Ivanhoe Mines has completed the first copper anode shipment via the Lobito Corridor, establishing a new export paradigm for African critical minerals. The 99.7% pure copper anodes, produced at a newly commissioned smelter in the Democratic Republic of Congo, travelled by rail to Angola’s Port of Lobito before heading to European markets. Aurubis AG purchased the shipment for processing at its German low-carbon facility.
This shipment represents Africa’s transition from exporting unprocessed ore to refined products. Historically, African producers have shipped raw materials abroad, capturing minimal domestic value. The Lobito route inverts this model, enabling smelting within the DRC whilst moving only refined anodes to international buyers.
Robert Friedland, Ivanhoe’s executive chairman, highlighted that these anodes rank among the world’s lowest carbon-intensity copper products. This distinction matters significantly as European manufacturers face mounting regulatory pressure to account for supply chain emissions, particularly in electric vehicles and renewable energy infrastructure. Copper refined using hydropower commands stronger buyer interest and cleaner certification credentials than material produced in carbon-intensive settings.
The Lobito Corridor connects mining regions across the DRC and Zambia to Angola’s Atlantic coastline, creating a Western-backed alternative to China-dominated logistics networks. This geopolitical dimension underpins Western government support for the route’s development as supply chain diversification becomes a strategic priority.
The corridor promises reduced transport times, lower shipping costs, and accelerated mineral supply chains. Critically, it enables intermediate refining steps along the railway, allowing value-added components to remain regionally rather than flowing entirely to overseas processors. This infrastructure investment could catalyse industrial development across Angola and the DRC, creating employment and tax revenue beyond mining operations.
Ivanhoe’s inaugural shipment establishes commercial proof that the corridor functions as a viable export artery. The delivery provides investors and policymakers with concrete evidence of the route’s potential. As additional producers utilise the corridor, Africa’s position within global energy transition supply chains will strengthen considerably, marking a fundamental shift in how the continent monetises its mineral wealth.
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