Zimbabwe has licensed a second gold refinery as it moves to expand its processing capacity amid rising output of the precious metal and growing pressure on its existing infrastructure.
The new refinery, which will be located in Bulawayo, the country’s second-largest city, is expected to be commissioned next year, according to government officials who spoke to Bloomberg.
Currently, all gold produced in Zimbabwe is processed through the state-owned Fidelity Gold Refinery. However, officials say the facility may soon be unable to handle the country’s increasing production volumes, particularly as output is projected to reach 50 tonnes in 2026, up from a record 46.7 tonnes last year.
The expansion highlights Zimbabwe’s growing reliance on gold as a critical source of foreign currency. Officials noted that the new refinery is intended to ease pressure on the existing system and support the country’s long-term production ambitions.
The investors behind the Bulawayo refinery have not been disclosed. Authorities said their identities would only be made public once the facility is formally commissioned.
Gold Remains Backbone of Zimbabwe’s Export Earnings
Gold continues to play a central role in Zimbabwe’s external earnings. In the first quarter of 2026 alone, gold exports brought in $1.19 billion, more than double the $579 million recorded in the same period the previous year. In 2025, the sector generated $4.61 billion, accounting for roughly 47.5% of the country’s total export revenue of $9.7 billion.
The government is also pushing to scale up production further. Mutapa Gold Resources, the state-owned mining entity, has set a target of doubling output by 2029. Meanwhile, the Mutapa Investment Fund, Zimbabwe’s sovereign wealth vehicle, is seeking $250 million to expand mining operations and strengthen the output of one of the country’s most important export commodities.
Source: Africabusinessinsider