All Mineral Profiles
| Mineral | Symbol | Corridor Significance | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Copper | Cu | DRC 2nd globally (3.3Mt). Zambia 7th. ~$13,000/t record highs. | critical |
| Cobalt | Co | DRC 72-78% of global supply. 2025 export ban → quota system. | critical |
| Lithium | Li | Manono deposit: world's largest hard-rock (400Mt). Disputed. | critical |
| Germanium | Ge | Kipushi mine 90 g/t Ge. China export controls → DRC strategic. | critical |
| Rare Earth Elements | REE | Longonjo (Angola): $268M funded. 2027 production. China-free pathway. | critical |
| Tantalum | Ta | DRC major producer. 3TG designation. Electronics capacitors. | strategic |
| Tin | Sn | DRC producer. 3TG conflict mineral. Manono lithium-tin deposit. | strategic |
| Tungsten | W | DRC minor producer. 3TG conflict mineral. China dominates. | strategic |
| Gold | Au | Kibali: Africa's largest gold mine (700,000+ oz). 3TG mineral. | strategic |
| Diamonds | C | Angola 3rd globally (14M carats). Catoca 4th largest mine. | important |
| Zinc | Zn | Kipushi: world's highest-grade zinc (203,168t in 2025). | important |
| Nickel | Ni | Munali (Zambia): only primary nickel mine. Battery metal. | important |
| Manganese | Mn | Kisenge deposit offered to US investors. Battery potential. | important |
| Iron Ore | Fe | Cassinga (Angola): historical deposits. Not currently operational. | important |
| Uranium | U | Shinkolobwe: Hiroshima bomb uranium. Historical significance. | important |
Corridor Mineral Hierarchy
Tier 1: Corridor-Defining Minerals
Copper and cobalt are the minerals that justify the corridor's existence. The DRC-Zambia copper belt produces approximately 4.2 million tonnes of copper and over 200,000 tonnes of cobalt annually. These minerals will constitute the vast majority of corridor throughput volume and value for the foreseeable future.
Tier 2: Strategic Growth Minerals
Lithium (via the disputed Manono deposit), rare earth elements (via Pensana's Longonjo project in Angola), and germanium (via Kipushi mine) represent the corridor's diversification frontier. Each addresses critical supply chain gaps for Western nations and could significantly expand corridor strategic importance.
Tier 3: Established Production Minerals
Zinc (Kipushi), gold (Kibali and by-product), diamonds (Catoca), and the 3TG conflict minerals (tin, tungsten, tantalum) are produced in significant quantities but are not primary corridor commodities.
Tier 4: Potential Future Minerals
Manganese (Kisenge), nickel (Munali), iron ore (Cassinga), and uranium (historical) represent potential future additions to corridor mineral flows depending on development decisions and market conditions.
Related Sections
Investment Tracker — Detailed profiles of 30 mines across the corridor
ESG Observatory — Environmental, social, and governance monitoring
DR Congo · Zambia · Angola — Country profiles