Financial Mail and Business Day

Angola, Zambia, DRC set sights on trade corridor

Michael J. Kavanagh and Candido Mendes

Angola, Zambia and Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) agreed to establish a new agency that will oversee the development of a trade corridor to and from the Atlantic Ocean port of Lobito, which has the potential to transform how the region’s resources are shipped.

The Lobito Corridor Management Institution will facilitate trade from Zambia and DRC over Angola’s 1,344km Benguela Railway, the three countries said at a ceremony in the Angolan port city last week. If the project materialises, it may serve as a key route to move metals used to make electric vehicles and wind turbines from inland mines to port, and cut transport times from weeks to days.

The agency will “ensure the availability of the Lobito Corridor to importers and exporters from the inland states of the DRC and Zambia as an efficient and economical supplement to other trade routes,” Ricardo Viegas D’Abreu, Angola’s transport minister, said in a speech, according to a transcript shared with Bloomberg.

Zambia and DRC are key suppliers of copper and cobalt, which are shipped via road to ports in SA and East Africa. The Benguela Railway, which once transported minerals from the region, was shut during the Angolan civil war that lasted from 1975 to 2002.

Angola completed a $1.8bn refurbishment of its segment of the line in 2014, and in July, Trafigura and Mota-Engil Engenharia e Construcao Africa signed a 30-year concession agreement to run its cargo operations. The track in DRC remains in poor shape. To take full advantage of the line, Zambia would need to build a separate rail link to connect to it.

The new transport agency will be based in Lobito and run by an executive secretary and permanent secretariat, who have yet to be named. The three countries’ transport ministers and an executive committee of government and transport officials will oversee the institution, according to Viegas D’Abreu.

The three nations took more than a decade to negotiate the tripartite corridor accord. They had a combined population of about 150-million people and a GDP of $216bn in 2022, IMF data shows.

Zambia transport minister Frank Tayali said his country also intended to ship manganese and nickel along the line, and had asked Angola for land at Lobito to be used as a dry port, according to a copy of his speech.

Constantin Kalala Mayiba, DRC’s ambassador to Angola, said his nation wanted to use the rail line to link its landlocked regions to the sea and reduce transport costs, which are among Southern Africa’s highest.

THE DRC WANTS TO LINK ITS REGIONS TO THE SEA AND REDUCE TRANSPORT COSTS, WHICH ARE AMONG SOUTHERN AFRICA ’ S HIGHEST

NATIONAL

en-za

2023-02-02T08:00:00.0000000Z

2023-02-02T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://bd.pressreader.com/article/281603834611172

Arena Holdings PTY