KoBold is spending about $150 million to accelerate its search for more deposits at the Mingomba project, located along the fabled African copper belt.

The additional studies will be completed in 2024, said Mfikeyi Makayi, the Zambian CEO of the Silicon Valley start-up.

"It's a very attractive project and we have said within a decade we would want Mingomba to be a producing mine," Makayi told Reuters.

KoBold uses artificial intelligence to search for copper, cobalt, nickel and lithium that the world needs for the clean energy transition and to accelerate growth in electric vehicles.

KoBold is backed by Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a climate and technology fund whose other backers include Virgin Group's Richard Branson and Bridgewater Associates' Ray Dalio.

The company's investors understand the lengthy period it takes to build the mine and that securing supplies of these metals is critical, Makayi said.

"They may not be your traditional, conventional backers, but the global need is so critical, it's basically a crisis," Makayi said. "That's why the buy-in is there, for people to be willing to be with us for the long haul, that just shows the commitment to what we are doing."

KoBold also searches for critical metals with BHP Group and Rio Tinto at projects in Australia. Commodity investor EMR Capital and Zambia's ZCCM-IH also own stakes in Mingomba.

The United States is looking for alternative sources of supply for critical metals and the funding from American investors has enabled KoBold to ramp up exploration, Makayi said.

KoBold wants to find more deposits as big as Mingomba in Zambia and would also explore opportunities in Botswana, Namibia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, Makayi said.

She wouldn't say if KoBold would partner with BHP and Rio Tinto to develop Mingomba. KoBold's own internal capacity could advance the mine, Makayi said, when asked if the firm would consider a joint venture.

The deposit has a defined resource of about 247 million tons of ore with an average grade of 3.64% copper, or an estimated 9 million tons of copper, according to KoBold.

"Maybe they will come in, it doesn't have to be in Zambia, it could be Namibia or Botswana. They're our partners but those discussions are yet to be had," Makayi said.

(Reporting by Felix Njini; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Anil D'Silva)

By Felix Njini