ZAMBIA · MINERALS & MARKETS
Key Facts
—New route west: The Zambia Lobito copper railway would link the Copperbelt to Angola’s Atlantic port of Lobito.
—Timeline: Zambia aims to start building its section by the third quarter of 2026, with operations expected by 2027 to 2028.
—Western money: An Africa Finance Corporation facility of 753 million dollars and a US pledge of 250 million are funding the corridor.
—Grant widened: On 18 June 2026 the US agreed to expand a 491-million-dollar grant toward critical-minerals infrastructure feeding the route.
—Metals at stake: The line is built to carry copper and cobalt, both central to the energy transition.
—Hedging east: Zambia is also reviving the China-backed TAZARA line to the Indian Ocean, keeping both routes open.
The Zambia Lobito copper railway is the country’s plan to ship Copperbelt metal west to Angola’s coast, a Western-financed route that aims to loosen China’s grip on the minerals of the energy transition.
Why the Zambia Lobito copper railway matters
The Zambia Lobito copper railway is the country’s bid to fix an old problem: its copper is landlocked and slow to reach the sea. The new line would run west, from the Copperbelt to Angola’s port of Lobito.
Copper is Zambia’s lifeblood, its biggest export and the anchor of government revenue. Getting it to market faster and more cheaply is close to a national priority.
Zambia aims to start building its section by the third quarter of 2026, according to officials cited by Zambian transport media. Financial close is targeted for early 2027, with first operations between 2027 and 2028.
How the corridor works
The Lobito Corridor is built around the old Benguela Railway, which links the Atlantic port of Lobito to the mineral-rich interior. It is designed to carry copper and cobalt from Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The Democratic Republic of Congo, Zambia’s northern neighbour, shares the route and the same export problem. Together the two hold some of the world’s richest copper and cobalt reserves.
For Zambia, the appeal is distance. Shipping west through Lobito is far shorter than the long haul east to ports on the Indian Ocean.
The old Benguela line fell into disrepair during Angola’s long civil war and has only recently been rebuilt. Its revival is itself a marker of the region’s return to stability.
Who is paying
Unusually for a major African railway, the money is coming mainly from the West. The Africa Finance Corporation has arranged a 753-million-dollar facility for the Angolan section.
That package includes 553 million dollars from the US International Development Finance Corporation and 200 million from the Development Bank of Southern Africa. Washington has separately pledged 250 million dollars for the corridor.
The funding mix is a statement of intent. Western development banks are putting public money into a project meant to keep African metal flowing their way.
A grant quietly repurposed
The American commitment deepened this month. On 18 June 2026 in Lusaka, the US Millennium Challenge Corporation agreed to widen a 491-million-dollar grant to support critical-minerals infrastructure.
Part of the money will now fund priority roads in the North-Western and Copperbelt provinces that feed the Lobito route, according to africa.com. It is a sign of how far Washington will go to secure the metals.
The contest behind the tracks
The corridor is more than a logistics project. It is the West’s answer to China’s long dominance of African copper and cobalt, and to Beijing’s parallel revival of the eastern TAZARA line to the Indian Ocean.
For Washington, the route is about supply security rather than charity. The metals it would carry feed electric vehicles, power grids and weapons systems.
Zambia, sensibly, is hedging. It wants both routes open, playing the great powers against each other to win the best terms for its copper.
What it means for Zambia’s economy
If the line works, it could lower the transport costs that have long eaten into mining profits. Cheaper logistics would make new mines viable and lift the value of existing ones.
The government hopes that translates into investment, jobs and revenue. It is betting that better infrastructure, not just higher prices, is the way to grow.
Mining already accounts for the bulk of Zambia’s export earnings. A cheaper route to port would amplify the value of every tonne it sells.
The risks on the line
Big African railways have a history of delay, cost overruns and stalled financing. The Lobito project must avoid the traps that sank earlier schemes.
There is political risk too, spread across three countries with different priorities. A change of government in any of them could slow the work.
What to watch
The test now is delivery. Financing must close, ground must be broken, and the first trains must actually run on schedule.
For an outside reader, the corridor is a useful gauge of the wider scramble. Whoever builds the railways will help decide who controls the metals of the energy transition.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Zambia Lobito copper railway?
It is a planned rail link from Zambia’s Copperbelt to Angola’s Atlantic port of Lobito, giving Zambian copper a shorter western route to global markets.
When will construction start?
Zambia aims to begin work on its section by the third quarter of 2026, with financial close targeted for early 2027 and operations expected between 2027 and 2028.
Who is paying for the Lobito Corridor?
Western lenders are leading the funding, including a 753-million-dollar facility arranged by the Africa Finance Corporation and a US pledge of 250 million dollars for the corridor.
Why does the route matter to the West?
It offers an alternative to China-controlled supply chains for copper and cobalt, two metals central to the energy transition.
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