Qatar seeks to deepen its influence in Africa with $103bn investment pledge

Oxford Economics Africa reports that the Democratic Republic of the Congo will receive the largest share at $21 billion, targeted for mining, hydrocarbons, agriculture, and 12 other sectors. Botswana’s package stretches across infrastructure, diamond processing, tourism, cybersecurity, and defence. Burundi’s deal focuses on energy, farming, and infrastructure.
Africa has long exported raw resources with little domestic value addition. Analysts say Qatar’s pledges could help change that, especially in economies heavily reliant on mining exports.
In Botswana, the funding may help reduce the country’s reliance on volatile diamond cycles. In the DRC and Zambia, the capital could unlock vast reserves of critical minerals essential for the global green transition transition with lithium and cobalt projects leading the pack.
Still, Oxford Economics warns that global diamond prices remain weak, and poor infrastructure continues to hinder mineral development.
The Al Mansour deal is part of a bigger wave of Gulf capital targeting Africa. According to Oxford Economics, investments from GCC investments in Africa’s energy and minerals are accelerating, hit $2.2 billion in African critical minerals in the first half of 2025. Abu Dhabi’s International Resources Holding acquired Zambia’s Mopani copper mine for $1.1 billion last year, while DP World and AD Ports are expanding aggressively in African ports.
This comes as U.S. protectionism rises under Donald Trump’s second term, leaving many African states seeking alternative partners. Gulf nations are stepping into the gap with both money and political leverage.
For Doha, the $103 billion is about more than short-term returns. Oxford Economics says it fits into Qatar’s strategy to reduce dependence on hydrocarbons and lock in access to food, minerals, and new markets.
Source: Africabusinessinsider