DINSON Iron and Steel Company has secured ISO 9001:2015 certification, strengthening its compliance with internationally recognised quality management standards and supporting plans for regional expansion.
The Manhize-based steel producer received the certification from the Standards Association of Zimbabwe (SAZ). The approval confirms that its production processes for steel billets and deformed bars meet global quality benchmarks.
ISO 9001:2015 is the world’s most widely used quality management standard. It emphasises customer satisfaction, operational efficiency and continuous improvement.
“This is a confidence booster for the company,” said a Dinson representative, Mr. George. “We are very proud to announce that we are ISO certified in terms of ISO 9001 of 2015.”
“As an organisation, it is very important for our systems of how we run and produce our iron and steel products to be certified by an international body in the Standards Association of Zimbabwe,” he added.
George said the certification followed a multi-stage audit process conducted by SAZ. The reviews assessed whether Dinson’s systems align with international best practices.
“We ran through a series of rigorous internal audits from SAZ auditors which happened in various stages so that we satisfy the requirements of ISO certification,” he said.
He described the achievement as a foundation rather than an endpoint. “This ISO certification is the bedrock. Now we will move to the next level of product certification.”
“We want to make sure we are supplying to the market compliant with the requirements of the final consumer of our products,” George said.
Product certification would allow the company to meet specific technical standards required in regulated regional markets. These include South Africa, Zambia and Mozambique.
“We will go full throttle into the regional market when we have product certification,” he said.
Industry analysts say the certification strengthens Zimbabwe’s domestic supply of quality steel for mining and construction. It also reduces reliance on imports and supports infrastructure development.
The certification also comes as the country expands production of strategic minerals needed for the global energy transition. Growing output from lithium projects across the country is expected to increase demand for compliant, locally produced steel and industrial inputs, reinforcing links between mining, manufacturing and export-oriented growth.
The milestone is expected to enhance export capacity and aligns with national industrialisation goals under Vision 2030, which aims to diversify and grow the economy.










