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China × Africa · Technology & Innovation

China Is Made In China

Exploring how China's extraordinary technological rise is transforming the African continent — through infrastructure, digital innovation, clean energy, and strategic partnerships that are reshaping the future.

The Story of a Rising Superpower

China has emerged as the world's leading technological powerhouse in the 21st century. From manufacturing semiconductors and electric vehicles to building 5G networks and AI systems — China's innovation engine is unmatched in scale and speed.

This platform documents China's technological advancement and its growing role across Africa: building railways, ports, smart cities, and digital infrastructure that connects a continent of 1.4 billion people to the global economy.

We believe in honest, informed dialogue about one of the defining geopolitical and technological stories of our time.

$47B+
Chinese investment in Africa annually
54
African nations with active Chinese projects
10,000+
km of railways built across the continent
#1
China as Africa's largest trading partner since 2009

Sectors

Technology at the Frontier

High-Speed Rail

China operates more high-speed rail than the rest of the world combined, and is now exporting that expertise across East Africa, connecting landlocked nations to coastal ports.

5G & Telecom

Huawei and ZTE have deployed 5G networks across dozens of African cities, leapfrogging copper-wire infrastructure and bringing mobile internet to remote regions.

Clean Energy

China is Africa's largest financier of solar and hydroelectric projects, powering millions of homes and businesses with renewable energy built by Chinese engineers.

Smart Cities

From Konza in Kenya to Diamniadio in Senegal — Chinese firms are designing and building Africa's next-generation smart city hubs with AI-driven infrastructure.

Artificial Intelligence

China's AI firms like Alibaba Cloud, Baidu, and Hikvision are deploying surveillance, logistics, and agricultural AI systems across the African continent.

Port Infrastructure

From Djibouti to Lagos, Chinese-built deep-water ports are transforming maritime trade routes and positioning Africa as a key node in the Belt and Road Initiative.

Landmark Projects Reshaping a Continent

From the first diplomatic handshakes of the 1950s to today's mega-infrastructure corridors, China's engagement with Africa spans a century of solidarity, construction, and shared development. Here are the defining milestones.

1955
01

Bandung Conference — Asian-African Solidarity

Indonesia — China's Premier Zhou Enlai stood alongside 29 newly independent African and Asian nations to declare the "Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence" — the philosophical foundation of all future China-Africa engagement.

1956
02

Egypt Diplomatic Recognition — First African Tie

Egypt — China and Egypt establish full diplomatic relations, making Egypt the first African nation to recognise the People's Republic of China. China supported Egypt's nationalisation of the Suez Canal, cementing early solidarity.

1958
03

Morocco & Sudan Diplomatic Ties

North Africa — China extends its African diplomatic network to Morocco and Sudan, beginning a pattern of South-South diplomatic outreach that would reach all 54 nations over the following decades.

1960
04

The Year of Africa — Mass Diplomatic Expansion

Pan-Africa — 1960 saw 17 African nations gain independence. China rapidly recognised Guinea, Mali, Somalia, Congo, and others, becoming one of the first major powers to engage the newly independent continent on equal terms.

1963
05

Chinese Medical Teams Dispatch to Algeria

Algeria — The first Chinese medical team of 24 doctors landed in Algeria in 1963, beginning a programme that has since sent over 20,000 doctors to 48 African countries. It remains one of the longest-running South-South health missions in history.

1964
06

Zhou Enlai's Grand African Tour — 10 Nations

Pan-Africa — Premier Zhou Enlai visited 10 African countries, announcing China's "Eight Principles" for foreign aid: respect for sovereignty, no conditions, equal partnership. This tour set the tone for China's Africa policy for generations.

1966
07

Friendship Textile Mill — Tanzania

Tanzania — China built and gifted the Friendship Textile Mill in Dar es Salaam, one of the first large-scale Chinese industrial projects on the continent, providing thousands of jobs and producing fabric for East African markets.

1969
08

Mogadishu Friendship Hospital — Somalia

Somalia — China funded and built the Mogadishu Friendship Hospital, one of the largest medical facilities in East Africa at the time. Chinese surgeons trained Somali medical staff for over a decade, establishing lasting healthcare infrastructure.

1971
09

African Votes Restore China's UN Security Council Seat

United Nations — 26 African nations voted with China at the UN General Assembly to restore the People's Republic's seat (Resolution 2758), displacing Taiwan. Mao Zedong famously declared "It was our African friends who carried us into the UN."

1975
10

TAZARA Railway — Tanzania & Zambia

Tanzania & Zambia — The 1,860 km Tanzania-Zambia Railway, financed with a US$500 million interest-free loan and built by 50,000 Chinese workers alongside 65,000 Africans, connected landlocked Zambia's copper belt to the Tanzanian port of Dar es Salaam. At the time, it was the largest Chinese overseas project ever undertaken.

1976
11

National Stadium — Tanzania

Tanzania — China built the National Stadium in Dar es Salaam as a gift to the Tanzanian people, seating 60,000 fans. It became a symbol of Afro-Chinese friendship and hosted independence celebrations and AFCON matches for decades.

1979
12

Kariba North Bank Hydropower Extension — Zambia

Zambia — China assisted in expanding the Kariba North Bank power station, providing critical electricity to Zambian industries and cities. This was one of the first Chinese energy infrastructure projects in Sub-Saharan Africa.

1983
13

Agricultural Assistance Programme — 30 Nations

Pan-Africa — China sent agricultural technicians to over 30 African nations in the 1980s, introducing hybrid rice cultivation, drip irrigation, and soil management techniques. Chinese-developed hybrid rice would later feed millions across Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Madagascar.

1988
14

Kpong Hydroelectric Expansion — Ghana

Ghana — Chinese engineers supported expansion of the Kpong Dam, strengthening Ghana's electricity supply and deepening Sino-Ghanaian technical cooperation that would lay groundwork for later Belt and Road projects.

1993
15

Bui Dam Pre-Feasibility Studies — Ghana

Ghana — China began early technical cooperation on the Bui Dam project, eventually leading to a $600M Exim Bank-financed construction project that delivered 400 MW of clean hydroelectric power to Ghana's grid by 2013.

1999
16

FOCAC Founding Preparations — Pan-Africa

Pan-Africa — China and 44 African nations began co-creating the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) framework, establishing the institutional backbone for all future bilateral development, trade, and investment agreements.

2000
17

FOCAC Founded — Beijing Summit

China — The inaugural Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) summit was held in Beijing with 44 African nations, launching a structured framework for diplomatic, economic, and cultural engagement that now drives billions in annual investment.

2006
18

FOCAC Beijing Action Plan — $5 Billion Pledge

China — The 2006 FOCAC summit saw China pledge US$5 billion in loans and investment, cancel debts owed by 31 African countries, and announce 0-tariff trade for 190 categories of African goods. President Hu Jintao declared China Africa's "all-weather strategic partner."

2009
19

China Becomes Africa's Largest Trading Partner

Pan-Africa — Bilateral trade surpassed $100 billion for the first time, and China overtook the United States as Africa's single largest trading partner — a position it has held every year since, with trade now exceeding $280 billion annually.

2012
20

African Union Headquarters — Ethiopia

Ethiopia — China gifted the $200 million African Union headquarters building in Addis Ababa, a landmark 99-metre tower that serves as the diplomatic capital of the African Union and hosts all 55 member states. It stands as one of the most visible symbols of Sino-African partnership.

2013
21

Belt and Road Initiative — Africa's Entry

Pan-Africa — President Xi Jinping launched the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), incorporating 52 African nations. This transformed Chinese engagement from bilateral aid to a continent-wide infrastructure investment strategy covering roads, rail, ports, power, and digital networks.

2014
22

Mombasa–Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway — Kenya

Kenya — Construction began on the 480 km Standard Gauge Railway linking Nairobi to the port of Mombasa. Financed by China Exim Bank ($3.8B) and built by China Road and Bridge Corporation, it cut travel time from 12 hours to 4 and became Kenya's largest infrastructure project since independence.

2016
23

Addis Ababa–Djibouti Railway

Ethiopia & Djibouti — The 759 km electrified railway connecting landlocked Addis Ababa to the Red Sea port of Djibouti opened, replacing the colonial-era narrow-gauge line. Financed and built by China Railway Group and CREC, it slashed freight costs for Ethiopia by over 50%.

2017
24

China's First Overseas Military Base — Djibouti

Djibouti — China opened its first overseas military logistics facility in Djibouti, marking a historic expansion of its naval presence. Combined with the adjacent Djibouti Free Trade Zone ($3.5B), this positioned China as a permanent strategic power on the Horn of Africa.

2018
25

FOCAC Beijing Summit — $60 Billion Pledge

China — The 2018 FOCAC summit saw President Xi Jinping pledge US$60 billion in financing for African development covering infrastructure, agriculture, health, digital economy, and poverty reduction — the largest single commitment in the forum's history.

2019
26

PEACE Undersea Cable — East Africa to Asia

East Africa — Construction of the PEACE (Pakistan and East Africa Connecting Europe) undersea fiber-optic cable began, linking Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Tanzania directly to the global internet backbone — bringing high-speed broadband to previously underserved coastal nations.

2021
27

COVID-19 Vaccine Donation — Pan-Africa

Pan-Africa — China donated over 200 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to African nations, and Sinopharm/Sinovac became the primary vaccines used across the continent when Western manufacturers prioritised their own markets. China also donated 3,000 tonnes of medical supplies and PPE in 2020.

2022
28

Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam — Completion

Ethiopia — Africa's largest hydroelectric dam (6,450 MW capacity) reached full operation, with Chinese companies including SEPCO III Electric Power Construction providing key turbine and electrical systems. The dam will supply clean electricity to 65 million Ethiopians and export power to Sudan, Kenya, and Djibouti.

2023
29

Lobito Corridor Railway — Angola, DRC & Zambia

Southern Africa — China signed agreements to upgrade and extend the Lobito Corridor, a 1,300 km railway linking Angola's Atlantic port of Lobito through the DRC to Zambia's copper belt — creating an Atlantic-facing mineral export route that could reshape Southern Africa's economic geography.

2024
30

FOCAC Beijing Summit — $50 Billion & Digital Silk Road

China — The 2024 FOCAC summit launched China's "Digital Silk Road" expansion into Africa, covering AI data centres, smart city rollouts in 10 cities, 5G expansion, satellite internet, and e-commerce platforms — positioning China as Africa's dominant digital infrastructure partner for the decade ahead.

Featured Videos

Watch documentaries, reports, and analyses about China's technological advancements and its partnerships across the African continent.

China in Africa: Should the West Be Worried? — The Economist
China in Africa: Building Capacity — CGTN
Raw Materials Race: China & Europe in Africa — DW Documentary

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