Zambia, a landlocked country in southern Africa, is rich in natural resources, with fertile agricultural land, abundant water resources, and a young and growing population. With strategic access to regional markets through the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and enhanced regional transport corridors, Zambia offers attractive opportunities for entrepreneurs and investors seeking to establish value-added, export-oriented and import-substituting businesses. The government's stated priorities of economic diversification, job creation and industrialization create an enabling environment for agro-processing projects, mining value addition, renewable energy, manufacturing, logistics and tourism.
Why start a business in Zambia?
1. Natural resource base and agricultural potential
Zambia is blessed with rich plateau soil and a pleasant climate that contributes significantly to the growth of large-scale crops such as maize soybeans wheat beans tobacco cotton horticulture and livestock. There are a bunch of areas suitable for agriculture that combined with fresh water from the Zambezi Kafue and Luangwa rivers make the country ideal for commercial agriculture, various irrigation systems and aquaculture.
2. Value-added mining capability
For example , Zambia's main export is copper. And oh yeah Plus the country has cobalt emerald and other minerals. Mining was essentially about extraction – and so it became abundantly clear that downstream industries (refining metal fabrication battery component supply chains) could evolve to keep more value , value locally.
3. Young workforce and better business environment
Zambia's young population provides employment in the primary sector such as agriculture, the secondary sector (manufacturing and construction) and the tertiary sector (services). Ongoing reforms to attract private investment, the introduction of mining incentives and the establishment of industrial parks are among the factors that have improved working conditions in Zambia. The urban centers of Lusaka Ndola and Kitui among others are home to industrial clusters and community gathering points with their transport links.
4. Strategic regional location
Despite being a landlocked country Zambia is very fortunate to still be able to use road and rail corridors with ports in Tanzania Mozambique Zimbabwe and Dar es Salaam in South Africa that can take a bunch of different routes to the global market – a great opportunity for export-oriented businesses.
Promising business and investment opportunities
1. Agriculture and agricultural processing
What: The agricultural sector mainly covers agro-food processing coffee production dairy activities and fruit packing. It also includes fish processing, freezing plants, aquaculture ship repair and seafood exports.
The reason: In short, agriculture is the heart of Yemen because its the main source of employment for more than half of the population. However productivity and value addition have not kept pace due to a lack of processing infrastructure. The fisheries sector has great potential to contribute to the country's economy. The only problem is the lack of adequate infrastructure such as cold stores to preserve the freshness of the catch and the logistics of transporting the fish to the market.
Options:
One of the most important tangible Yemeni exports is Yemeni mocha coffee. In other words the processing of coffee beans for local consumption and export.
- Production of processed and packaged foods from fresh fruit and vegetables (dried canned and packaged).
- Beekeeping - Yemeni honey is in high demand due to its health , health properties.
- Dairy production construction of cold store chains
The country would benefit from investors setting up renewable energy agribusiness clusters with warehouses, cold storage and packing lines near fertile locations such as the Ibb Taiz and Dhamar regions linking local production with urban consumption and export.
2. Fishing and marine industries
What: The fishing industry includes fish processing, freezing plants, aquaculture ship repair and seafood exports.
The reason: Along the coasts of the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea Yemen has the most abundant fishing grounds in the world. However only a small part of this , this water is utilized.
3. Agricultural technology, mechanization and input supply
What: Farm mechanization services, seed and fertilizer distribution, irrigation systems, agricultural inputs and digital agritech platforms for expansion and market linkages.
Why? Productivity gains from better inputs and mechanization can transform smallholder production into commercial quantities suitable for processing and export. Digital platforms reduce transaction costs and improve income for farmers.
Opportunities: Agricultural machinery leasing models, packaged input supply chains, pilot micro-irrigation systems and marketplace/mobile trading platforms.
Government support and incentives
The Zambian government, including through the Ministry of Finance, supports local industry and encourages exports there with two types of incentives - financial and non-financial - that usually mean tax exemptions for priority sectors, investment incentives, agricultural processing zones and export processing zones, etc. Strategic economic zones and industrial parks typically offer plug-and-play opportunities and quick approvals. Working with the Zambia Development Agency (ZDA) or regional/local investment promotion offices will help you learn about sector-specific packages and land/facility opportunities.
Zambia offers a bunch of opportunities for investors looking to increase capacity and add local value. The greatest medium-term potential lies in the following areas: agro-processing, renewable energy, mining value addition, logistics/cold chain and tourism – sectors that capitalize on Zambia's natural wealth and regional linkages. Such business ventures, that combine commercial viability with job creation, involvement of smallholders and sustainable use of the environment, are most likely to succeed and attract concessional financing or public-private partnerships.