AfA Fund To Pave Way For Africa’s Energy, Mineral Sovereignties – MD

By ABAH ADAH, Abuja

Recently concluded Africa Natural and Energy Resources Investment Summit, AFNIS, 2025 provided a new era for African ownership in the mining sector  with the was official launch of the Africans for Africa Fund, AfA Fund. 

The initiative, stemming from the collaborative efforts of Core International, Motimosé Metals, Africa Minerals Strategy Group and Allied Trust Asset Management, aims to empower Africans to take an active and equitable role in harnessing their vast mineral wealth”.

Tim Token, the Africa for Africans Initiative managing director ,MD, in a speech delivered during the official launch of the Africans for Africa Fund on

July 17, 2025 at the AFNIS 2025 in Abuja challenged prevailing myths about resource consumption and highlighted Africa’s immense potential.

Tokun emphasised that despite claims of the global North “getting more from less” in terms of material consumption, global extraction of resources continues to accelerate. 

“In 2021 alone, more materials were mined from the earth than the sum total extracted from the dawn of humanity through to 1950. This staggering statistic underscores the enduring importance of mining as the bedrock of civilisation, with Africa proudly hosting 35% of all global mineral resources.

“For too long, African nations and communities have primarily benefited from resource rent, a model that often fails to trickle down to the grassroots. The AfA Fund seeks to fundamentally decouple from these traditional economic structures, which have historically favoured the global North. 

As Tim Tokun passionately articulated, true sovereignty extends beyond flags and football teams to energy and mineral sovereignties.

According to him, the AfA Initiative, which the fund is a part of, will achieve three critical objectives namely, creating wealth for a meaningful magnitude of Africans from African resources; attracting respectable parity alongside foreign exploration and mining companies; and facilitating a visible uplifting of frontline communities, who are the indigenous landlords of these mineral resources and hold the social license to operate.

Tokun highlighted a significant shift in global demand for metals. While gold and diamonds once dominated interest, the advent of renewable energy has ushered in a new wave of “unsexy” but now critical metals like graphite, cobalt, and manganese. 

“These minerals are now staples in battery chemistries, making Africa’s abundant reserves even more vital to the global energy transformation”, he noted.

In a statement by Suleiman Zakari, co-founder of Africans for Africa Initiative, he disclosed that AfA Fund aims to directly address the projected $2.1 trillion funding shortfall in the mining industry by 2050. 

According to him, the need for 61 new copper mines and 52 new lithium mines to meet energy transformation requirements by 2050 underscores the urgency for innovative financing models.

“The AfA Fund positions itself as the panacea Africa has been seeking to rethink mining finance”, the statement said.

According to the statement, The AfA Fund’s launch is the culmination of nearly a year of meticulous planning and strategic execution. Born out of the landmark commitments feature at AFNIS 2024, the initiative sought to move beyond mere discussions to actionable outcomes.

The statement detailed the Journey to Launch: A Comprehensive Recap of the AfA Initiative, whose foundational goals were bifurcated into two core components: 

The AFA Initiative Community: A pan-African professional network for experts, entrepreneurs, and rising professionals in the natural resources sector, aimed to foster mentorship, capacity building, amplifying African voices and participation across the mining value chain, among others.

The AFA Investment Fund: A closed-end specialist fund with a hybrid structure, drawing capital from both retail investors (targeting the 1.2 billion on the continent and 400 million in the diaspora) and institutional investors.

A distinguished Advisory Board comprising seasoned experts from across the African mining sector and beyond was also confirmed.