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Uis emerges as southern Africa’s fourth most important tech-metals mine

by Editor
December 3, 2025
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Uis emerges as southern Africa’s fourth most important tech-metals mine
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Uis has quietly risen to become the fourth most essential technology-metals operation in Southern Africa, standing just behind Bisie in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zimbabwe’s two lithium giants, Bikita and Arcadia.

This positioning reflects a shift in how the region’s mining landscape is evolving, with future-facing minerals now shaping strategic value far more than sheer tonnage or ore mass.

In this emerging order, Uis is no longer simply a historic tin field; it has become a central node in a continental tech-metals corridor stretching from the DRC to Zimbabwe and down into Namibia’s Erongo desert.

Andrada Mining’s latest financials show that the Uis Mine in Namibia remains one of the most essential polymetallic producers in southern Africa, with tin continuing to anchor the company’s revenue while tantalum and lithium output steadily build toward commercial scale.

For the six months to 31 August 2025, the operation generated £11.95 million in revenue from customers, underscoring Uis’s position as the company’s core producing asset.

Tin remained the backbone of the business. Sales reached £11.64 million for the period, up from £10.6 million during the same period last year, confirming substantial concentrate recoveries and steady demand from smelters.

Uis is one of the world’s largest open-pit tin mines, and the expansion programme underway has been supported by significant capital investment, including waste stripping, replacement of plant components, and the procurement of XRT ore sorters to improve efficiency.

The mine produced enough tin concentrate to maintain consistent stockpiles, with £2.29 million of finished product on hand at period-end.

Tantalum sales rose to £307 010, a marked increase compared with the £64 021 recorded over the same period in 2024.

Uis hosts a high-grade tantalum circuit within its existing processing infrastructure, allowing the company to recover the metal alongside tin without significant capital additions.

The continued improvement in tantalum output reflects deeper access to ore zones enriched with tantalum-bearing pegmatites, supported by the mine’s waste-stripping strategy.

Lithium production, still at pilot scale, delivered £ 2,634 during the period, broadly consistent with previous reporting cycles.

The lithium pilot plant has been built at Uis and is being refined to shape a future lithium revenue stream. The company capitalised costs associated with constructing the pilot facility, signalling a longer-term strategy to integrate lithium into its commercial product basket.

Although lithium revenue remains modest, Andrada’s earn-in agreement with SQM at the nearby Lithium Ridge project shows a parallel push to broaden the company’s footprint in Namibia’s lithium sector.

Sand sales, which are occasional and incidental to mining operations, contributed marginally, with no sales recorded in the current period, compared with £2,219 previously.

All minerals reported in Andrada’s revenue stream originate from the Uis operations in Namibia’s Erongo Region.

The mine, which sits on a historic tin field first developed in the early twentieth century, is now being repositioned as a modern technology-metals hub with production spanning tin, tantalum and lithium, supported by large-scale resource potential and continuous plant upgrades.

Exploration and evaluation assets also include Lithium Ridge and other regional pegmatite targets, reinforcing the future pipeline.

Although not the region’s largest mine by volume or revenue, Uis distinguishes itself through the combination of metals it produces in a single open-pit system.

Tin remains its anchor, placing it firmly as the second-largest industrial hard-rock tin producer in Africa after Bisie.

Alongside this base, the mine has developed a stable tantalum circuit and is progressing toward commercial lithium production.

This blend of commodities positions Uis at the centre of supply chains that feed electronics, advanced manufacturing, and global energy transition markets.

When compared across the broader Southern African region—home to copper titans in Zambia and the DRC, diamond giants in Botswana, and uranium powerhouses in Namibia—Uis sits firmly in the mid-tier in terms of scale.

It does not rival the multi-billion-dollar producers that move millions of tonnes of ore each year. Yet scale alone no longer defines strategic importance.

In a region where critical minerals are increasingly prized, Uis stands out as the most advanced and diversified technology-metals mine outside the Congo and Zimbabwe’s lithium belt.

Its position is further strengthened by Namibia’s jurisdictional stability, modern infrastructure and rapidly maturing mineral-processing capabilities.

While Zimbabwe’s lithium fields dominate volumes and Bisie commands exceptional tin grades, Uis offers consistency, scalability, and an industrial mining base that sets it apart from the artisanal belts of Rwanda, eastern DRC, and parts of Mozambique.

This makes Uis a rare operation: a mechanised producer of tin and tantalum with a clear pathway into commercial lithium—an uncommon combination even when viewed across the entire continent.

In numerical terms, Uis may sit in the fortieth to sixtieth position in the overall Southern African mining hierarchy, but that metric does not reflect its actual value.

When assessed through a technology-metals lens, which is now shaping investment decisions and geopolitical priorities, Uis comfortably ranks among the region’s top four.

Its output profile, expansion pipeline and jurisdictional advantages give it a strategic weight that far exceeds its physical size.

In a sector racing toward minerals of the future, Uis is no longer catching up—it is setting the pace.

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