COTE D’IVOIRE: LATEST INTERVIEWS MORE INTERVIEWS

"LiuGong is also a leader in battery electric vehicles, with the largest fleet in this segment. China leads the trends in this segment."
"SEMS has therefore focussed on providing technical services that our customers may not have in-house, such as topographic and geophysical drone services, which is a great area of growth for us."
"Our strong development pipeline has the potential to elevate Perseus to a very different level from where we are positioned today."
"Opportunities such as domestic gas and power supply, LNG, CNG, fertilizer plants, etc., present a huge untapped market that could sustain our presence in these regions for many years."

COTE D’IVOIRE: LATEST ARTICLES

Expanding Mining Frontiers in West Africa

October 02, 2020
The under-explored gold-bearing grounds of West Africa are the “last frontier” in the gold space.

The Geographic Spread of Africa’s Mining Investors

April 26, 2019
International investors demonstrate reinvigorated appetite for Africa’s mining prospects – from traditional partners like the Australians to a growing Chinese and Russian presence.

Prospective Lands: West Africa’s Mining Potential

November 15, 2018
GBR examines the current excitement surrounding the West African mining potential.

COTE D’IVOIRE: RECENTLY RELEASED PUBLICATIONS

MACIG

SPANISH

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

RECENT PUBLICATIONS

MACIG 2025 - Mining in Africa Country Investment Guide

It is said that mining is a patient industry. Current demand projections are not. Demand for minerals deemed ‘critical’ is set to increase almost fourfold by 2030, according to the UN. Demand for nickel, cobalt and lithium is predicted to double, triple and rise ten-fold, respectively, between 2022 and 2050. The world will need to mine more copper between 2018 and 2050 than it has mined throughout history. 2050 is also the deadline to curb emissions before reaching a point of ‘no return.’ The pace of mineral demand and the consequences of not meeting it force the industry to act fast and take more risks. Mining cannot afford to be a patient industry anymore. The scramble for supply drives miners back to geological credentials, and therefore to places like the African Central Copperbelt.

PARTNER EVENTS