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Home World Africa Mining Indaba refocuses on converting partnerships into real results

Mining Indaba refocuses on converting partnerships into real results

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Investing in African Mining Indaba is entering the next phase of its evolution, one defined by shifting from collaborative conversations to successful commitment delivery.

As preparations begin toward Mining Indaba 2027, the event is sharpening its focus on how partnerships across African mining translate into practical outcomes and investment decisions.

South Africa’s Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources Gwede Mantashe sees Mining Indaba as a critical platform for building and advancing partnerships, while unlocking investment.

“Through this platform, we have seen how dialogue translates into concrete action that supports growth, industrialisation and shared prosperity across the continent,” he explains.

In line with an evolving vision, whilst continuing the momentum started in 2026,  the theme for Mining Indaba 2027 is “Stronger together: Partnerships in practice”.

“This marks the next step in a deliberate three-year journey. Mining Indaba 2026 introduced a renewed industry focus on partnerships as the foundation for growth and collaboration. In 2027, that focus shifts decisively toward partnerships in practice, activating those relationships to unlock capital, enable policy and drive real project delivery across the sector,” says Laura Nicholson, Mining Indaba Industry Director.

While MI26 introduced the partnerships concept, MI27 will drive the next phase of industry collaboration, moving partnerships from concept to action. The MI28 phase will focus on measuring the impact of partnerships.

Mining Indaba 2026 drew the largest attendance in the event’s 32-year history. It attracted 12 000 delegates from 119 countries, including more than 1 600 investors, 1 700 executives and over 40 government ministers, underscoring the event’s growing role as a convening force for decision-makers across the sector.

Frans Baleni, Chairman of the Mining Indaba Executive Advisory Board, says the ultimate goal is to ensure that the partnerships forged at Mining Indaba translate into tangible results.

“Execution is what will shape the competitiveness and resilience of African mining,” he says.

The future of mining depends on the strength of human partnerships

People remain at the centre of mining and Mining Indaba is fully committed to the human connections that underpin the sector. The 2027 programme will continue to create space for meaningful engagement through exhibition areas, investor and mining company meetings, networking opportunities, community platforms and a high-level government programme.

“People become involved in mining because they have a passion for it,” says Nicholson. “The way to amplify partnerships in our sector is by creating platforms that celebrate that human passion.”

Where policy, capital and mining strategy turn into execution

Mining Indaba’s convening power is increasingly critical, as African governments and industry leaders look to build stable policy, investment certainty and stronger public-private collaboration.

The number of government ministers attending the event has grown from around 14 in 2024 to more than 40 – proof of a growing appreciation for mining as a growth engine for the continent.

Reinforcing this view, the Africa Finance Corporation has estimated that the continent is sitting on an $8.6 million strategic-minerals opportunity.

In the spirit of turning partnerships into action, the most recent Mining Indaba saw several major deals being done on the sidelines of the event.

These included:

  • A critical-minerals MOU signed between US trader Metalex Commodities and African energy business Anzana Electric Group.
  • The signing of a pact between Afreximbank and the Development Bank of Southern Africa to scale trade finance, de‑risk transactions and accelerate critical-minerals beneficiation.
  • An MOU between resources multinational ERG Africa and Entreprise Générale du Cobalt of DRC to formalise artisanal cobalt mining.
  • Anglo American confirming it’s investing an additional R200 million into the Junior Mining Exploration Fund, bringing total funding to R600 million.
  • Namibia signing on to the Luanda Accord to support the natural diamond sector.
  • A R100-million infrastructure agreement between Valterra Platinum, Roads Agency Limpopo and other mining partners.

“Mining Indaba continues to expand its relevance to mining adjacent industries that represent a larger ecosystem that collectively drives greater African economic growth,” Nicholson highlights. “Never before has an event brought all of these key stakeholders together – starting with exploration and extending through to manufacture and local value addition opportunities. This of course is all underpinned by strategic alignment between mining companies, government and investors as the core audiences that will drive this, all while ensuring impacted stakeholders like mining communities also become meaningful participants in the future. Senior role players, from all these industry sectors are able to make major investment and policy calls that turn partnerships into real, positive change – for the industry, and society,” she concludes.

For more than 30 years, Mining Indaba has been the leading platform bringing together African mining leaders, governments, investors and communities, to build partnerships that move the sector forward.

Mining Indaba 2027 runs from February 8 – 11 2027 at the CTICC, Cape Town. Mining Indaba is the leading platform convening global mining leaders, governments and investors, to drive action-oriented discussions, partnerships, and industry outcomes long beyond the event itself.

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