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Huge Mistake: Pakistan is Losing Control of Its Minerals

Pakistan played host last week to foreign dignitaries and mineral moguls at a glittering international summit in Islamabad, but the world around it moved on—fast and unbothered.

On stage, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif spoke grandly of “trillions of dollars” waiting to be mined across Pakistan. Offstage, the reality is far less theatrical: authorities have failed to move beyond zero-impact ceremonies while the global minerals race grows increasingly intense.

The Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC)—a hybrid civil-military body formed in 2023 to lure investors—has declared mining one of the five top sectors for investment. But apart from forming committees and hosting summits, concrete action remains missing. A rough estimate places the value of Pakistan’s mineral resources—copper, gold, rare earths, lithium, iron ore, and gemstones—at over $200 billion, while many experts say these pits hold precious stones worth over 5x higher. Whatever the valuation, the country’s output barely scratches the surface.

Contrast this with what’s happening abroad.

US-China Face-Off – Trump Blinks First

Last week, the United States reignited its tariff war with China by imposing another 34 percent tariff on Chinese imports, a move designed to box Beijing out of critical supply chains. In retaliation, China not only matched tariffs but went further—restricting exports of several rare earth minerals crucial to modern technology: samarium for magnets and lasers, gadolinium for MRI machines, terbium and dysprosium for electric vehicle motors and control rods, yttrium for LED phosphors, and scandium for high-performance alloys.

These minerals aren’t just trade assets—they’re strategic leverage. China currently controls about 95 percent of global rare earth production. The United States, on the other hand, has spent the last decade trying—unsuccessfully—to reshore critical mineral supply chains while simultaneously picking fights with the country that supplies them. According to a 2020 US International Trade Commission report, America is 78 percent dependent on China for rare earths alone.

It’s not the first time Washington has played this reckless hand. In 2023, the US watched helplessly as China blocked exports of gallium and germanium, both vital for semiconductors. In 2024, China followed up by tightening controls on rare earths even further. Now, the screws are tightening again—and the rest of the world is left guessing how long the stockpiles will last.

The Cheerleader

Pakistan, meanwhile, is neither a player in this game nor a supplier—despite sitting on the very minerals that the world is fighting over.

Instead, we get legislation like the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Mines and Minerals Bill 2025, passed earlier this month by the provincial government. The bill creates two new bureaucracies—one to issue licences, the other to “facilitate investment”—both stacked with bureaucrats and ministers. The actual act of mining seems to be missing.

Both are loaded with overlapping roles, departmental reps, and non-binding mandates. Worse, federal interference is hardwired into the bill. All major mining agreements must align with a model agreement provided by Islamabad’s Federal Mineral Wing. In theory, this is for standardization. In practice, it undermines provincial autonomy and creates yet another layer of approval—and delay.

For large-scale mining projects—defined as anything over Rs. 500 million—the law mandates joint ventures with government-run companies. This would be reasonable if those companies had the capability to explore or extract. They don’t. They exist mostly on paper, propped up by the illusion of capacity.

Pakistan’s state-run mining outfits have long suffered from underfunding, political meddling, and operational incompetence. Private investors—domestic and foreign—face an opaque regulatory environment, legal uncertainty, and security concerns.

So, while Washington and Beijing slug it out over who controls tomorrow’s technology, Pakistan claps from the sidelines—cheering, hosting summits, and drafting laws that do little to change its mineral destiny.

The minerals are there. We have them. The urgency is global. But the will? Still missing in action.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of ProPakistani. The content is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended as professional advice. ProPakistani does not endorse any products, services, or opinions mentioned in the article.


  • You greedy punjabis, keep the fuck away from KP and Balochistan. Go and dig around the diamond market, you might find something left behind by your elders

    • Is kpk and balochistan your brothel where u sell your souls and body? They are Pakistan and punjabis are paying with their blood to keep them free ftom the clutches of India..Be thankful for the favours.

    • Ask your Baloch “sardars” where do they do the budget that is given to them for development?! Maybe

  • Plz plz plz

    Go to my comments, i mentioned this in my previous cimments

    I have an example and you too

    That is Sandak Metal Project….. china, a so called friend played main role, including our decison makers

    But you may not speak on this

  • I agree with the writer. Authorities are an extension of the bureaucracy. Bureaucracy sets up authorities to provide slots for their post retirement. Incidentally, I have served in one such authority on HR side. The authority along with other subjects, was also working for mineral exploration in the tribal areas. During its 20 year long existence, the authority couldn’t scratch even a furlong long stretch and finally had to be abolished.

  • These useless leeches from the Mafia dollar kissing army who is looting the country directly from their enterprises and paying zero tax while siphoning off resources. Corporate farms now the new Egyptian style way to strangle the country. They appoint their lapdogs from Nawaz, Zardari and others.
    Only way is for Baloch to break free from.these snakes once and for all.
    We don’t want Chinese or the Pakistani or anyone.
    Pakistani are just cowards who cannot overthrow this genocidal army once and for all.

  • Trillion dollars minerals, billions dollars oil, we should come out from this fantasy.
    Real thing is to make the people skillful and let them earn in homeland or abroad.

  • All this need sincerity with national interests.
    If personal interests are above national interests than nothing works towards self reliance.

  • Why Pak Army is involved in such decisions? This is not their job and they should shutdown SIFC with immediate effect. This is against professionalism of Armed forces.

    • They have to… What if someone invades for oil and sells the manjan of “freedom”?!

  • LOL. I have been travelling from the South West to Up North and i assure you we dont have such figures worth of minerals. Wadh is already closed/exhausted after mining Chromite and Magnesite for 18/20 Years. Sain Dak and Reko Diq is a separate issue, but the real problem is the fake claims of ciritical minerals we have.

  • The present form 47 illegitimate govt of Pakistan ruling without the mandate wants to sell the country to their Christian/Zionist/Hindutva Masters an then with the looted wealth flee Pakistan to Belarus, because other countries would not except them in their country

  • Since most people shall not think of any solution so I shall refrain from thinking about this topic or issue.
    Even tldr the actual article. Not expecting any solution in it. If there is any then inform and maybe we may read it.

    :-) the value of too much info and posts these days.

  • two hundred billions dollars only.
    Then it is good for pak to explore its minirals by himself without any external involvement.

    But only those public servents and businesses will involve in oil and gas plus minirals activity who are subjected to fierce accountability under the law may be article six

  • Better that Pakistan train its own technical people from abroad, buy their own machinery and start the processing it self. 100% invest will remain with in Pakistan. This will save in Trillions of dollars if it is mined by Pakistan it self and the earn in Trillions of dollars if marketed to outside needy countries or utilized with in Pakistan by setting industries which will create a lot of jobs. Pakistan will lose nothing and it will be a 100% win win situation for Pakistan it self


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