By Hasan Muhammad
Editor's Note: The writer is a freelance columnist on international affairs based in Karachi, Pakistan. The article reflects the author's opinions and not necessarily the views of China Economic Net.
Earlier this month, Changsha - the capital of China’s Hunan province - became a buzzing epicenter of a renewed Sino-African economic embrace. At the fourth China-Africa Economic and Trade Expo, 176 new cooperation projects worth a staggering $11.39 billion were inked, marking a 45.8% surge in the number of signed deals compared to the previous edition. This event was not just a business fair; it was a clear reaffirmation of China’s long-term vision for Africa.
For Africa, a continent yearning for modern infrastructure, sustainable development, and inclusive economic progress, the timing could not have been better. And for China, which has been Africa’s largest trading partner for 16 consecutive years, this engagement reaffirms a strategy rooted in strategic foresight rather than transactional opportunism.
With over 4,700 companies, financial institutions, and business associations participating, this year’s expo became the most expansive yet. Showcasing everything from African agricultural delicacies and fashion to Chinese engineering machinery and daily-use goods, the event painted a vivid picture of a relationship that has matured beyond extractive trade into diversified partnership.
The numbers speak volumes: bilateral trade between China and Africa reached a record $295.6 billion in 2023, and has already jumped 12.4% year-on-year in the first five months of 2025. These aren’t abstract figures. They represent real roads built, factories running, homes powered, and jobs created across the continent.
Of the 176 projects signed, 28 were dedicated to infrastructure, totaling $5.27 billion. These include agreements in transport, water conservation, energy, communications, and industrial upgrades. Since 2022, Africa has emerged as the largest market for Chinese exports tied to foreign-contracted projects, including critical sectors like marine engineering, electric motors, and construction machinery.
More than a decade into Africa’s participation in the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), the continent is seeing visible dividends. Chinese state-owned enterprises have built or renovated over 10,000 kilometers of railways and nearly 100,000 kilometers of highways across Africa. But the current phase of China-Africa cooperation seems to be entering a more sophisticated arena: green transformation and digital connectivity.
One of the most profound yet under-discussed shifts is China’s role in catalyzing Africa’s industrial base. As nations across the continent seek to move beyond raw material exports and toward value-added manufacturing, China’s export of machinery, expertise, and technology is giving a much-needed nudge. For example, exports of construction equipment and electrical generators from China to Africa have surged by more than 50% in recent months - tools not just for building infrastructure, but for building capacity.
Companies like China Communications Construction Co, with operations in 52 African countries and over 1,500 projects completed, are not just contractors; they are collaborators in Africa’s long-term growth story. Their next chapter involves pushing deeper into renewable energy, smart logistics, and eco-conscious urban design - all critical levers for Africa’s ambition to leapfrog into the future.
As the world faces economic headwinds, climate emergencies, and shifting geopolitical sands, the China-Africa axis stands out for its constancy and evolution. From infrastructure and trade to climate resilience and digital leapfrogging, this partnership - if stewarded wisely - can become a lodestar for South-South cooperation.
Africa doesn’t just need donors. It needs durable allies. This expo was not just a milestone; it was a springboard into a future where Africa’s modernization is not a distant dream, but a shared endeavor - powered by cranes, code, and clean energy.
(Editor: fubo )