Africa Rallies Global Support Ahead of Major Infrastructure Summit in Luanda
- Posted on October 6, 2025
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The African Union (AU), working with the government of Angola, is finalizing plans for an important infrastructure financing summit in Luanda later this month.
Dominic Kirui -Nairobi,Kenya
The African Union (AU), working with the government of Angola, is finalizing plans for an important infrastructure financing summit in Luanda later this month.
The event will run from October 28 to 31 and aims to bring together heads of state, financiers, and business leaders from Africa and around the world. The goal is to address Africa's ongoing infrastructure investment gap and speed up the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) implementation.
Angolan President João Lourenço, who is also the current AU Chair, is leading the summit, which is organized by the AU’s development agency, AUDA-NEPAD. This will be the third edition of the African Infrastructure Financing Summit.
During the AU Commission Handover Ceremony in March 2025, President Lourenço emphasized, “Infrastructure is one of the essential pillars of the African Union's Agenda 2063. We must mobilize all available financial resources to achieve our goals, from roads and railways to ports, power lines, and digital networks. I have called on the Commission to hold a continental infrastructure conference in 2025 to drive investment and connect Africa for trade, innovation, and prosperity.”
More than a thousand high-level participants are expected in Luanda for four days of strategic talks focused on unlocking capital for transformative infrastructure projects. These projects will enhance connectivity, trade, and regional integration throughout the continent.
The summit is critical for executing Agenda 2063, the African Union’s long-term development plan. This plan is currently in its ten-year implementation phase, which started in February 2024. Agenda 2063 aims to close the funding gap between the roughly $80 billion raised each year and the estimated $130 to $170 billion needed to meet Africa's infrastructure demands.
Building the Financial Framework
The summit will highlight AUDA-NEPAD’s efforts to attract capital from within Africa and abroad. The agency, led by Nardos Bekele-Thomas, is increasing its engagement with African financial institutions. This includes the recently launched Alliance of Multilateral African Financial Institutions, started earlier this year alongside Afreximbank. Major players such as the Africa Finance Corporation, led by Nigerian executive Samaila Zubairu, along with African pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and regional development banks, are also part of this effort.
Leading private sector companies are expected to be key participants. Attendees will include senior executives from Nigeria’s Dangote Group, Egypt’s Arab Contractors, and South Africa’s MTN, as well as banks like Ecobank, Commercial Bank of Ethiopia, United Bank for Africa, and Nedbank. Important state-owned energy firms like Algeria’s Sonatrach and Angola’s Sonangol will also take part.
International investors and development partners will attend, including institutions like the World Bank and IMF, as well as Western investment firms such as Blackstone Infrastructure Partners, Macquarie Asset Management, and Antin Infrastructure Partners. The summit will also feature alternative financial partnerships with strong participation expected from ChinaAid, China Eximbank, the Saudi Fund for Development, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, and Korea Investment Corporation.
The presence of these various groups reflects a shift in Africa’s development financing landscape. It moves away from traditional Western reliance towards a broader framework that includes emerging Global South powers. President Lourenço announced the summit during the 17th BRICS summit in Brazil in July, reinforcing Angola’s commitment to South-South cooperation.
Presidential Talks and Strategic Corridors
A series of presidential dialogues will be central to the summit, aiming to create a bold future for African infrastructure. Several high-level talks are planned between President Lourenço and his regional counterparts, including Félix Tshisekedi (DR Congo), Hakainde Hichilema (Zambia), William Ruto (Kenya), and Bassirou Diomaye Faye (Senegal).
These discussions will focus on enhancing major trade and transport routes, such as the Lobito Corridor, the Lamu Port-South Sudan-Ethiopia Transport (LAPSSET) corridor, and the Abidjan-Lagos highway. They will also cover cross-border infrastructure governance and mechanisms to manage energy and transport networks.
Additional talks involving leaders from South Africa, Ethiopia, Mauritius, Nigeria, and Rwanda will look into innovative financing models, particularly on how domestic capital markets and institutional investors can better support connectivity and integration.
The summit’s final presidential panel is expected to include Alassane Ouattara (Ivory Coast), Abdel Fattah el-Sisi (Egypt), Filipe Nyusi (Mozambique), and Julius Maada Bio (Sierra Leone). This panel will discuss advancing the AfCFTA as a tool for economic transformation.
Former Nigerien president Mahamadou Issoufou, designated as the AU’s “champion” for the AfCFTA, may also join. His participation, however, has stirred debate among African leaders due to his alleged backing of the junta in Niamey that continues to detain former president Mohamed Bazoum.
A Critical Moment
As global development financing faces challenges and Africa seeks to forge its own growth path, the Luanda summit comes at a crucial time. Organizers hope the event will produce concrete investment commitments and strengthen political dedication to long-term infrastructure planning and integration.
As the continent strives to turn Agenda 2063’s vision into reality, all eyes will be on Luanda. The key question remains whether Africa’s leaders and partners can provide the capital, coordination, and determination to translate ambition into action.
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