South Africa and the European Union signed a major critical minerals partnership at a high-level trilateral summit in Pretoria on November 20, with President Cyril Ramaphosa, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and European Council President António Costa affirming a “mature” and “trust-based” relationship, according to a joint communiqué issued after the meeting.
Von der Leyen said the EU is “announcing €350mn in investment” (about $405mn) to modernise South Africa’s transport and energy systems — funding that will be mobilised under the Global Gateway strategy — and includes support for Transnet, the state-owned rail and logistics operator, to accelerate its decarbonisation plans. The EU said detailed project commitments will be finalised in coordination with Pretoria.
The mineral partnership aims to secure long-term access to key inputs such as platinum group metals (PGMs), manganese and vanadium — minerals where the country is already a top global supplier — while helping South Africa expand domestic processing and refining. Officials from both sides described value-chain upgrading as a strategic objective rather than a binding production requirement.
Ramaphosa said the agreement creates space for “predictable and reliable cooperation” at a time when multilateral institutions face geopolitical uncertainty. EU officials likewise framed the partnership as a rules-based response to growing global competition for clean-tech materials.
Von der Leyen added that “three new major projects” had been launched under Global Gateway, although full project documentation has not yet been published.
For South Africa, the agreement offers a potential boost to its industrial base: the country is among the world’s largest producers of PGMs but processes only a limited share of global battery metals, with most value added offshore. Analysts say increasing local beneficiation would support jobs and reduce exposure to commodity-price volatility.
Separately, U.S. officials told Reuters that Washington is assessing possible sanctions and expanded Pentagon counterterrorism engagements with African partners, a signal of intensifying geopolitical competition in areas overlapping with EU and South African priorities.
The Pretoria summit marks one of the most substantial upgrades in Africa–EU economic cooperation in recent years, setting out a framework for long-term collaboration on climate, trade, security and supply-chain resilience.
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