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Dangote Places a $1 Billion Bet on Zimbabwe’s Industrial Ambitions

Aliko Dangote shakes hands with Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube as President Emmerson Mnangagwa looks on. PHOTO: Gov't of Zimbabwe
Wednesday, November 12, 2025

In a powerful vote of confidence for Zimbabwe’s economy, Aliko Dangote, Africa’s foremost industrialist, has signed a landmark US$1 billion investment agreement in Zimbabwe, targeting cement production, coal mining, and power generation. The initiative aims to build an integrated industrial complex, aligning closely with the Mnangagwa administration’s Vision 2030 – Zimbabwe’s ambitious blueprint to become an industrialized upper-middle-income economy.

This deal ranks among Zimbabwe’s largest private-sector investments in over a decade. It promises to boost domestic cement output, secure steady coal supplies, expand power capacity, and create significant employment opportunities – critical components for revitalizing the country’s manufacturing sector.

Dangote’s earlier projects in Zimbabwe (2015 and 2018) faced challenges, but this renewed venture benefits from pre-identified sites, streamlined regulatory approvals, and secured energy off-take agreements, indicating stronger groundwork for success.

Should the project proceed, Dangote will join notable Nigerian investors like Benedict Peters, whose Aiteo-led ventures in platinum and battery minerals have cemented a major foreign presence in Zimbabwe’s mining sector.

For Dangote Industries, which operates across 17 African countries, Zimbabwe offers strategic advantages: abundant limestone and coal reserves, a cement market reliant on imports, and growing demand for power infrastructure.

As Zimbabwe seeks large-scale investments to accelerate its industrial growth, Dangote’s commitment signals renewed investor confidence in the country’s economic reforms and long-term development trajectory.

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