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Lindian fires the first shot at Kangankunde: Africa enters the rare earth extraction phase

Ongoing story : Rare Earths & Critical Minerals: The American Sovereignty Strategy· Part 4/5

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Lindian fires the first shot at Kangankunde: Africa enters the rare earth extraction phase
Illustration : Anouk Verhoeven

First blasting in Malawi: Kangankunde shifts from development to physical extraction. A new African front opens in the global race for rare earths.

The Fact

On July 2, 2026, Lindian Resources announces the first blast at Kangankunde, Malawi – one of the world's largest undeveloped rare earth deposits, with a high concentration of monazite (a source of neodymium and praseodymium, NdPr). The operation marks the start of physical extraction after years of development and environmental studies [Yahoo Finance, July 2, 2026].

Our Analysis

Kangankunde is part of a rapidly expanding African front: following Nigeria’s "world-class" discovery in late June 2026, Malawi is moving to operational extraction. China’s dominance (~60% of global rare earth production) remains the primary vulnerability in permanent magnet supply chains, essential for EV motors, wind turbines, and defense systems. Energy Fuels, MP Materials, Aclara (Chile), and now Lindian collectively form a still-fragile non-China counterweight. The timing is strategic: NdPr demand is projected to surge by 2030. However, the gap between first blast and commercial production spans 3 to 5 years – Kangankunde won’t resolve short-term tensions. The real value is geopolitical: diversifying supply sources before demand saturates Chinese capacity.

To Watch

  • Grades and volumes published for Kangankunde
  • NdPr (oxide) spot price
  • Energy Fuels/MP Materials partnerships in Africa

Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.

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Lucia FerrazÉconomiste transition & matières critiques (São Paulo)
Elle suit les matières premières de la transition : lithium, cuivre, uranium, terres rares.
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CurioBretagne 04 Jul 2026 · 07:45

Et si Kangankunde devenait le symbole d’une Afrique qui négocie enfin à armes égales, pas juste un nouveau guichet pour les coursiers du cobalt ?

EconEddie_89 04 Jul 2026 · 10:32

If Kangankunde’s terms are truly equal, let’s see the local refining capacity before calling it a win-otherwise it’s just outsourcing the mess.

Econo_Hans 04 Jul 2026 · 04:23

Kangankunde klinkt veelbelovend, maar laten we hopen dat het niet weer een kwestie wordt van winst voor buitenlandse partijen en lege handen voor Malawi.

tessa_london 03 Jul 2026 · 12:58

Optimistic but wary-if this actually delivers local refining jobs instead of just shipping raw ore, it could shift the game. Fingers crossed the hype isn’t another mirage.

EconEddie_89 03 Jul 2026 · 12:19

I’ll believe it when I see the EPC contract signed, not the press release.

J.P.R. 03 Jul 2026 · 12:10

68 ans à voir des gisements prometteurs s’enliser dans les coûts logistiques… Kangankunde tiendra-t-il ses promesses sans se faire étrangler par les routes et l’électricité ?

le_sceptique_financier 03 Jul 2026 · 12:10

Permettez-moi de douter... L’Afrique a déjà donné assez de ses ressources pour qu’on lui parle de « nouveau front » comme d’une victoire.

经济小王_沪 03 Jul 2026 · 14:38

非洲资源开发的历史包袱固然沉重,但这次稀土项目的主导权和收益分配是否真的更公平,还得看合同细节而非口号。

J.P.R. 03 Jul 2026 · 14:45

If this is a victory, why are the contracts still drafted in languages most local stakeholders can’t read?

Finanz_Fuchs 03 Jul 2026 · 12:08

42 Jahre Bergbau-Hype in Afrika - mal sehen, ob diesmal die Infrastruktur mitspielt oder wieder nur die Börsenkurse.

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