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Gianflavio Carozzi

CEO, AESA
ASEA speaks of the importance of training to ensure safe and efficient operations.

Peter Quarm

DIRECTOR, DUTYLEX
Dutylex explains the challenges of beginning a business distributing industrial lubricants in Ghana and West Arica more generally.

Martin van Gemert

MANAGING DIRECTOR, MINCON WEST AFRICA
Mincon comments on its business with the mining sector in West Africa.

Tim Gabruch

VP COMMERCIAL, DENISON MINES CHIEF COMMERCIAL OFFICER, URANIUM PARTICIPATION CORPORATION
Uranium Report 2020
“Phoenix is the highest-grade undeveloped uranium deposit in the world, with an average grade of 19.1% and 59.7 million pounds U3O8 in probable reserves (141,000 tonnes).”

The State of Gabon’s Oil Industry

Gabon’s maturing fields and decreasing production levels, together with the low price regime over the past five years, have brought the country’s oil industry to a turning point.

Lorenzo Fiorillo

EVP WEST AFRICA, ENI
ENI updates GBR on the progress of its operations across Sub-Saharan Africa.

Chivambo Mamadhusen

CEO, GRUPO VIDERE
Grupo Videre looks at the massive LNG developments in Northern Mozambique from the perspective of a service company.

Dave Lawson

PRESIDENT MINING & MINERALS, WOOD GROUP
Chile Mining 2020 EXPOMIN Official Investment Guide
Wood Group provides a winde array of mining services to its clients in Chile.

Ricus Grimbeek

PRESIDENT AND CEO, TREVALI
Trevali Mining examines the challenges of mining in the time of COVID-19 and how efforts to reduce costs have been rewarded.

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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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