Mining remains one of Africa’s most critical economic sectors, supplying the world with essential minerals, precious metals, and industrial raw materials. Today, the competitiveness of African mining is increasingly shaped not only by resource endowment but by the quality of logistics infrastructure linking mines to processing plants and export terminals. Governments and private investors across the continent are expanding railways, modernizing ports, and developing mineral processing capacity to reduce transport costs, improve reliability, and retain more value locally. These investments are reshaping mining value chains and strengthening Africa’s place in global supply networks.
In Southern Africa, South Africa continues to anchor the region’s mining logistics ecosystem. Its heavy-haul rail corridors remain vital for coal and iron ore exports, with the Sishen–Saldanha line serving as a lifeline between Northern Cape mines and the Port of Saldanha. Upgrades to rail capacity, signaling systems, and port handling equipment aim to remove bottlenecks and boost throughput. Simultaneously, investments in mineral processing and beneficiation reflect a broader push to shift from raw mineral exports to higher-value products.

