Africa’s entry into the G20 marked far more than symbolic inclusion—it signalled a structural shift in the global order.
Description
Africa’s entry into the G20 marked far more than symbolic inclusion—it signalled a structural shift in the global order. With a rapidly expanding population, rising GDP, and an unparalleled share of the minerals essential to the global energy transition, Africa is moving from the periphery of international governance to one of its central organising forces. South Africa’s 2025 G20 presidency accelerated this shift, using its platform to champion the continent’s priorities—from critical minerals cooperation to sustainable industrialisation and reforms to global finance. What made this presidency distinct was not only what it pursued, but how it pursued it.
As Zeinab El-Sayed, Head of Government Partnerships at Investing in African Mining Indaba, argues, Africa’s ascent on the world stage reflects a new diplomatic discipline: a compact approach grounded in coordination, coherence, and confidence.
Guest: Zeinab El-Sayed: Head of Government Partnerships: Investing in African Mining Indaba




