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Yaw's avatar

Fantastic write-up, Dr. Opalo. A rare mix of good news, bad news, and clear-eyed realism.

I especially agree with point #2.

I made a related write-up some time ago on the distribution of Africa’s mineral exports. The headline takeaway is simple: Africa is far less "resource-rich" than commonly assumed.

https://yawboadu.substack.com/p/african-resources-and-commodity-markets?selection=853eb312-19aa-4d98-9ad6-b20316ec416d#:~:text=While%20the%20DRC%20exports%20over%2050%25%20of%20the%20cobalt%20market%2C%20that%20market%20is%20relatively%20small%2C%20with%20a%20value%20of%20%247

Not only that, many African countries have very little mineral endowment at scale (Rwanda, Burundi, Lesotho, Kenya, Malawi, The Gambia, Djibouti, and more) export very little in resources or export amounts too small to matter macroeconomically (like less than $10B annually). In fact, 70% of Africa's recorded resource exports annually just come from 8 countries: South Africa, Nigeria, Algeria, Angola, Libya, DRC, Ghana, and Guinea in that order.

Even within specific minerals, production is highly concentrated:

Phosphates: Morocco

Bauxite: Guinea

Manganese and platinum: overwhelmingly South Africa (with Gabon for manganese)

Copper: mainly the DRC and Zambia

Iron: South Africa & Mauritania

To put scale in perspective: Africa’s total copper ore exports in 2023 were about $4B. Peru alone exported roughly $20B, and Chile about $24B.

https://oec.world/en/profile/hs/copper-ore

The same pattern holds for iron ore. South Africa and Mauritania dominate Africa’s output, yet Australia exports roughly 9× the entire African continent, and Brazil about 3×.

https://oec.world/en/profile/hs/iron-ore

If more people left the mental trap of resource fetishism. policy and public knowledge in the continent could go in a better direction once one is more tethered to reality.

Synthetic Civilization's avatar

This is a very strong survey, especially the framing around the collapse of “organized hypocrisy.”

One thing I’d add is that what Africa is confronting may be less a world without norms than a transition to a system where power increasingly operates upstream of law and institutions.

In that environment, legality stops functioning as a stabilizer and becomes a tool which makes geopolitically exposed regions vulnerable not because they’re naive, but because the coordination logic itself has shifted.

Navigating that shift may require new forms of strategic legibility, not just better adherence to fading rules.

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