Central & South Asia

Pakistan Can’t Export Rocks Forever

Pakistan’s mineral wealth offers a chance to relieve economic pressures — only if it avoids repeating a pattern of exporting low-value raw materials. Projects like Reko Dig and Thar suggest opportunities and risks tied to governance and sustainability. Lasting gains depend on developing downstream industries that create higher-valued, skilled jobs and stable long-term growth.
By
Pakistan Can’t Export Rocks Forever

April 25, 2026 04:51 EDT
 user comment feature
Check out our comment feature!
visitor can bookmark

Pakistan does not have many painless economic choices left. Years of , weak investment and recurring stress have forced the state into a cycle of short recoveries followed by fresh constraints. That is why renewed attention to the matters. Beneath the headlines lies a real opportunity, but also a familiar risk. Pakistan has often exported raw or lightly processed goods and then wondered why the country earns too little from what it sells. The same trap now hangs over minerals. If the country simply digs, ships and celebrates, it will repeat an old mistake in a new industry. The larger backdrop, visible in external trade and State Bank growth , is that Pakistan needs durable sources of foreign exchange, not another short burst of optimism.

Pakistan’s resource base is substantial, and the of the Ministry of Energy has long catalogued copper, gold, coal, iron ore, chromite, limestone, marble, gypsum and gemstones. Yet resource wealth on paper is not the same as value in the treasury. The political temptation is to point to large headline numbers at and treat them as future income.

Serious investors do not work that way. They look for certified reserves, detailed engineering, water availability, power access, transport corridors, tax stability and dispute resolution they can trust. That is why the updated feasibility study for , the project’s and the International Project Disclosure () matter more than sweeping claims about buried wealth. They move the conversation from fantasy to finance.

Reko Diq is a governance test

The strongest symbol of that shift is itself. If Pakistan can keep the project on track, protect the contract structure and maintain public credibility, it could alter the country’s export mix for decades. Barrick Gold Corporation’s target of 2028 is important, but the institutional lesson is even more so. Pakistan already paid a heavy price for the earlier legal conflict around this asset. A successful mine would show that the country can manage a long-horizon project effectively without turning every commercial disagreement into a national crisis. It would also show whether the state can enforce environmental and community standards through a genuine environmental and social impact — not just a ceremonial one. In a world shaped by the and the push for , governance quality is no longer a side issue; it is part of the asset’s value.

Thar coal offers a harder lesson. The project helped expose the cost of relying too heavily on imported fuel and too little on domestic resources. The case made by Sindh Engro Coal Mining Company () is : Local coal reduced some import pressure and created domestic energy capacity that Pakistan had long delayed. In a country that still struggles with energy insecurity, that matters. But it is only a partial answer. Coal can buy time, yet it cannot define a future facing stricter environmental scrutiny, constrained climate finance and rising global pressure for cleaner supply chains. Even Pakistan’s current of ores and related products shows how limited the country’s value capture remains. Import substitution can ease short-term pressure. It does not, by itself, build a modern industrial base.

The real prize lies beyond the pit

That is why Pakistan should stop talking about minerals as if extraction alone were development. The real prize lies further down the value chain: processing, refining, smelting, cutting, certification, engineering services, logistics and specialized manufacturing linked to copper, industrial minerals and gemstones. To get there, the country needs better geological data, predictable licensing, reliable electricity, water planning, roads, rail links and vocational training. It also needs rules that people can trust.

Pakistan already has environmental review , but rules on paper are not enough when local communities feel excluded or provincial interests feel ignored. In Balochistan especially, the question is not only how much copper or gold leaves the ground, but also who gets jobs, receives royalties, gets clean water and bears the environmental cost. A mining boom without local legitimacy will remain politically fragile and difficult to sustain, no matter how attractive the reserve estimates appear in an official .

Pakistan should see minerals as a bridge to a more competitive economy, not as a substitute for one. The country still needs tax reform, export diversification, a healthier power sector and a business climate that rewards production rather than access. Minerals can support that transition, but only if policymakers resist two temptations. The first is fantasy: the belief that enormous in-ground valuations are the same as usable national wealth. The second is laziness: the belief that exporting raw material is enough. It is not.

The world is looking for new suppliers of copper and other strategic inputs, and Pakistan has a chance to matter. But that chance will close if the country remains content to dig up rocks while other countries capture the refining margins, the industrial know-how, and the skilled jobs. Pakistan cannot export rocks forever. At some point, it must build around them.

[ edited this piece]

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect 51³Ô¹Ï’s editorial policy.

Comment

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Support 51³Ô¹Ï

We rely on your support for our independence, diversity and quality.

For more than 10 years, 51³Ô¹Ï has been free, fair and independent. No billionaire owns us, no advertisers control us. We are a reader-supported nonprofit. Unlike many other publications, we keep our content free for readers regardless of where they live or whether they can afford to pay. We have no paywalls and no ads.

In the post-truth era of fake news, echo chambers and filter bubbles, we publish a plurality of perspectives from around the world. Anyone can publish with us, but everyone goes through a rigorous editorial process. So, you get fact-checked, well-reasoned content instead of noise.

We publish 3,000+ voices from 90+ countries. We also conduct education and training programs on subjects ranging from digital media and journalism to writing and critical thinking. This doesn’t come cheap. Servers, editors, trainers and web developers cost money.
Please consider supporting us on a regular basis as a recurring donor or a sustaining member.

Will you support FO’s journalism?

We rely on your support for our independence, diversity and quality.

Donation Cycle

Donation Amount

The IRS recognizes 51³Ô¹Ï as a section 501(c)(3) registered public charity (EIN: 46-4070943), enabling you to claim a tax deduction.

Make Sense of the World

Unique Insights from 3,000+ Contributors in 90+ Countries