5/8/2026
Huayou Cobalt acquires Atlantic Lithium for $210 million, strengthening China's African critical minerals grip
China's strategic push into Africa's critical minerals sector has advanced significantly with the announcement of a $210 million acquisition agreement whereby Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt will acquire Ghana-focused lithium developer Atlantic Lithium. The deal underscores Beijing's accelerating strategy to secure upstream control of battery metals essential for the global energy transition.
Under the transaction terms, Huayou Cobalt will acquire all issued shares of Atlantic Lithium at $0.25 per share, valuing the company at approximately $210 million. The acquisition targets Atlantic Lithium's flagship Ewoyaa lithium project in Ghana, along with the company's exploration assets in Côte d'Ivoire, both recognized as emerging supply sources in West Africa's lithium belt, according to MiningWeekly.
Atlantic Lithium CEO Keith Muller commented on the proposal, stating that Huayou's acquisition acknowledges the Ewoyaa project as a highly attractive hard-rock lithium asset capable of serving growing global electric vehicle and energy storage markets. The Ewoyaa project formally entered global lithium production following Ghana's parliamentary ratification of the mining lease in March 2026, ending years of regulatory delays and granting Atlantic Lithium exclusive rights to mine and process lithium in the Central Region for an initial 15-year period.
Huayou Cobalt, already a major player in Africa's cobalt and nickel supply chains, described the acquisition as strengthening its position in new energy materials at a time when global demand for electric vehicles and energy storage systems continues to surge. The company positioned the transaction as a natural extension of its growing footprint across Africa's critical minerals landscape.
For Atlantic Lithium, the board indicated that the acquisition offer provides a more stable and de-risked development path forward amid lithium price volatility, financing pressures, and the complexities of developing the Ewoyaa project under existing joint venture arrangements. Atlantic Lithium's largest shareholder, Assore International Holdings, which holds approximately 26.4% of the company's issued shares, has endorsed the deal.
The acquisition further reflects China's broader strategy of consolidating control over Africa's critical minerals sector through acquisitions, equity investments, and long-term offtake agreements. China has rapidly expanded its dominance in Africa's mining sector, securing long-term control over critical minerals such as lithium, cobalt, and copper, giving Chinese firms a strong upstream position in global supply chains, particularly in battery metals.
The Ewoyaa project is expected to play a central role in positioning Ghana within global battery supply chains once fully developed. As global competition for battery metals intensifies, Africa is increasingly emerging as a key battleground in the race to secure resources powering the clean energy transition.
Source: Business Insider Africa, MiningWeekly
