Lobito Corridor
A 1,344km railway linking Angola's port of Lobito to copper and cobalt zones in the DRC and Zambia, the West's flagship infrastructure counter to China in Africa.
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What it is
The Lobito Corridor is a transcontinental rail logistics system anchored in the Port of Lobito on Angola's Atlantic coast. It runs approximately 1,344 kilometers east through Angola to the DRC border, and extends via planned rehabilitation and new construction through the DRC's Katanga mining province to Zambia's Copperbelt. The Angola segment operates under a 30-year freight concession held by Lobito Atlantic Railway (LAR), a joint venture of Portuguese contractor Mota-Engil and commodities trader Trafigura. A separate 800km greenfield line will link northern Zambia to the Angolan network for the first time.
The corridor's strategic logic: move copper, cobalt, and manganese from the DRC-Zambia Copperbelt to Atlantic ports faster and cheaper than existing routes via South Africa, while giving Western governments a credible infrastructure alternative to China's Belt and Road in central Africa.
History
The corridor's physical backbone is the Benguela Railway. The Portuguese government awarded a 99-year concession in 1902 to Scottish mining magnate Sir Robert Williams; construction began in 1903 under George Pauling and Company, reached the DRC border at Luau in 1929, and completed the Atlantic-to-Copperbelt link by 1931. The railway served as a central mineral export artery for decades, handling copper and manganese from the Katanga mines. Angola's civil war (1975-2002) devastated the infrastructure and halted through traffic. Rehabilitation of the Angolan section began after the war ended, and LAR took over the freight concession. The modern multi-country Lobito Corridor project dates formally to October 24, 2023, when the US, EU, the African Development Bank, Africa Finance Corporation, and the governments of Angola, the DRC, and Zambia signed a cooperation MoU.
Current state
As of July 2026, the Angolan segment is operational and carrying copper and cobalt westward. On July 3, 2026, Africa Finance Corporation achieved financial close on a US$753 million financing package for the 1,300km Angolan brownfield corridor: US$553 million from the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) and US$200 million from the Development Bank of Southern Africa. Total committed investment across all corridor components exceeded US$10 billion, combining US government pledges above US$4 billion, EU Global Gateway allocations, and African Development Bank and World Bank Group participation.
For the DRC segment, the DRC Ministry of Finance submitted a US$500 million World Bank loan request in October 2025. The 800km Zambia greenfield leg remained at the financing stage: AFC planned a fundraise launch in Q3 2026, targeting financial close in Q4 2027. Nine EPC contractors completed site visits across the full corridor in early 2026; preferred bidders for construction contracts were expected in July-August 2026, with early civil works possibly beginning in late 2026 or early 2027. See 洛比托走廊进入招标阶段,逾40亿美元资金确认到位以支撑50亿美元建设 for construction bidding details.
Washington frames the project as its flagship critical-minerals counter to China's Belt and Road. The corridor simultaneously functions as an EU Global Gateway flagship. US political support faces a risk: the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment was omitted from the Trump administration's 2026 federal budget (see G7版BRI对手悄然失声:PGII从特朗普2026年预算消失,洛比托项目仍在推进), though the DFC loan for the Angolan segment reached financial close under the Trump administration.
Relationships
Angola is the western anchor and concession host. Its GDP reached US$152 billion in 2026 and the corridor is central to President João Lourenço's diversification plan as oil output, roughly 1 million barrels per day, declines from a 2008 peak of 1.9 million. See Angola overtakes Kenya as Africa's sixth-largest economy and anchors over US$10bn Lobito Corridor as oil sector faces structural decline for Angola's concurrent economic context. Zambia under President Hakainde Hichilema has positioned the Zambian leg as central to its copper output expansion target (see 赞比亚2025年铜产量未达百万吨目标,将目标延续至2026年,洛比托走廊铁路推进). The DRC's Katanga Copperbelt is the primary minerals source. The corridor competes directly with Chinese-financed rail and road infrastructure across the same region (see 一带一路热度创历史新高,2025年达2130亿美元,转向能源、矿业与科技).
What to watch
- July-August 2026: preferred EPC bidder selection and construction contract awards across the corridor.
- Q3 2026: AFC's Zambian leg fundraise launch and whether the Q4 2027 financial close target holds.
- Whether PGII's absence from the Trump 2026 budget translates into reduced DFC commitment or project delay on later tranches.
- DRC World Bank loan approval for Katanga segment rehabilitation and community consent processes along the route.
- Whether the corridor generates local industrial value-added in Angola, the DRC, and Zambia, or functions primarily as a mineral transit route for external buyers.