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Dr. Benedito Paulo Manuel

MANAGING DIRECTOR, CATOCA
Sociedade Mineira de Catoca explains why it is optimistic about the near future for the Angolan diamond industry.

Kelvin Sim

CEO, ABSOTECH
Absotech explains its objectives in South East Asia.

Edwin Wan

MANAGING DIRECTOR, BERTSCHI
Bertschi Singapore speaks of its logistics and storage operations on Jurong Island.

Paul Stockburger & Jason Reynolds

SECTOR LEADER, STRATEGIC PURSUITS, MINING MINERALS AND PRACTICE LEADER, MINING, MINERALS AND METALS, STANTEC
"The mining industry has done well by integrating and involving communities in the discussions, and educating the general public on the importance of mining for our future."

Randy Huffsmith

VICE PRESIDENT, WSP
"We have expanded our services and are now offering more mining material handling and process engineering solutions."

Jorge de Zavaleta

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, ARGENTINE CHAMBER OF THE CHEMICAL AND PETROCHEMICAL INDUSTRY (CIQYP)
"We expect a second wave of investment in the upstream, which would also be tied to gas liquifying. Vaca Muerta could really take off in two or three years."

Marc Sale

CEO, FIRST CLASS METALS
"As we listed, we had credentials that other companies might take a year to aspire to."

Ali Haji

CEO, ION ENERGY
"Nobody else has yet gone after brine in Mongolia."

Lakshmi Prasanna Chundu

DIRECTOR - REGULATORY AFFAIRS, THE PHARMACEUTICAL EXPORT PROMOTION COUNCIL OF INDIA (PHARMEXCIL)
Pharmexcil explains how the agency is promoting India’s life sciences exports, which aim to reach US$40 billion in five years.

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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.

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