Copperbelt Growth Isn’t a Capital Problem. It’s a Capability One.

At the 121 Mining Conference in Cape Town, a panel of leaders from investment, energy, and mining discussed energy reform, infrastructure bottlenecks and capital flows across Zambia and the Copperbelt, highlighting the growing importance of leadership and talent in mining.

But what stood out to us was this: Behind every reform, every financing breakthrough, every additional megawatt on the grid is a shift in capability. And capability comes down to bankable teams of people who have credibility, governance and delivery track record that investors will back.

Mining Board Leadership Building New Capabilities in Teams
Mining Companies Are Building New Capabilities

When First Quantum Minerals adds 100MW of power demand to support expansion, that’s not just an engineering issue.

It requires:

  • Commercial teams who understand complex power purchase agreements
  • Risk teams capable of pricing grid volatility
  • Treasury functions comfortable with blended finance structures
  • Leadership able to navigate public–private energy reform

Mining companies in Zambia are no longer simply operators of assets; they are reshaping the leadership and talent in mining needed to participate in evolving power markets.

That requires a different talent profile than the sector has traditionally built. In recent mandates, we’ve seen mining companies prioritise commercial power expertise and partnership‑building capabilities in roles that didn’t exist even five years ago.

Power Sector Reform Requires Institutional Depth

The unbundling of ZESCO Limited and the opening of the grid to Independent Power Producers (IPPs) is not just a regulatory milestone.

It demands:

  • Skilled, commercially minded regulators
  • Sophisticated transmission planning
  • Bankable contracting frameworks
  • Governance resilient to political cycles

Structural reform succeeds or fails based on people, not policy documents.

Financing Innovation Is Also a Talent Story

The panel highlighted green bonds and blended finance structures led by organisations such as CrossBoundary Energy and Copperbelt Energy Corporation.

But innovative capital structures requires:

  • Lawyers fluent in cross-border insurance and risk allocation
  • Bankers who can syndicate in frontier markets
  • ESG specialists able to align DFIs and institutional investors
  • Local execution teams operating to international standards

As risk perceptions evolve in both Zambia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the differentiator increasingly becomes execution quality.

Capital is available. Bankable teams are rarer.

Many of the finance and ESG leadership mandates we’ve completed in recent years reflect this shift, with organisations seeking deeper commercial and partnership‑oriented capability to unlock new forms of capital.

The Strategic Shift – Specialisation and Leadership

One of the strongest themes from the panel was that mining companies are stepping away from owning generation assets and instead partnering with IPPs.

That is a leadership decision – one that highlights how critical leadership and talent in mining have become to long‑term strategy

It reflects clarity around core competencies and disciplined capital allocation. But it also requires boards and executive teams comfortable with:

  • Strategic partnerships
  • Risk-sharing structures
  • Variable power pricing
  • Long-term infrastructure planning

This is not just operational change; it is organisational evolution.

Conclusion

When viewed through a human capital lens, the implications are significant.

If the Copperbelt is serious about tripling copper output, the conversation must move beyond megawatts and bridges. It must include:

  • Leadership development
  • Succession planning
  • Cross-sector talent mobility (mining ↔ energy ↔ infrastructure finance)
  • Building local institutional capability

Much of this capability shift is already visible in the leadership profiles we see emerging across the region. The next 3–5 years won’t just test capital markets. They will test leadership depth, execution capability and institutional resilience.

The regions that scale fastest will not be those with the most copper, but those with the strongest teams.

As capability demands increase, many organisations across the Copperbelt are reassessing whether their leadership structures are ready for the next decade. Our recent work in succession planning, board effectiveness and organisational design reflects this shift.

Leadership at this level deserves a considered, strategic partnership. Let’s start the conversation. For a bespoke and specialised experience, speak to one of our Consultants today.