- January 28, 2026
- Posted by: Tresmark
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In 2025, Pakistan’s mineral exports to China recorded strong and diversified growth, according to the latest trade data, underscoring deepening industrial cooperation and rising demand from China’s manufacturing, infrastructure and green-energy sectors.
According to China’s General Administration of Customs (GACC), among the standout performers, copper and copper-based exports continued to expand, with copper and articles rising to $1.14 billion, while copper ores and concentrates exceeded $11 million, highlighting copper’s strategic role in power grids, electronics and clean-energy technologies. At the same time, aluminium ores and concentrates surged from $0.29 million to $14.16 million, an increase of over 4,700%, reflecting China’s growing use of aluminium in electric vehicles, renewable energy systems and lightweight industrial manufacturing.
Other key mineral categories also posted solid performance. Chinese customs data showed that iron ores and concentrates remained above $101 million, while manganese ores, lead ores and concentrates, natural calcium phosphates and industrial minerals such as vermiculite and perlite contributed to overall growth. These materials are essential for China’s steelmaking, battery production, fertilisers and large-scale infrastructure projects.
Trade data further showed that Pakistan’s exports of zinc ores and concentrates to China reached $110.90 million in 2025, underscoring steady Chinese demand from the galvanising, construction and automotive sectors. Exports of chromium ores and concentrates stood at $89.43 million, reflecting their continued importance for China’s stainless steel and alloy manufacturing industries. In addition, Pakistan exported aluminium and articles thereof worth $30.35 million, supporting downstream manufacturing applications. These figures highlight the breadth of Pakistan’s mineral export basket and its increasing alignment with China’s industrial and clean-energy supply chains.
A senior official from Pakistan’s Ministry of Commerce said the expansion reflects “strong complementarities between Pakistan’s mineral resources and China’s industrial demand, supported by improved logistics and long-term commercial partnerships”. He added that enhanced connectivity under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) has reduced transport bottlenecks and improved export reliability.

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According to a Pakistani metals industry analyst interviewed by China Economic Net, China’s demand for copper, aluminium and iron inputs remains structurally strong due to the energy transition, grid expansion and advanced manufacturing. He said Pakistan is emerging as a stable and diversified supplier in this context.
Ghulam Qadir, Trade and Investment Counsellor at Pakistan’s Embassy in China, told China Economic Net that one of the major positive developments in Pakistan-China trade is the rapid growth of copper exports. He said Pakistan imports compressors and scrap from global markets, extracts high-quality copper and exports refined copper ingots, an intensive, labour-driven process in which the country has developed strong expertise.



