The DRC and Zambia hold vast deposits of critical raw materials such as copper, cobalt,
zinc,
iron and
uranium. As of December 2025, exploitation of these resources is dominated by foreign companies, particularly from China. Much of the raw materials are exported via ports on Africa's eastern and southern coasts:
Dar es Salaam in
Tanzania,
Beira in
Mozambique and
Durban in
South Africa. Transportation relies heavily on trucks, with roundtrip journeys taking several weeks. The railway lines of the Lobito Corridor, when operational, would provide a quicker, cheaper and more reliable export route. That this route is oriented towards the
Atlantic Ocean, i.e. towards the US and Europe, makes it particularly attractive to these actors. By supporting a westward-oriented export corridor, the US and EU are hoping to gain easier access to critical raw materials and to diminish the Chinese dominance in the region's mining sector. Through its
Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), China has also made significant contributions to infrastructure development in the region. The
European Commission describes the Lobito Corridor as a "key Global Gateway flagship." In light of this, in November 2025, China signed a $1.4 billion agreement with Zambia and Tanzania for the modernisation of the competing
TAZARA Railway, linking Zambia's Copperbelt to
Tanzania's
Dar es Salaam port. The Benguela and TAZARA railways could be better integrated. Joining the Lobito Corridor to the TAZARA could create a single trans-continental corridor from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean. ==References==