Commentators often frame Beijing's investments as part of a grand
strategy to secure military footholds, exploit debt vulnerabilities and exert
undue influence over the continent.
This narrative, amplified through lenses of
great-power competition, suggests that Chinese firms are aggressively building
ports to create debt traps that could lead to asset seizures if African nations
falter on repayments.
However, a closer examination of the evidence reveals a
different story.
Contrary
to portrayals of China as an aggressive lender imposing unwanted projects,
nearly all Chinese-funded ports in Africa stem directly from requests by
African governments seeking to address longstanding infrastructure deficits.
African leaders have long recognised that inadequate port facilities hinder
economic growth, limit trade competitiveness and constrain access to global
markets.
With limited domestic capital and waning interest from traditional
Western donors, many turned to China as a willing partner capable of delivering
large-scale projects quickly and at scale.
Today,
Africa’s infrastructure gap, estimated at $130 billion annually, costs the
continent up to 2.5 percent of annual GDP growth and inflates intra-African
trade costs by up to 40 per cent.
The demand is therefore not manufactured; it
is existential. Countries in the region, therefore see ports as gateways to
economic transformation. Without modern, deep-water facilities capable of
handling mega-container ships, Africa remains locked out of global value
chains.
This
thinking aligns perfectly with Africa’s own vision. The African Union’s Agenda
2063 and the African Continental Free Trade Area both hinge on seamless
movement of goods and people.
The AfCFTA’s success demands efficient logistics hubs
that reduce transit times, lower costs and unlock value in agriculture,
manufacturing and services. Chinese investments directly support these goals.
The
uncomfortable truth is that the traditional Western development partnership
abandoned hard economic sectors long ago. Over the past two decades, European
and American aid has drifted decisively toward social sectors such as health,
education, civil society.
These are often accompanied by a thicket of
conditionalities, governance audits and environmental benchmarks so stringent
they effectively veto any large-scale civil engineering.
Modern
ports, unlike the naval bases of colonial memory, are glass-and-cable hubs of
efficiency. They require power, data, logistics and maintenance. They create
ecosystems of small businesses, trucking routes and cold storage.
For many
countries, including Kenya, the China port expansion partnership also builds
the roads and railways to the hinterland; and the industrial park next door.
The projects also promote critical technology transfer and job creation for
local populations.
Another
view often missed by China-Africa port development partnership is that the
investments benefit everyone, including the West. More efficient logistics hubs
reduce global supply-chain costs, enhance food security and stabilise economies
prone to fragility.
A prosperous Africa integrated into world trade is a market
for European and American goods, a source of critical minerals and a bulwark
against instability.
Framing China’s role as inherently threatening risks
alienating the very governments best positioned to shape their futures. It also
ignores that diversified partnerships strengthen African leverage, not diminish
it.
It
is now proper to argue that increased Chinese investments in Africa has led to
multiplicity of initiatives by different countries, either individually or in
collection, targeted at enhancing development cooperation with Africa.
This is
something good for Africa. At the forefront is the Partnership for Global
Infrastructure and Investment, a G7 initiative launched in 2022 that aims to
mobilise $600 billion for sustainable infrastructure globally by 2027, with a
strong focus on Africa.
The
United States, for its part, has adopted a deal-based approach, prioritising
commercial partnerships and strategic investment in critical minerals over
traditional aid models.
The
UK launched the Clean Green Initiative in 2021, pledging $4 billion in climate
financing for sustainable infrastructure.
From
Brussels, came the Global Gateway; the European Union's ambitious strategy to
counterbalance China's Belt and Road Initiative by mobilising up to $352
billion for sustainable infrastructure projects worldwide between 2021 and
2027.
Ultimately,
China’s port-building in Africa is a story of responsiveness, not ratcheting
influence. African governments have requested this development support because
the continent’s transformation cannot wait for ideological purity tests.
What
the West should do, is not lecture from the sidelines. It should compete. If
Washington or Brussels truly worries about Chinese influence at African ports,
the answer is not to publish another critical report.
It is to offer better
financing for the next generation of terminals; instead of demanding that
Africa first abandon the partnerships that are already working.
The writer is a scholar of international relations
with a focus on China-Africa development cooperation. X: @Cavinceworld