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Tanzania's Mining Budget 2026/27
April 28, 2026  
Tanzania Mining Sector Budget 2026/27: FY2026 Impact Analysis on FYDP IV & DIRA 2050 | TICGL TICGL Economic Intelligence  |  Dashboard  |  Business Intelligence  |  Last updated: April 28, 2026 TICGL Sector Analysis · Mining & Minerals Tanzania's Mining Budget 2026/27: Can It Fix Structural Gaps and Deliver FYDP IV? Minister Mavunde presented Tanzania's first […]
Tanzania Mining Sector Budget 2026/27: FY2026 Impact Analysis on FYDP IV & DIRA 2050 | TICGL
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TICGL Sector Analysis · Mining & Minerals

Tanzania's Mining Budget 2026/27:
Can It Fix Structural Gaps and Deliver FYDP IV?

Minister Mavunde presented Tanzania's first mining budget under the Fifth Development Plan (FYDP IV) on April 27, 2026. This TICGL analysis examines whether the TZS 175 billion allocation adequately addresses the sector's structural challenges — and what it means for the broader DIRA 2050 vision.

📅 Published: April 28, 2026 ✍️ TICGL Economic Research Unit 📖 Peer-reviewed analysis 🏛️ Source: Ministry of Minerals, Budget Session 2026/27
11.9%
Mining GDP Share
▲ Q1–Q3 2025 average
$5.4B
Mineral Exports 2025
▲ +31.1% YoY
TZS 1.4T
Revenue Collected
▲ 115% of target
175B
2026/27 Budget (TZS)
▲ From 224.98B approved
350K+
Mining Jobs 2025
▲ +13% from 2024
4th
Africa — Fraser Index
▲ 68.04 score (↑ from 62.75)

Tanzania Mining in 2026: A Sector Redefining the Economy

Over the past decade, Tanzania's mining sector transformed from a peripheral contributor into the country's most critical growth engine. By 2024, it achieved a historic milestone — and 2025 data shows the momentum accelerating.

Historic Achievement: The mining sector contributed 10.1% of national GDP in 2024, surpassing the government's 2026 target two full years ahead of schedule. By Q1–Q3 2025, the average jumped further to 11.9% — the highest ever recorded.
🏆
East Africa's Mining Leader
Tanzania's mining GDP contribution of 10.1% is nearly double Mozambique's 5.2% and far above Kenya (0.3%) and Uganda (0.8%). Tanzania ranks 4th on the African continent.
#1 in EAC
💰
Top Foreign Exchange Earner
Mineral exports contributed 52.57% of all national exports in 2025 — up from 45.17% in 2024. For manufactured/non-natural goods alone, mining's share is 63.73%.
$5.4B (2025)
▲ +31.1% YoY
👷
350,000+ Employed
The sector directly employs over 350,000 people with 97.1% Tanzanian nationals. Local companies account for 91.7% of total mining sales — exceeding the 80% target by 14.6%.
97.1% Local
▲ Exceeds 90% target
🔬
Critical Minerals: The New Frontier
Tanzania holds top-20 global reserves in graphite, nickel, cobalt, REEs, and lithium. In 2025 alone, 454 critical mineral licenses were issued for cobalt, nickel, lithium, heavy mineral sands, and REEs.
454 Licenses
▲ Issued in FY2025/26

GDP Contribution Trajectory (2015–2025)

YearGDP Share (%)Mining GDP (TZS Bn)Mining GDP (USD Mn)Growth RateTrend
20153.8%4,0001,700Baseline
20184.8%2,960+26%Rising
20207.3%9,9004,200+52%Strong growth
20229.1%2,008800+26%Near target
20239.1%0%Plateau
202410.1% ✅2,318923+11%Target exceeded
2025 Q1~9.5%2,250896Stable
2025 Q2~9.5%2,336930+3.8% QoQRecovery
2025 Q1–Q3 Avg11.9%New RecordHistoric high
2025 Full Year Est.10.0%+~9,500~3,785+5%On track

Mining GDP Share: 2015–2025

Tanzania mining sector % of national GDP — decade of transformation

East Africa: Mining GDP Comparison 2024

% of national GDP — Tanzania's regional dominance

Africa Continental Ranking — Mining GDP (2024)

RankCountryMining GDP (USD Bn)% of National GDPPosition vs Tanzania
1South Africa11.57–8%Larger economy, lower %
2Egypt5.84.5%Lower % share
3Guinea4.922%Higher % but smaller economy
4 🇹🇿Tanzania0.92310.1%Top 5 Africa
5Nigeria0.625<1%Below Tanzania
6Ghana0.5805.2%Below Tanzania
7Zambia0.1653.8%Below Tanzania

FY2025/26 Performance Review: Revenue, Exports & Jobs

Before assessing the new budget, TICGL examines how FY2025/26 actually performed against targets — a critical baseline for evaluating FY2026/27 ambitions.

Revenue Collection: Jul 2025 – Mar 2026

Ministry of Minerals: FY2025/26 Budget Structure

Total Approved Budget TZS 224.98 Billion
Recurrent Expenditure (Total) TZS 100.38 Billion
— Other Charges (OC) TZS 76.11 Billion
— Staff Salaries (PE) TZS 24.27 Billion
Development Projects (Total) TZS 124.60 Billion
— Domestic Financing TZS 71.51 Billion
— External Financing TZS 53.09 Billion
Funds Received (Jul 2025–Mar 2026) TZS 82.90 Billion
Revenue Collection Exceeded 115% of Target: The Ministry was tasked with collecting TZS 1.41 trillion in revenue for FY2025/26. By March 2026 (9 months), TZS 1.03 trillion had been collected and remitted to the Treasury — representing 114.94% of the prorated target. Full year outturn is expected to comfortably exceed the annual target.

Mining Tax Revenue Growth: 2021–2025

Fiscal YearRevenue (TZS Mn)Revenue (USD Mn)Growth RateAchievement vs Target
2021/2022624,610249Baseline
2022/2023677,700270+8.5%
2023/2024753,820300+11.2%
2024/2025 (Target)1,000,000398+32.7%
2025 (First Half)~902,000~359+19.7%90% by mid-year
2025 (Full Year Est.)~1,400,000+~557++85.6%Exceeds Target ✅

Mining Tax Revenue: 2021–2025

TZS Billion — showing accelerating revenue mobilisation

Mineral Export Growth (USD Mn)

Total mineral exports 2014–2025 — gold dominance and growth

Mineral Export Performance (2014–2025)

YearTotal Exports (USD Mn)% of National ExportsGold Exports (USD Mn)Gold ShareYoY Growth
20141,90038%1,71090%
20192,30045%2,07090%+43.8%
20203,60050%3,24090%+56.5%
20233,80052%3,42090%+11.8%
2024~4,12045%3,420~83%+8.4%
2025 (Ministry data)5,401.952.57%4,753.988%+31.1% ✅

Mineral Trade Through Markets & Buying Centres

Domestic Mineral Trade Surged: Mineral transactions through formal markets and buying centres reached TZS 4.90 trillion (Jul 2025–Mar 2026) — up dramatically from TZS 2.82 trillion in the same period of FY2024/25. This 73.8% jump reflects both higher prices and improved market formalisation.
Performance Indicator2025 Achievement2026 TargetStatusTrend
GDP Contribution11.9% (Q1–Q3 avg)10.0%✅ ExceededRecord high
Tax Revenue (TZS Mn)~1,400,000800,000✅ +75% above targetSurging
Export Value (USD Mn)5,401.94,000✅ +35% above targetRecord
Gold Export (USD Mn)4,753.93,500✅ +35.8%New high
Direct Employment350,000+340,000✅ ExceededGrowing
Local Content (%)91.7%80%✅ +14.6pp above targetStrong
Tanzanian Workforce (%)97.1%90%✅ ExceededStable high
Mineral Smuggling Seized (TZS Bn)3.31 (55 incidents)Ongoing challengePersistent risk
Foreign Reserves (USD Bn)6.66.0✅ Exceeded>5 months cover
Investment Attractiveness (Fraser)68.04 / Rank 4 Africa✅ Improved+5.29 pts

FY2026/27 Budget: Structure, Priorities & Revenue Targets

Minister Mavunde's FY2026/27 budget request of TZS 174.98 billion is Tanzania's first mining budget under FYDP IV. TICGL assesses its structure, allocation logic, and whether it matches the sector's strategic ambitions.

FY2026/27 Budget: Approved Allocation

Development Projects TZS 71.51B (40.87%)
Recurrent — Staff Salaries (PE) TZS 27.37B (15.64%)
Recurrent — Other Charges (OC) TZS 76.11B (43.49%)
Total FY2026/27 Budget TZS 174.98 Billion
Revenue Target Raised: The Ministry is tasked with collecting TZS 1,406,006,031,000 (TZS 1.406 trillion) in revenue during FY2026/27 — a significant increase from FY2025/26's TZS 1.41 trillion target. Given FY2025/26's 115% performance, this is achievable if gold prices remain elevated.

Budget Allocation FY2026/27

TZS 174.98 Billion — allocation by category

Budget vs Revenue: Ministry of Minerals

Budget expenditure vs revenue collected (TZS Bn) — mining is a net revenue generator

Five Priority Areas — FY2026/27

Priority AreaKey ActivitiesInstitutionsTICGL Assessment
1. Revenue Collection EnhancementStrengthen market inspections; control smuggling; digital tracking (MSMIS); camera-hat system for Mirerani tanzaniteTume ya Madini, WizaraWell-funded; operationally feasible ✅
2. GDP Contribution GrowthNew mine licensing; production oversight; local content enforcement; new investor facilitation; MSMIS deploymentTume ya Madini, WizaraStrategically sound ✅
3. Value Addition & ProcessingValue Addition Strategy implementation; 6 gold refineries; new smelters for copper, nickel, tin; LBMA accreditationWizara, TGC, STAMICOAmbitious but underfunded ⚠️
4. Small-Scale Mining & ASM8,878 new licenses issued; CRDB credit MoU (TZS 50Bn for Songwe); Lwamgasa, Katente, Itumbi model centres; MBT programme (youth/women/PWD)STAMICO, Tume ya MadiniHigh inclusion impact ✅
5. Digital Governance (MSMIS)Mineral Sector Management Information System — integrating licensing, revenue, compliance, production trackingTume ya Madini, WizaraCritical enabler; at early stage 🔵

Institution-Level Plans FY2026/27

InstitutionKey FY2026/27 CommitmentsStaffing PlansInfrastructure Investment
Tume ya Madini
(Mining Commission)
Licensing, production oversight, ASM licensing, anti-smuggling, local content enforcement, safety inspections, MSMIS deployment240 training spots (70 long + 170 short)25 vehicles, 300 computers, 100 motorbikes, 40 XRF scanners, 20 scales; new offices (Mahenge, Rukwa, Songwe); rehabilitate Morogoro, Mtwara, Mbeya offices
GST
(Geological Survey)
Airborne geophysical survey (QDS 239 & 240); national database completion; 25,000 sample analyses; ASM drone surveys; 4 seismic stations; State-of-Art Lab (Kizota, Dodoma)30 staff training (short + long)Helicopter + drones; new lab Dodoma; regional labs Chunya & Geita; crucibles 250,000 units
STAMICO
(State Mining Corp)
Lwamgasa gold mine production; Katente model centre expansion; 2 new processing plants (120t/day each); coal briquettes; STAMIGOLD research; Ntaka nickel project16 new hires; 54 training spots10-story HQ building (Dodoma); processing machinery (Mwakitolyo, Buhemba)
TGC
(Tanzania Gemological Centre)
1,300 gemstone cuts, 1,400 jewellery pieces, 7,200 stone products; Tanzanite quality research with GIT Thailand; 1,200 sample tests/year; 8-story twin tower construction7 staff training8-story Twin Tower Building (labs, workshops, dormitories)
TEITI
(Extractive Industries Transparency)
17th annual reconciliation report (FY2024/25); beneficial ownership disclosure; EITI 4th validation prep (Jan 2027); local content compliance research4 long + 12 short trainingNew office building (Mtumba)

Structural Challenges: Why Mining's Economic Impact Remains Below Potential

Despite headline achievements, Tanzania's mining sector faces deep structural impediments that prevent it from fully translating resource wealth into broad-based economic development. This section — the analytical heart of TICGL's assessment — maps these challenges systematically.

The Core Paradox: Tanzania's mining sector contributes 52.57% of merchandise exports and 10–11.9% of GDP — yet its multiplier effect on the domestic economy remains limited. Value leaves the country as raw or semi-processed material, most financial flows go to foreign shareholders, and linkages to local manufacturing, technology, and skills remain weak.
#Structural ChallengeImpact LevelDescriptionEvidence
1Low Value Addition / ProcessingCriticalThe majority of Tanzania's minerals — especially gold — are exported in raw or minimally processed form. Only 20% local refining is mandated, but actual execution is partial.Only 15% local processing vs 40% target for 2030; 6 gold refineries operational but LBMA accreditation not yet achieved
2Weak Domestic LinkagesHighMining operations rely heavily on imported equipment, chemicals, and technical services. Backward linkages to local manufacturers remain shallow despite 91.7% local sales (which includes trading, not manufacturing).Equipment imports significant; chemical supply chains unlocalized; transport linkages underdeveloped
3Geoscientific Data GapHighOnly 16% of Tanzania's territory has detailed geophysical survey coverage. Investors cannot efficiently locate deposits without data, raising exploration costs and deterring junior miners.Two strategic blocks (176,676 km²) now undergoing survey — will raise coverage from 16% to 34%
4Mineral Smuggling & Revenue LeakageHighIllicit mineral trade undermines revenue mobilization. TZS 3.31 billion was seized in 55 incidents (Jul 2025–Mar 2026) — but these represent discovered cases only. True leakage is larger.55 smuggling incidents; TZS 3.31B seized; tanzanite Mirerani remains particularly vulnerable
5Gold Price DependencyHighGold accounts for ~88–90% of mineral exports. A price reversal from current USD 4,190/oz levels would dramatically impact revenue targets, reserve accumulation, and GDP growth.Sensitivity: at USD 1,800/oz, export value drops to ~USD 3.54B vs current USD 4.75B
6ASM Sector InformalityMedium-HighWhile 350,000+ people work in mining, the vast majority are in informal artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM). This reduces tax capture, environmental compliance, and worker safety.Only ~19,356 in formal sector (licensed); 8,878 new ASM licenses issued FY2025/26
7Skills & Technical Capacity GapMedium-HighTanzania lacks sufficient local expertise in resource estimation, financial modeling, mine auditing, and advanced gemological processing. This limits negotiating capacity with multinationals and constrains value addition.Only 8 staff targeted for resource estimation/financial modeling training in FY2025/26
8Critical Minerals Slow DevelopmentMediumDespite massive critical mineral reserves (graphite, nickel, lithium, REEs), most projects remain at exploration or early development stage. The transition from exploration to production takes 8–15 years without active facilitation.454 licenses issued but few in production; Kabanga nickel still in development; Bunyu graphite still under construction
9Infrastructure BottlenecksMediumRemote mineral deposits lack road, rail, and power connections. Mining infrastructure investment of USD 3.55B is underway but execution lags. Power supply reliability constrains processing.Railway development (Tanzania-Zambia, Tanzania-Burundi); port expansion pending
10Environmental Compliance GapsMediumMine closure plans, tailings storage facility (TSF) management, and environmental restoration obligations are inconsistently enforced — particularly for ASM operations.New Environmental Action Plan (MSEAP 2025–2030) adopted; enforcement capacity being built

TICGL Impact Analysis: Does the Budget Fix the Structural Problems?

This is the central question of this analysis. TICGL evaluates each structural challenge against the FY2026/27 budget provisions to provide an evidence-based verdict.

Structural Challenge Coverage Score

TICGL assessment of budget adequacy per challenge (0–10)

Vision 2030 Targets: Current Progress

Current achievement vs 2030 target (% progress)

Structural ChallengeBudget ResponseAdequacyGap / RiskTICGL Score
1. Low Value AdditionValue Addition Strategy completed; 6 refineries supervised; new smelter promotion; TGC expansion (8-story tower); LBMA accreditation ongoingPartialNo dedicated capital for new processing plants; LBMA accreditation timeline unclear; strategy approved but not yet implemented5/10
2. Weak Domestic LinkagesLocal content enforcement strengthened; 100% Tanzanian reserved services list maintained; CSR compliance improvedPartialNo industrial policy integration; manufacturing sector linkages not addressed in budget; linkage to industrial parks not explicit5/10
3. Geoscientific Data GapGST survey of 176,676 km² (two strategic blocks); QDS 239 & 240 geophysics; drone-based ASM surveys; national database at 45% — targeting completionGoodSurvey will only raise coverage from 16% to 34%, still well below 50% Vision 2030 target. Contractor procurement pending.7/10
4. Smuggling / Revenue LeakageCamera-hat system for Mirerani; 25 new vehicles + 100 motorbikes for field officers; 40 XRF scanners; MSMIS tracking; inter-agency coordinationGoodTechnology helps but systemic smuggling requires border management reform beyond Mining Commission's mandate7/10
5. Gold Price DependencyCritical minerals licensing accelerated (454 licenses FY2025/26); Panda Hill niobium signed; nickel, REE projects advancing; Critical Minerals Strategy completedPartialDiversification takes 8–15 years from exploration to production; gold will dominate for foreseeable future; revenue targets assume sustained high gold prices5/10
6. ASM Informality8,878 ASM licenses issued; TZS 50Bn CRDB credit line (Songwe Gold Family); MBT programme (273 licenses, 183 groups); Lwamgasa, Katente, Itumbi model centres; 2 new processing plants (120t/day each)StrongCredit access is the main constraint — TZS 50Bn is a good start but sector needs much more; environmental compliance in ASM still weak8/10
7. Skills Gap8 staff in resource estimation/financial modeling; 455 staff trained FY2025/26; TGC gemological programme; Thailand GIT partnership for tanzanite research; Turkey field trip (31 miners)WeakScale is far too small; no mining-specific university programme funded; private sector training not catalysed; 8 experts cannot transform a USD 4B+ sector4/10
8. Critical Minerals DevelopmentCritical Minerals Strategy approved; 454 licenses issued; Panda Hill signed; STAMICO nickel licenses; REE license portfolio buildingEarly StageStrategy approved but not yet gazetted; production timeline 5–15 years out; no dedicated critical minerals development fund5/10
9. Infrastructure BottlenecksNot directly within mining budget — cross-sectoral; mining revenues indirectly fund infrastructure; railway and port referenced as mining supportNot AddressedInfrastructure for mining regions not funded in this budget; cross-ministry coordination mechanism not clear3/10
10. Environmental ComplianceMSEAP 2025–2030 adopted; TSF and WRD inspections strengthened; ESG framework integration mandated; new regulation GN 563/692 on license holder obligationsGoodASM environmental enforcement still resource-constrained; mine closure plans compliance varies7/10

Budget Adequacy by Challenge Area (TICGL Score /10)

ASM Formalisation8/10
Smuggling / Revenue Leakage7/10
Geoscientific Data Coverage7/10
Environmental Compliance7/10
Value Addition / Processing5/10
Domestic Linkages5/10
Gold Price Diversification5/10
Critical Minerals Development5/10
Skills & Technical Capacity4/10
Infrastructure (in mining budget)3/10

FYDP IV Alignment: Mining Sector in the Five-Year Plan (2026–2031)

Tanzania's Fourth Five-Year Development Plan (FYDP IV) runs from 2026/27 to 2030/31. The FY2026/27 mining budget is the first year of implementation. TICGL examines how well the budget positions the sector to achieve FYDP IV milestones.

FYDP IV Context: The budget was explicitly prepared in alignment with FYDP IV, the CCM 2025 Election Manifesto, DIRA 2050, the Long-Term Plan (LTPP 2050), Paris Agreement commitments, Agenda 2063, and the Africa Mining Vision. This multi-framework approach is a strength — but also risks diluting focus if not prioritized.
FYDP IV / Mining Vision 2030 Target2024 Status2030 TargetProgress to TargetFY2026/27 Budget Contribution
GDP Contribution (%)10.1% (11.9% in 2025 Q1–Q3)15%67% of gap closedNew mine licensing; production oversight; investor facilitation
Geoscientific Coverage (%)16%50%32% progress (will reach 34% after current survey)GST survey of 176,676 km² — raises to 34%; needs 4 more similar-scale surveys
Value Addition / Local Processing (%)15%40%38% progressStrategy completed; 6 refineries supervised; smelter promotion — but no new capital injected
Formal Employment (persons)~19,356 formal; 350,000 total50,000 formal39% progressASM licensing (8,878 new); model centres; MBT programme; credit access (CRDB)
Export Earnings (USD Bn)4.7 (2024); 5.4 (2025)8.059–68% progressSustained by high gold prices; critical minerals add incremental contribution post-2027
Mining Vision 2030 Pillars5 pillars: Geoscience data; Legal/institutional framework; Sector integration; ASM development; Environmental managementAll 5 addressed in FY2026/27 budget — legal pillars strongest, integration pillar weakest

FYDP IV Mining Targets: 5-Year Trajectory

Projected path to 2030/31 under current budget trajectory (GDP % contribution)

Revenue vs Budget: Mining Sector Returns

Every TZS 1 spent on mining generates ~8x in government revenue

Fiscal Impact Breakdown: Mining Revenue Sources (2025)

Revenue StreamAmount (USD Mn)% of Mining RevenueYoY ChangeFY2026/27 Expectation
Royalties (6% precious metals)42030%+48.9%Higher — gold prices up 57.8%
Corporate Income Tax55740%+85.6%Higher with expanded profits
Inspection Fees (1%)705%+48.9%Stable/growing
VAT (mining-related)21015%+275%Strong growth
Import Duties (equipment)634.5%+80%Growing with investment
Health Levy (0.1% gross value)141%New 2025Full year contribution
Other mining taxes664.5%+88.6%Growing
TOTAL1,400100%+133%Target: TZS 1.406T ✅

DIRA 2050: Mining's Role in Tanzania's Long-Term Vision

Tanzania's Development Vision 2050 positions the country as a middle-income nation with a diversified, industrialized economy. The mining sector must transition from a raw-material exporter to a value-adding, industry-catalyzing, technology-absorbing engine. The FY2026/27 budget is the first step in this 25-year journey.

Mining Vision 2030 — "Madini ni Maisha na Utajiri" (Minerals are Life and Wealth): Completed in FY2025/26, this strategy defines five pillars to achieve DIRA 2050 in the mining sector: (1) Geoscience data infrastructure, (2) Legal & institutional framework, (3) Sector integration with the broader economy, (4) ASM development & formalisation, and (5) Environmental management. All five are addressed in the FY2026/27 budget — but with uneven resource allocation.
DIRA 2050 Pillar (Mining)Current Status (2025)2030 Milestone2050 VisionFY2026/27 Budget ActionAlignment Score
Geoscience Infrastructure16% coverage; 45% of national database done50% coverage100% mapped; real-time geological data shared globallyGST survey (→34%); database completion; drone surveys7/10
Legal & Institutional ReformMining Act (Cap.123) updated; new ASM regulations; MSMIS at design stageFully digital, transparent governanceIntegrated, automated, corruption-resistant mineral governanceMSMIS deployment; TEITI 17th report; beneficial ownership disclosure; new GN 563/6928/10
Economic Integration / Value Addition15% local processing; limited manufacturing linkages; 6 refineries operating40% local processing; LBMA-accredited refineriesTanzania as regional minerals processing hub; gemstone & metals manufacturing centreValue Addition Strategy launched; smelter promotion; TGC expansion — but insufficient capital5/10
ASM Development350,000+ in ASM; ~19,356 formal; 8,878 new licenses; TZS 50Bn credit line50,000 formal ASM; environmentally compliant operationsASM as formal, bankable, sustainable sub-sector with social safety netsMBT programme; model centres; CRDB credit; ASM zones designated; licensing drive8/10
Environmental ManagementMSEAP 2025–2030 adopted; ESG framework integrating; TSF inspections strengthenedFull ESG compliance; mine rehabilitation on trackZero net environmental loss from mining; rehabilitated mine landscapes; carbon-neutral operationsMSEAP implementation; new license obligations (GN 563/692); closure plan compliance7/10

Key Strategic Programs Bridging Budget to DIRA 2050

⛏️
Mining for a Brighter Tomorrow (MBT)
Five-year programme (2025/26–2029/30) targeting youth, women, and persons with disabilities. 273 licenses issued to 183 groups across Mara, Kagera, Shinyanga, Morogoro, Dodoma & Njombe. Partnership with North Mara Gold Mine (Nyamongo). Also active in Mirerani, Mbogwe, Nyang'hwale.
273 Licenses
183 beneficiary groups
🏭
Panda Hill Niobium — Strategic Flagship
Signed March 24, 2026. Expected to make Tanzania one of the world's top 4 niobium producers. 1,600 direct jobs, 6,336 indirect jobs. USD 1.77 billion in local procurement. Government share: 16% non-dilutable equity + TZS 2 trillion projected revenue from royalties, taxes, and dividends.
TZS 2T Revenue
Expected over project lifetime
💎
Tanzania Gemological Centre Expansion
8-story Twin Tower Building under construction — labs, workshops, value-addition karakanas, mineral gallery, student dormitories. Partnership with Thailand's GIT for tanzanite quality research. Target: 1,300 gemstone cuts + 1,400 jewellery pieces + 7,500 beauty products annually.
TZS 135M
Annual product value target
🔬
State-of-Art Geoscientific Lab — Dodoma
GST's new national-class laboratory at Kizota, Dodoma. Regional labs also planned for Chunya (Mbeya) and Geita. Will produce 250,000 crucibles/cupels annually for gold assay; analyse 25,000 soil, rock and mineral samples per year. Core to attracting junior mining investors.
25,000
Samples analysed per year (target)
💻
MSMIS — Digital Mineral Governance
Mineral Sector Management Information System — integrates licensing, production tracking, revenue collection, and compliance monitoring. Needs analysis complete; stakeholder mapping done; document preparation underway. Integration planned with other government systems (TRA, BRELA, TIC).
Phase 1
Implementation underway
🌱
MSEAP: Environmental Action Plan 2025–2030
Mineral Sector Environmental Action Plan integrates ESG principles into mining regulation aligned with DIRA 2050 Pillar 3 (Environmental Sustainability). Governs TSF management, waste rock disposal, mine closure plans. Annual reporting mandated from all large-mine license holders.
Pillar 3
DIRA 2050 alignment

Regional Comparison: Tanzania vs East Africa & African Peers

Tanzania's performance must be understood in context. How does the mining sector compare regionally, and what lessons can Tanzania draw for improving its development impact?

CountryMining GDP %Employment (000s)Mineral Exports (USD Bn)Key MineralsTanzania vs
🇹🇿 Tanzania10.1% (11.9% 2025)350+ (total); 19.4 (formal)5.4Gold, tanzanite, graphite, nickel, REE
Kenya0.3%8.50.15Soda ash, fluorsparTanzania 33x higher GDP%
Uganda0.8%12.00.20Gold, cementTanzania 12.5x higher GDP%
Rwanda1.2%6.80.45Tin, tantalum, tungstenTanzania 8.4x higher GDP%
Mozambique5.2%Coal, LNG, titaniumTanzania nearly 2x higher GDP%
Zambia3.8%85.09.50Copper, cobaltHigher exports; larger copper base
DRC25.0%200.015.00Copper, cobalt, diamondsMuch larger scale; weaker governance
Investment Attractiveness FactorTanzania ScoreRegional AverageAfrica AverageGap
Regulatory Framework78/10065/10060/100+13 pts above regional avg
Geological Potential85/10070/10075/100+15 pts above regional avg
Infrastructure65/10060/10055/100+5 pts — room for improvement
Political Stability72/10068/10062/100+4 pts above regional avg
Local Content Compliance92/10070/10065/100+22 pts — a standout strength
Overall Score78/10067/10063/100Rank 4 Africa / 34 Globally

TICGL Verdict: A Solid Start, But Structural Transformation Needs Bolder Investment

Overall TICGL Assessment: The FY2026/27 mining budget is a well-structured, strategically coherent first budget under FYDP IV. It correctly prioritises revenue collection, ASM formalisation, geoscience data, environmental governance, and digital systems. However, its TZS 174.98 billion allocation is insufficient to drive the structural transformation Tanzania needs — particularly in value addition, skills development, and critical mineral acceleration. The budget's biggest asset is the institutional momentum it creates; its biggest gap is capital for industrial processing.
✅ Strengths: What the Budget Gets Right
• Revenue mobilisation systems well-funded (XRF, cameras, vehicles)
• ASM formalisation is comprehensive and inclusive (MBT, credit, model centres)
• Digital governance (MSMIS) finally moving to implementation
• Critical Minerals Strategy and Mining Vision 2030 now approved
• Panda Hill niobium agreement is a landmark strategic deal
• Environmental governance (MSEAP) properly integrated
• TEITI transparency strengthened with new EITI validation prep
⚠️ Gaps: Where More is Needed
• Value addition investment: Strategy approved but no capital for new processing plants
• Skills: Only 8 technical staff trained in resource estimation — far too few
• Critical minerals: No dedicated development fund; projects remain in exploration
• Infrastructure: No direct budget for road/rail/power to mining regions
• Diversification: Revenue targets assume sustained gold price above USD 4,000/oz
• MSMIS: Still at design stage; deployment may slip if domestic funding is delayed
🔭 Strategic Outlook: 2026–2031
• Gold prices at USD 4,190/oz give Tanzania a 2–4 year window to accelerate structural reforms using windfall revenues
• Niobium, nickel, and REE development will take 5–10 years — starting now is imperative
• The 2030 target of 15% GDP share is achievable if critical minerals enter production
• Value addition is the single biggest lever for increasing GDP impact beyond export volume

TICGL Strategic Recommendations

#RecommendationPriorityTimeframeEst. Additional Investment Needed
1Establish a Critical Minerals Development Fund from gold windfall revenuesCriticalFY2027/28USD 200–500 million (could be PPP-financed)
2Scale skills training: Fund a dedicated Mining Engineering and Metallurgy scholarship programme (500 students/year)HighImmediateTZS 50 billion/year
3Leverage high gold prices to negotiate LBMA accreditation for at least 3 refineries by 2027High12–18 monthsUSD 15–30 million (technical assistance)
4Accelerate MSMIS deployment — set a firm go-live date of December 2026High8 monthsWithin existing TZS 76.11B OC budget
5Create a Mining Infrastructure Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) for road, power, and rail to key mining regionsMedium2027/28USD 1–2 billion (development bank financing)
6Fully gazette the Critical and Strategic Minerals List — precondition for licensing and tax policy alignmentHighQ3 2026Administrative cost only
7Establish a Mineral Revenue Stabilisation Fund to buffer against gold price volatilityMediumFY2027/2810% of annual mining revenue (~USD 140 million/year)
8Accelerate geoscientific coverage to 60% by 2030 — commission two additional survey contracts immediatelyHighFY2027/28TZS 80 billion additional

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