The Third Financing Summit for Africa’s Infrastructure Development opened in Luanda with African leaders uniting to address the continent’s massive infrastructure financing gap. Angolan President and African Union (AU) Chairperson João Manuel Gonçalves Lourenço emphasized that Africa needs to invest between $130 billion and $170 billion annually to sustain growth and unlock its potential as a global growth engine. He called for a shift from rhetoric to concrete action, highlighting the Summit as a key step in mobilizing resources to enhance connectivity and integration across the continent.
Co-hosted by the African Union Commission (AUC) and the African Union Development Agency (AUDA-NEPAD), the Summit is themed “Capital, Corridors, Trade: Investing in Infrastructure for the AfCFTA and Shared Prosperity.” It aims to accelerate investment in strategic, bankable projects that support the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), uniting a market of 1.4 billion people.
African Union Commission Chairperson Mahmoud Ali Youssouf declared that Africa is entering a new era of self-determination, where the continent must take control of financing and implementing its development agenda. He stressed that infrastructure investment is both a strategic and political necessity for Africa’s sovereignty and competitiveness. Youssouf called for a shift from dependency to partnership, urging African nations to build an “Africa that is connected, confident, and sovereign.”
AUDA-NEPAD CEO Nardos Bekele-Thomas reported that since the last summit in Dakar, Africa has mobilized $1.5 billion for cross-border infrastructure projects. She emphasized that the continent must approach financing through unified strategies rather than fragmented deals. Bekele-Thomas also highlighted innovative financing tools such as the Alliance for Green Infrastructure in Africa’s Project Development Fund, which recently secured $118 million under Africa50’s management.
During the Leaders’ Dialogue, AU Commissioner for Infrastructure and Energy Lerato Dorothy Mataboge reiterated that industrialization and regional integration depend on robust, interconnected infrastructure. She noted that Africa’s future prosperity will be defined by the infrastructure it builds to connect and empower its economies.
The Luanda Summit also saw the signing of three key Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs): a partnership between the African Social Security Association and AUDA-NEPAD to channel pension funds into infrastructure, a $500 million Qatar Airways endowment for renewable energy and industrialization, and the creation of the Angola Export and Trade Facility to boost regional trade.
A major highlight of the Summit was the introduction of specialized “deal rooms,” where investors and developers met to advance 13 near-bankable projects in sectors such as energy, ICT, transport, and water. These sessions are designed to speed up due diligence and move projects toward financial closure.
The Luanda Summit represents a pivotal milestone in Africa’s journey toward financing its own future. By fostering unity, strategic partnerships, and actionable commitments, it marks a defining moment in the continent’s pursuit of sustainable development, integration, and self-reliance.







