Zambia: Driving Change And Connection

Published 1 day ago
Zambia leading image – Victoria-Falls-amazing-view
Image by IStock

“We must all act in harmony to move our country forward and achieve the much-needed economic transformation. Indeed, our best years as a nation are truly within our reach. The will, courage, energy and faith we garner for our transformation will secure us the success we all desire to achieve,” says H.E. Hakainde Hichilema, President of Zambia.

On October 24, 2024, Zambia celebrates its diamond jubilee in honor of its independence, under the theme, 60 Years Strong: Honouring Our Heritage, Embracing the Future.

As a large, landlocked country with an estimated population of about 21 million people in 2024, as per Worldometer, from 72 ethnic groups, Zambia is steeped in history dating back to the African Stone Age. This while standing proud as one of Africa’s most stable countries with consistently peaceful transitions of power.

Advertisement

Sharing borders with eight countries, namely Angola, Botswana, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe, Zambia is also the continent’s biggest copper producer as well as one of the world’s richest countries in terms of natural resources.

The US$259 million Kazungula Bridge, a road and rail bridge over the Zambezi River linking Zambia and Botswana, was inaugurated in May 2021. The bridge has boosted trade and tourism in Southern Africa and provided cross-border cooperation and the regional infrastructure development needed in order to facilitate intra-African trade in the Southern African Development Community (SADC).

Loading...

On August 24, 2021, H.E. Hakainde Hichilema, described as a businessman, farmer and politician, was sworn in as Zambia’s new president, giving rise to a new dawn for the country and a vision of economic transformation.

He also unveiled the new Green Economy and Environment ministry, emphasizing his administration’s commitment to the mitigation of climate change in the country, continent and the world.

Advertisement

In March 2022, a giant wind-solar hybrid plant was announced which has seen developer and energy group, Chariot build a 430MW project to power copper and gold extraction mining operations.

Zambia is ensuring it is tackling climate change at an institutional level while diversifying its economy and scaling up community-led projects. In 2023, the president approved plans related to the construction of a 71-megawatt hybrid renewable energy project in the Chibombo district.

The 2024 budget has allocated substantial resources to agriculture to bolster initiatives such as irrigation development, fertilizer subsidies, and research and development.

One of Africa’s fastest-growing economies, Zambia’s economy is projected to grow at 4.5% in 2024 aided by strategic interventions in agriculture, tourism, mining, manufacturing, energy and transport sectors while the focus on the rehabilitation and upgrading of existing roads will open and secure further trade corridors with neighboring countries.

Advertisement

Zambia’s dedication to promoting a favorable business environment has saw it score 67 points in the ease of doing business index in 2020, ranking it among the top 10 African economies according to the Doing Business 2020 report published by the World Bank Group.

The country is projecting itself to become a business haven for the continent’s start-ups, with the government’s commitment to building Zambia and helping it to become a technologically-driven economy and business hub.

Advertisement

Loading...