China’s Belt and Road Initiative and Africa’s infrastructure development ambitions

Over the last decades, China has been at the forefront of championing multiple global initiatives, including the Global Development Initiative, the Global Security Initiative, and the Global Civilization Initiative.

One of such global development initiatives is the Belt and Road Initiative, which has become known shortly as ‘BRI’.

Launched in 2013 by Chinese President Xi Jinping, China’s BRI is one of the most ambitious infrastructure projects ever conceived in the history of the world.

The BRI is earmarked to recreate the historic Silk Road trade route to open up the world market and establish a trade and investment network spanning the three continents of Africa, Asia, and Europe to facilitate greater global growth and development.

For the Chinese leadership, they aspire to maintain an open world economic system and achieve diversified, independent, balanced, and sustainable development with a shared future.

The BRI is now not simply an economic initiative but also a global public good instrument, where resources are being rallied to achieve this ambitious plan.

BRI matters to developing countries

It is key to mention that the Belt ad Road Initiative is not a China-only story.

Its primary goal is to address the vast infrastructure demand in developing countries.

As of August 2023, 155 countries were listed as having signed up to the BRI.

The participating countries represent more than half of the world’s gross domestic product (GDP) and nearly 75 per cent of its population.

Beyond the numerous global discussions surrounding the viability and relevance of the BRI, the initiative is active, with a number of projects already finished or in progress and contributing to economic growth and creating unlimited job opportunities.

As of October 2023, there had been over 3000 projects completed under the BRI, generating over 420,000 jobs.

BRI member countries in the global south are aiming to maintain and increase their involvement in the initiative.

To these receiving states, where infrastructure financing is desperately needed, geopolitical externalities are of secondary concern.

BRI and Africa’s connectivity ambitions

It is imperative to ask questions that border on the significance of the BRI for Africa’s own development future.

How does it fit into Africa’s infrastructure development agenda? – Its outright significant.

The primary infrastructure bottlenecks for the continent have long been identified as energy, water, sanitation, telecoms, and transportation, with 30 countries regularly facing power outages and slightly more than a third of Africans having access to electricity.

By 2025, the African Development Bank estimates that the continent will need to spend up to $170 billion annually to upgrade its infrastructure, with two-thirds of that amount going towards brand-new infrastructure and the remaining one-third for maintenance.

In Africa, demand for electricity will increase by 93 per cent by 2035, around 47 per cent of roads will need to be paved, ports must increase their average container handling performance from 20 to 25 to 30 moves per hour, and an additional 300 million people must have access to the Internet to keep up with the continent’s economic growth.

The World Bank estimates that to achieve universal Internet access throughout Africa, $100 billion will need to be invested in infrastructure, such as 4G stations, and at least 250,000 kilometers of fiber will be required to build and maintain broadband networks.

For Africa to experience economic success and sustained growth, the infrastructure gap must be filled.

Improved infrastructure would make it easier to conduct more intraregional and international trade, lower business costs, increase Africa’s competitiveness both domestically and internationally, and act as a catalyst for the continent’s economic transformation and diversification through industrialization, value addition, and sustainable and inclusive growth.

The BRI is delivering infrastructure development across Africa, and the continent has a more positive view of the initiative than anywhere else outside China.

As of August 2022, 50 of the 55 countries in Africa had signed some sort of memorandum of understanding or other agreements on the BRI.

The African Union has also signed a Memorandum of Understanding on BRI cooperation with China.

Some countries, such as Kenya, Tanzania, and Somalia (on the shores of the Indian Ocean), as well as Egypt and Djibouti (on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea), have strategic locations that make them natural BRI partners because they link Africa, Asia, and Europe.

For the rest of the many countries on the continent that have joined the BRI countries list, it is to help them meet their urgent infrastructural development needs.

Boosting intra-African trade

Africa has an ambitious plan for a common and single market through the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

Transporting goods between nations has been a hindrance to intercontinental trade because the continent is made up of several small landlocked nations without access to ports.

The primary cause of this is a lack of streamlined and effective transportation routes throughout the continent, which leads to high expenses from shoddy infrastructure.

To remove integration bottlenecks, it is essential to invest in telecommunications infrastructure, ports, power generation, roadway and railroad infrastructure.

China has aggressively been at the forefront of infrastructure financing across the continent, helping African countries to build many infrastructure projects over the years.

According to research by the Centre for Global Development, a United States (US) think tank, China’s two major foreign development banks invested $23 billion in infrastructure projects on the continent between 2007 and 2020.

That amounts to $8 billion more than the combined contributions of the other top eight lenders, which include the World Bank, the African Development Bank, and the US and European development banks.

Africa’s agenda 2063 and BRI vision

In January 2015, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, at the 24th African Union (AU) Assembly of Heads of State and Government, Africans adopted a shared strategic framework for inclusive growth and sustainable development called Agenda 2063.

That was meant to be a strategic guide to Africa’s development in the next 50 years.

The goal of Agenda 2063 is to fulfill seven aspirations, each with specific objectives that, if met, would bring Africa one step closer to realising its vision for 2063.

The Agenda 2063 states category aspiration number two of Africa’s quest to build a connected continent in all shapes and forms within the next 50 years.

Africans aspire to build “an integrated continent, politically united, and based on the ideals of Pan-Africanism and the vision of Africa’s Renaissance.”

This, according to the goals of these aspirations, would entail developing a world-class infrastructure crisscrossing Africa — “improving connectivity through newer and bolder initiatives to link the continent by rail, road, sea, and air; and developing regional and continental power pools, as well as ICT.”

BRI is already delivering infrastructure development across Africa, and the continent has a more positive view of the BRI.

African infrastructure and economic growth may be unified and expedited as a result of China’s participation in infrastructure projects on the continent, and the Belt and Road Initiative’s goal of enhancing connectivity among member nations resonates directly with Africa’s own ambitions for the next 50 years.

By Paul Frimpong

Source: GNA

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