Cape Town is set to host African Mining Week 2026 at a moment when global demand for critical minerals is intensifying and African governments are seeking to reposition the continent within evolving supply chains linked to the energy transition. Estimates from multilateral institutions, including the World Bank, indicate that Africa holds more than 30 per cent of global reserves of several key transition minerals, while broader modelling suggests demand for these resources could increase significantly by 2030 as clean energy technologies expand (see World Bank report on green transition minerals). Against this backdrop, the forthcoming gathering reflects both renewed investor interest and ongoing debates about how mineral wealth can translate into inclusive and sustainable development across African economies.
The conference, scheduled for 14 to 16 October in Cape Town, is expected to convene policymakers, industry representatives, financiers and researchers to examine the structural transformation of Africa’s mining sector. Organisers, Energy Capital and Power, have framed the 2026 programme around the theme Mining the Future Unearthing Africa’s Full Mineral Value, signalling a continued shift away from extractive models centred on raw exports towards approaches that emphasise local beneficiation, industrialisation and regional value chains.
This emphasis aligns with a growing body of African policy frameworks, including the African Mining Vision, which advocates for the integration of mining into broader development strategies. Discussions at the ministerial forum are expected to focus on regulatory reform and policy coordination, with several governments reviewing mining codes to improve transparency, attract investment and strengthen domestic participation. At the same time, there is increasing recognition that fragmented regulatory regimes can limit cross border collaboration and reduce bargaining power in global markets.
Regional integration is therefore likely to feature prominently in deliberations. Initiatives linked to the African Continental Free Trade Area are being positioned as mechanisms to facilitate intra African trade in minerals and related products, while proposals for mineral corridors seek to connect extraction sites with infrastructure, processing facilities and export routes. Such approaches reflect an emerging consensus among policymakers that value addition within the continent is central to long term economic resilience, even as implementation remains uneven across jurisdictions.
Alongside policy dialogue, the programme includes investment roundtables and country focused sessions designed to connect African projects with international partners. Interest from the United States, Europe, the Middle East and China underscores the strategic importance of African mineral resources within a competitive geopolitical landscape. Analysts note that while external capital and technology remain essential, questions persist regarding the terms of engagement, local content requirements and the equitable distribution of benefits.
Technical workshops and exhibitions are also expected to highlight advances in mining technologies, including digitalisation, automation and environmental management systems. These developments are increasingly relevant as stakeholders confront the environmental and social dimensions of mining, including land use, water management and community relations. The intersection between sustainability standards and competitiveness is likely to shape both regulatory approaches and investment decisions in the coming decade.
African Mining Week will take place alongside African Energy Week, reflecting the interconnected nature of resource governance across energy and mineral sectors. This co location underscores the extent to which discussions about Africa’s development trajectory are being shaped by the global energy transition, as well as by domestic priorities related to industrialisation, employment and fiscal stability.
While the conference is positioned as a platform for advancing partnerships and sharing expertise, it also sits within a broader set of debates about how Africa can assert greater agency over its natural resources. The extent to which policy coordination, institutional capacity and regional cooperation can translate into tangible outcomes remains an open question. Nevertheless, the 2026 edition is expected to provide a forum for articulating diverse African perspectives on the future of mining, reflecting both opportunities and constraints in a rapidly evolving global context.






