Chapo arrived at Kigali International Airport to join more than 2,800 participants from over 70 countries. Gabon’s President Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema is also attending the two-day event, which runs on 14–15 May 2025. The forum brings together heads of state, chief executives, and institutional investors to shape Africa’s economic agenda.
This year’s theme — Scale or Fail: Why Africa Must Embrace Shared Ownership — sets a direct challenge to African businesses and governments. The agenda calls for bold cross-border growth. It asks leaders to move beyond national markets and build at continental scale.
Forum discussions centre on sectors where Africa can move fastest. Energy transition, infrastructure, agriculture, and regional integration sit at the top of the agenda. These are areas where Mozambique has clear assets and strong investor interest.
Mozambique’s offshore natural gas fields remain one of southern Africa’s most significant investment opportunities. Its deep-water ports provide strategic access to regional and global trade routes. Both sectors align directly with the forum’s focus on shared ownership and cross-border capital deployment.
The shared ownership model matters for investors. It spreads project risk across multiple partners. It draws in public and private capital together. It also builds the political resilience that large infrastructure projects need.
A core forum objective is reducing trade barriers across the continent. Harmonised regulations lower the cost of cross-border investment. They also accelerate deal timelines, which matters to institutional investors with deployment targets.
Mozambique stands to gain directly from deeper regional integration. Its ports serve landlocked neighbours including Zambia, Zimbabwe, and Malawi. Stronger trade corridors expand throughput and generate long-term infrastructure returns. Agriculture exports also benefit when border frictions ease.
Chapo’s presence in Kigali signals that Mozambique is actively courting international capital. Bilateral conversations on the sidelines of high-profile forums often accelerate deals that formal processes slow down. The forum provides exactly that kind of access.
Energy and infrastructure commitments made at the forum will set the tone for Mozambique’s investment pipeline through 2026. Investors should monitor whether the shared ownership framework translates into concrete public-private partnership structures in the months ahead. Regulatory announcements tied to the forum’s outcomes will be an early indicator of momentum.
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