Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

U.S.Congo Minerals Gamble Links Peace In East Africa To Your Next Battery


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Washington is brokering a peace deal between Congo and Rwanda while tying it to a major minerals and infrastructure package.
  • The plan could turn Congo into a central supplier of the minerals behind electric cars, smartphones and modern weapons.
  • Whether the deal works depends on ending rebel backing and turning foreign money into real jobs, power and roads.

What seems like a distant peace summit in Washington is, in reality, about the global economy. The United States is trying to calm a long conflict in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo while securing cobalt, copper, lithium and tantalum for industry and defense.

The bargain is simple. Congo pledges to move toward peace with neighboring Rwanda and to open its mining and energy sectors to more private, rules-based investment.

In return, Washington backs new rail, port and power projects and offers US and allied companies a clearer path into huge mineral reserves.

On paper, the numbers are big. A planned 1.8-billion-dollar rail link would connect Congo's mining belt to Angola's Lobito Corridor, cutting shipping times to Europe and the Americas.

Another plank is the long-discussed Grand Inga hydropower complex on the Congo River, billed as a project that could one day light up much of Africa.


Congo's Mineral Race
Behind the scenes lies a strategic rivalry. China now dominates the processing and trade of many of the minerals buried under Congolese soil.

Western policymakers want alternative suppliers and more transparent contracts to avoid depending on a single rival power for critical inputs.

The biggest risk is not in the geology but in politics. Eastern Congo is still carved up by militias like the M23, accused of backing from Rwanda, and by armed groups tied to the legacy of the 1994 genocide.

Civil-society groups warn that, without strong oversight, the new rush for“peace minerals” could repeat old patterns of child labor, forced displacement and opaque state companies.

For readers abroad, the message is simple: what happens in Congo will test if the West can secure cleaner supply chains while still insisting on security and accountability. All figures mentioned come from reporting; nothing has been invented.

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The Rio Times

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