Kenyan President William Ruto said talks with the United States on a critical minerals partnership are at an “advanced stage” and could be completed soon. He spoke on the margins of the G7 Summit in France, where he held discussions with leaders including US President Donald Trump. The proposed framework would cover rare earth elements and other strategic minerals used in clean energy and advanced technology industries.
Crucially, Ruto said both sides agree that minerals under the partnership should be processed in Kenya rather than exported in raw form. That stance aligns with a broader African policy shift towards local beneficiation. Governments across the continent seek to retain more value from resources that underpin electric vehicles, renewable power systems, battery supply chains and advanced manufacturing.
Countries such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Zimbabwe have already moved to expand domestic processing capacity and, in some cases, limit exports of unprocessed ores. Kenya now appears ready to anchor a similar strategy in a bilateral deal with the United States, positioning itself as a regional hub for critical mineral processing. For investors, the Kenya minerals deal points to future demand for capital in concentrators, refineries, logistics and power infrastructure needed to support local value addition.
Kenya holds known deposits of rare earth minerals and niobium and is exploring for lithium, graphite, copper and nickel, which are considered prospective but remain largely untapped. These resources sit at the centre of global competition over critical minerals security. Western economies are looking to reduce reliance on Chinese processing and refining capacity. G7 leaders recently agreed to strengthen cooperation on supply chains for such materials and diversify processing away from single-country dependence. The proposed Kenya–US accord fits that agenda while also responding to African calls for more balanced economic partnerships.
Ruto framed the talks as part of a wider reset in Africa’s engagement with Western partners, calling for a move away from extractive models built on raw material exports. He argued that natural resources from the continent “can no longer be exported and processed elsewhere” and should instead be processed “in-country and in-continent” to create jobs and industrial capacity.
He also said Kenya and its peers will “reject” relationships centred on simple resource extraction. They are looking instead for partnerships that emphasise investment, industrial development and employment creation. That language aligns with a growing push by African leaders to secure deals that lock in commitments on processing, technology transfer and local content.
Beyond mining, Ruto linked the Kenya minerals deal to a broader push to change how Africa accesses global capital. He argued that Africa is constrained less by a lack of capital than by weak mechanisms to mobilise existing savings and reduce financing costs. He highlighted the scale of African pension funds, insurance assets and reserves. He argued that these could support more domestic investment if backed by stronger guarantee and risk-sharing tools.
Ruto welcomed growing support for African financial institutions, citing the African Trade & Investment Development Insurance (ATIDI), formerly the African Trade Insurance Agency, as a platform that can help lower investment risk and unlock capital flows. If paired with a credible mineral processing strategy, such risk-mitigation capacity could crowd in long-term private investment into Kenyan downstream assets.
For investors, the direction of travel is clear. If finalised on the terms outlined by Ruto, the Kenya minerals deal would anchor Kenya’s attempt to become a processing and industrial hub for strategic minerals, with policy support for in-country value addition and a stronger role for African capital. The next signals to watch will be the final structure of the agreement, any linked fiscal or regulatory reforms, and the first wave of concrete processing and refining projects that emerge on the back of the pact.
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