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China’s Yahua Industrial Group gets lithium export quota from Zimbabwe

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China secures 6 month ​export quota for lithium concentrates from Zimbabwe

China’s Sichuan Yahua Industrial Group said on Tuesday it had secured a six-month ​export quota for lithium concentrates from Zimbabwe, two ‌months after Africa’s top lithium producer suspended exports of the key battery material.

The quota will be sufficient to ensure normal ​production at its Kamativi Mine, Yahua Group added ​in response to a question on an investor ⁠online Q&A platform affiliated with the Shenzhen Stock ​Exchange.

Yahua is going through the procedure to resume exports, ​it added.

The comments came after Zimbabwe granted export quotas to two Chinese mining firms for lithium concentrates.

The firms, Chengxin Lithium and Sinomine ​Resources, run lithium mining facilities in Zimbabwe, state media said ​on Monday.

Zimbabwe suspended exports of all raw minerals and lithium concentrates in ‌February, ⁠citing alleged malpractice and leakage.

It told producers it would introduce lithium concentrate export quotas earlier this month, with conditions that included commitments for more local processing.

In 2025, ​Zimbabwe exported 1.13 ​million tons ⁠of lithium, bearing spodumene concentrate to China, making up about 15% of China’s lithium ​concentrate imports last year.

Huayou Cobalt said it ​had ⁠not received any notice from the Zimbabwe government, according to Monday’s state media report.

Huayou is also among ⁠Chinese ​investors in Zimbabwe, dominating its lithium ​mining industry.

–Reuters–

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