The Angolan government is seeking $4.5 billion in financing to extend the Lobito Corridor railway into Zambia’s Copperbelt, a strategic infrastructure expansion designed to strengthen regional trade and industrial connectivity across Southern Africa.
The proposed 830-kilometre extension would link Zambia’s mineral-rich Copperbelt region to the existing 1,300-kilometre Lobito railway, which runs from the Atlantic port city of Lobito in Angola through Lobito, Benguela and Luau to the border with the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). This development aims to streamline copper exports from Zambia and the DRC, which together account for over 13 per cent of global copper production, significantly reducing transport times to international markets.
The project’s financing target represents a substantial increase from the $1.6 billion cost initially projected by the African Development Bank (AfDB) in 2024. While the Africa Finance Corporation (AFC)—which is managing the project alongside the United States, Angola, Zambia and the DRC—has refrained from assigning a final figure, the higher estimate reflects expanded engineering scope, regional interconnection goals, and updated logistical assessments.
The Lobito Corridor, already described by the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) as a “transformative transcontinental infrastructure route,” is also seen as a significant Pan-African trade integration effort. It is not merely a transport project but a framework for industrial corridor development, designed to enable value addition in mineral processing, logistics, and manufacturing across multiple economies.
Funding progress has been uneven. A $533 million U.S. loan earmarked for the Angolan segment in 2024 remains undisbursed, while Italy recently committed $320 million and the AfDB pledged $500 million toward the Zambian extension. Negotiations with additional multilateral lenders and private investors are ongoing, with construction anticipated to commence in 2026.
Observers note that the project has been portrayed internationally as a counterweight to Chinese-backed infrastructure investments across Africa. However, regional leaders have emphasised that the Lobito Corridor is foremost a continental project driven by African development priorities, designed to facilitate equitable trade, reduce dependency on congested southern routes through South Africa, Mozambique, and Tanzania, and open new logistics opportunities for land-linked economies in Southern and Central Africa.
If realised, the Lobito Corridor extension could become a model for cooperative African-led infrastructure development, aligning with the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) vision of enhanced intra-African trade and regional value chain integration. The corridor’s long-term impact will depend not only on foreign investment but on the sustainability of local partnerships, environmental governance, and community participation in shaping the socio-economic future of the regions it traverses.







