Angola

Africa's largest oil producer, Angola is striving to rebuild itself after a 30 year-long civil war, at the same time as tackling a major economic crisis related to the international oil price shocks. AFD supports Angola in its efforts to diversify the economy and promote inclusive
socioeconomic development, with the aim of ensuring long-term socio-economic stability.
  • logo linkedin
  • logo email
AFD supports Angola in its efforts to diversify the economy and promote inclusive socioeconomic development
AFD and Angola: diversifying the economy and reducing inequalities
Angola, Luanda, country page

Promoting access to water and reliable energy

Promote access to water in Angola, AFD

Promoting access to water and reliable energy

Despite significant investments in recent years, the rate of access to essential services remains low in Angola, particularly access to water. In 2020, only 57% of the population had access to an improved water source nationally and just 28% in rural areas.

The Angola government, in partnership with AFD, the World Bank, the African Development Bank and the EIB, has committed to restructuring the water and sanitation management system, by creating provincial water companies and a regulatory institute for the sector. AFD is supporting the strengthening of these public companies, as well as the rehabilitation and extension of urban and peri-urban water networks in the country’s main provinces. This will eventually provide access to water for nearly 1 million additional inhabitants in the poorest districts.

Only a third of the Angolan population has access to electricity. The government has set an ambitious goal to provide 60% of the population with electricity by 2025. Objectives include improving the financial management of the sector’s public enterprises, reducing losses, rehabilitating existing infrastructure, and expanding the electricity network from the most populous cities. Rural electrification is also a government priority in order to promote economic development in the countryside and fight against the rural exodus.

AFD is supporting these initiatives by providing €150 million in financing for the rehabilitation and extension of the existing network, as well as for technical assistance to public companies.

Developing the agriculture sector

Develop the agricultural sector in Angola

Developing the agriculture sector

Agriculture is a key sector for Angola to diversify its economy, make its growth more inclusive, and improve national food and nutritional security. This sector’s significant growth in recent years has been driven mainly by small-scale family farming, which has allowed for the expansion of cultivated areas, following the return of land to agriculture after the civil war, and government investment in public infrastructure. However, national agricultural production remains below demand, and Angola still imports more than half of its food.

AFD has been supporting the Angolan authorities, and in particular, the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, to develop a more robust and resilient agricultural sector, resulting in many decent jobs.

Consequently, AFD has committed more than €150 million in financing to four structuring projects since 2018. These projects provide the most comprehensive support possible to strengthen key sectors, from vocational training, through to access to bank financing and infrastructure financing.

Project support is provided in partnership with the other donors in Angola, including the World Bank, IFAD, the European Union and the African Development Bank (ADB).

Supporting innovation and digital entrepreneurship

Supporting innovation and digital entrepreneurship in Angola

Supporting innovation and digital entrepreneurship

Angola is a country with a very young population that has a huge potential for the creation of startups and technological and digital solutions in the transport, marketing, sales, agriculture and fishing sectors.

In 2021, the emerging Angolan startup ecosystem was ranked in the Top 115 worldwide and 2nd in Central Africa.

As part of its backing for Angola’s economic diversification and inclusive socio-economic development, AFD is supporting the Angolan start-up ecosystem through a technical cooperation program implemented between the Óscar Ribas University, SchooLab and EmLyon. This peer-to-peer partnership project, which includes an incubator, a Junior Enterprise, a Fab Lab (with TotalEnergies) and entrepreneurship training, aims to create a benchmark entrepreneurial cluster in Luanda. The success of this initiative should lead to the scaling-up of the project in the near future, in agreement with the local authorities and with the support of AFD, Expertise France and Digital Africa.

Accompanying macroeconomic reforms

governance, seminar for the judiciary, Côte d'Ivoire

Accompanying macroeconomic reforms

As Africa’s largest oil producer (OPEC, 2022), Angola remains economically dependent on oil resources. After the drop in oil prices from mid-2014, Angola found itself in a severe recession and facing severe fiscal imbalances. At the end of 2017, the government undertook a major structural reform program aimed at modernizing, diversifying and making the country’s economy attractive to investors, with the support of the IMF and the World Bank.

AFD has supported country’s economic and financial transition through a €200M public policy budget financing. The project centres on public finance management reform, based on best international standards of efficiency and transparency (PEFA, MAPS), the resizing and strengthening of public enterprise sector governance, better management of public-private partnership support, and the improvement of the Central Bank’s capacity and supervision of the financial sector.

This project is accompanied by an ambitious technical assistance program, carried out by Expertise France, with significant support from the European Union, financed by a €7.5 million grant. It aims to build a long-term bilateral peer-to-peer cooperation on reform, for the country’s development trajectory.

Optimizing urban mobility in Luanda

Nigeria Transport BRT bus

Optimizing urban mobility in Luanda

Transport in Luanda province is based on three key modes: the suburban railway system, with a single line between Luanda and Catete/Icolo & Bengo (used by 1,600 passengers/day), maritime transport, comprised of 4 boats, 2 lines and 3 stations (about 300 passengers/day), and the road network (used by 450,000 people each day, i.e., 5% of the population).

Private collective cabs, faster but more expensive than the Luanda public urban bus service, account for 68% of the modal split. Public buses are considered slow and the bus fleet is largely under capacity at peak times, causing user discomfort and insecurity. 

AFD, the Embassy’s economic department and the Angolan Ministry of Transport have used a FEXTE grant to set up a cooperation program, aimed at developing more sustainable urban mobility and coping with the agglomeration’s strong demographic growth. The CODATU association is coordinating support for this project, providing both French experience and expertise in the sector, as well as an openness to exchanges of experience with similar projects, particularly in Africa.

Promoting development through sport

Promote development through sport in Angola, AFD

Promoting development through sport

AFD promotes the ideal of sport for everyone, to drive social and educational development which guarantees gender equality and citizenship.

AFD is financing a sports and social cooperation project for women’s basketball with the LDLC ASVEL women’s club, the Tony Parker Adéquat Academy and the Angolan Formigas de Cazenga club. This project aims to empower Angolan young people through basketball. It is part of a global French initiative and is linked to the project deployed by the French Embassy in Angola (FSPI BASE-F).

11
projects funded since 2018
806
million euros in financing since 2018
45%
of financing targeted to economic diversification

Shortly after gaining independence from Portugal in 1975, Angola experienced a 27 year-long civil conflict that had a heavy human toll, ravaged the economy and much of the country's infrastructure. Since 2002, the country has been rebuilding itself, while also tackling an economic crisis related to the recent drop in oil prices. In view of the limits of the economic model adopted in recent decades, the Government has made the diversification of the economy its priority.

Angola can rely on extensive natural resources: it was Africa’s leading oil producer in 2016 and 2017, it has considerable reserves of diamonds and other mineral resources, while the country’s surface is covered by one of the most extensive water networks in the region. In addition, it has a considerable and predominantly young human capital. With some 1,800 km of coastline, located at the junction between Southern Africa and Central Africa, Angola has the geographical potential to become a major economic and commercial platform for the region. It is a member of SADC and ECCAS and is actively involved in restoring peace to the Great Lakes region. It is thereby asserting its regional role and is taking steps to develop the regional interconnection of its infrastructure networks.

With some 25.8 million inhabitants, 63% of whom are urban dwellers, Angola is the seventh most populous country in Africa. There are high levels of inequality in the country, despite the fact that it has the status of middle-income country (MIC) and the third largest GDP per capita in Sub-Saharan Africa. Poverty remains pervasive and 28% of the population was living under the international poverty line of USD 1.90 a day in 2014. Life expectancy stands at 52.3 years, one child in 6 does not go to school and the World Bank estimates that over half of the population suffers from periodic malnutrition.

AFD is helping the Angolan Government achieve its objectives of economic diversification (NDP), inclusive and sustainable development (SDGs) and climate change mitigation and adaptation (Paris Agreement). 

AFD's Angola office is directly attached to the Southern Africa regional office in Johannesburg.

Interactive map
This map is illustrative and does not list all the projects funded by AFD. Find the complete list of our projects on the opendata.afd.fr portal
Launch search
See map of all projects

Downloads

Institutional document

AFD Group and Angola

In Angola, AFD Group supports the sustainable development priorities of its local partners, by finan

...
Feb 2023
Institutional document

AFD and Agriculture in Angola

Angola’s agricultural potential is considered to be the greatest in Southern Africa, thanks to con

...
Feb 2023
Institutional document

AFD Group and Europe in Southern Africa

The collaboration between AFD and Team Europe in Southern Africa allows us the opportunity to increa

...
Feb 2022
Institutional document

AFD Group in Southern Africa

In Southern Africa, AFD Group intervenes in ten countries: Angola, South Africa, Botswana, Eswa

...
Oct 2021
Research document

Angola: a vital but constrained transformation of the economic model in the run-up to the 2022 elections?

The country is therefore approaching the general elections of August 24, 2022 in a changing economic

...
Jan 2023
Research document

Semestrial Panorama 2022 #2

The rise in commodity prices had already been happening since mid-2020 and is subject to an in-depth

...
Sep 2022
Research document

Prevention or treatment? The introduction of a new antimalarial drug in Angola

In spite of massive efforts to generalize efficient prevention, such as insecticide-treated mosquito...
Sep 2017
Research document

Developing Lower Secondary Education: a Rural Issue and Challenge for Sub-Saharan Africa

The current development of African education systems focuses on the perspective of universal complet...
Oct 2010
View all publications

Contact