, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.


























