Zimbabwe’s Mines Minister Polite Kambamura says the country’s mining industry will increasingly be judged not only by export receipts and output volumes, but by whether communities living next to mines can point to tangible improvements in their daily lives.
Speaking at the Chamber of Mines of Zimbabwe Annual Conference in Victoria Falls, Kambamura said mining companies must deliver visible benefits beyond the pit and the processing plant, including roads, schools, jobs, enterprise opportunities and stronger social services in host communities.
The remarks land at a time when Zimbabwe is pushing mining as the engine of its economic strategy. The sector generates more than three-quarters of the country’s export earnings in some years and remains central to Harare’s drive to build a US$12 billion mining economy. But across Africa, the politics of mining are shifting. Governments and communities are demanding more local value from mineral wealth, not just royalties and foreign exchange, but infrastructure, procurement opportunities and jobs that remain after the ore is gone.
Kambamura said the industry’s social licence to operate depends on transparency, responsible conduct and genuine partnerships with communities. He also urged miners to support skills development, saying Zimbabwe’s beneficiation ambitions will require a new pipeline of geologists, mining engineers, metallurgists, environmental scientists and digital specialists able to operate in a more automated, technology-heavy sector.
For investors, the message was clear: government wants mining capital, but it also wants mines to function as anchors of local development in the districts where the wealth is extracted.