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Beneath the Surface: Inside Botswana’s Mining Renaissance and the Hurdle of License Hoarding

Analyser

For over five decades, Botswana’s economic story has been inextricably linked to the sparkle of diamonds. However, as global markets shift, the nation is standing at the precipice of a broader mining renaissance. Beneath the sands of the Kalahari and across the nation’s vast landscapes lies a geological treasure trove that extends far beyond precious stones.

Yet, as the push for diversification accelerates, a persistent culture of speculative license hoarding threatens to stall progress, leaving vast swathes of the country’s mineral wealth locked underground.

Botswana’s pedigree as an elite mining jurisdiction has never been stronger. According to the recently released 2025 Fraser Institute Annual Survey of Mining Companies, Botswana has surged to become the 7th most attractive mining jurisdiction globally, easily reclaiming its crown as the number one investment destination in Africa. This ranking, a vital benchmark for global investors, reflects the country’s potent mix of geological potential and predictable policy.

The excitement driving this international confidence is largely rooted in Botswana’s diverse mineral endowment. The country is home to highly prospective greenstone belt ancient geological formations renowned globally for hosting significant precious and base metal deposits.

The Tati Greenstone Belt in the northeast and the Kraaipan Greenstone Belt in the south have shown immense potential for high-grade gold and silver.

Meanwhile, the Kalahari Copper Belt and the Selebi-Phikwe Belt are teeming with base metals and critical minerals like copper, nickel, and manganese which are commodities that are becoming increasingly vital for the global transition to renewable energy. Add to this the country’s massive coal reserves and the soda ash pans of the Makgadikgadi, and the blueprint for a highly diversified, multi-commodity economy is clear.

Despite this immense potential, uncovering these resources is neither easy nor cheap. Prospecting is inherently a high-risk, high-reward endeavor. It requires millions of dollars in advanced geological surveying, aerial mapping, and deep-hole drilling, all with no guarantee of discovering a commercially viable deposit. Exploration is largely hit or miss.

Because historical efforts were overwhelmingly hyper-focused on finding diamond-bearing kimberlites, the search for other minerals was largely sidelined. Consequently, an estimated 70% of Botswana’s map particularly the western flank of the country remains “greenfield” territory. It is entirely unexplored and completely unmapped for base and precious metals, representing a massive, untapped frontier for the global mining sector.

Even so, if the geology is world-class and the regulatory environment is ranked in the global top 10, what is holding back the rush to diversify? A major hindrance lies in a bureaucratic and systemic bottleneck: the hoarding of prospecting licenses.

Currently, there is a pervasive practice wherein local individuals or undercapitalized entities acquire mineral prospecting licenses without the financial backing, technical capacity, or genuine intention to carry out actual exploration. Instead of sinking drills into the ground, these licenses are hoarded as speculative assets.

The end goal of this unsavory and unproductive practice is to “flip” the ground by selling the licenses to legitimate, well-capitalized foreign or domestic investors at exorbitant, highly inflated prices.

For a genuine investor already facing the steep, sunk costs of hit-or-miss exploration, these exorbitant entrance fees are an immediate red flag. The practice actively scares away the exact foreign direct investment and technical expertise that Botswana desperately needs to map its greenfield territories and build new mines. It stifles economic growth, delays job creation, and keeps the country overly reliant on a diamond market that is currently battling the rise of lab-grown alternatives.

Now, for Botswana, to truly capitalize on its Fraser Institute ranking and transition from a diamond-dependent economy to a diversified mining powerhouse, the narrative must shift from speculation to execution. The government has recently acknowledged this issue, signaling intentions to clamp down on dormant licenses through stricter enforcement of “use it or lose it” policies.

If Botswana can successfully clear the bureaucratic deadwood and get specialized drills turning in its greenfield territories, the next fifty years of its economic story could be just as lucrative and significantly more diverse than the last.

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