The Middle East is positioning itself at the forefront of a new cross-regional mineral corridor linking African mines with Asian factories and European markets. Gulf states are leading the charge, investing heavily in African mining projects, refining raw materials through advanced industrial zones, and transporting processed minerals via world-class ports to global consumers.
Countries across the region play complementary roles. Saudi Arabia and Oman provide geological resources and growing industrial capacity. UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait bring financial strength and logistical expertise. Turkey and Iran contribute regional manufacturing, metals processing, and technical know-how, while Jordan and Israel supply specialty minerals and industrial chemicals critical for high-tech industries.
This integrated ecosystem combines investment, processing, trade, and technological innovation, creating a Middle East mining model not solely defined by extraction, but by value-added production and global supply-chain influence. By linking resources, capital, and expertise across borders, the region is positioning itself as a vital bridge in the global mineral-industrial network.
The next decade will test the Middle East’s ability to transition from oil dependency to a diversified mineral-industrial identity. Success could establish the region as a critical nexus for global supply chains, supporting electrification, decarbonization, and the emerging green economy.
