Zambia is testing a new way to manage sovereign risk. Under a Zambia debt-for-energy structure, Lusaka is using a US$600m African Development Bank loan and its own cash to retire US$1.36bn of expensive eurobonds, while locking in a long-term commitment to upgrade its power grid. This aligns debt relief, energy investment and development finance in a single transaction that other African issuers are likely to study closely.
The deal links an AfDB-backed liability management operation with a Grid Resilience Programme that will receive up to US$275m over 15 years. The programme targets Zambia’s electricity distribution network rather than new generation, aiming to cut losses, reduce outages and create capacity for new customers and renewable projects.
The AfDB loan of US$600m, combined with domestic resources, funds a tender offer to buy back US$1.36bn of outstanding sovereign notes at a discount. This reduces Zambia’s future interest bill and frees fiscal space that would otherwise service costly external debt. Part of that saving is ring-fenced for electricity infrastructure, ensuring that fiscal gains translate into tangible investment in an essential growth input.
The transaction was approved by the AfDB Board of Directors and is being presented as a potential blueprint for similar initiatives across Africa.
This is a notable shift from traditional restructurings, where sovereign liability management, energy investment and development finance often move on separate tracks. Here they are explicitly integrated. Debt relief is used not only to stabilise the fiscal position, but also to underwrite investment in the very infrastructure that should support future growth and, over time, strengthen Zambia’s repayment capacity.
The Grid Resilience Programme would be coordinated by GreenCo Power Services and implemented by a newly set up entity with private-sector and government representation. Implementation will be handled by a newly set up entity with a board led by private-sector representatives together with the Government.
For Zambia, the benefits extend beyond immediate fiscal relief. A stronger distribution grid should improve reliability, reduce technical losses and ease integration of solar, battery storage and regional power trading. This is particularly important for a system still heavily dependent on hydropower and exposed to drought-related shocks. Better networks improve the country’s ability to manage imports and diversified generation during future supply stress.
The transaction also sends a broader market signal. By choosing to retire restructured bonds in full and anchor that move in a defined investment programme, the government is positioning itself as a proactive issuer rather than a passive price-taker. That should support the narrative that Zambia’s restructuring is reaching a credible endgame and that the country is re-entering the investable universe, especially for investors focused on energy, infrastructure and transition themes.
For African sovereigns with stretched balance sheets and underfunded power systems, the Zambia debt-for-energy model offers a practical template. It shows how multilateral capital can be structured to deliver both fiscal savings and targeted infrastructure upgrades, while creating clearer visibility for investors on how freed-up resources will be used.
If the tender closes successfully and the grid programme gains traction, asset managers and development financiers will be watching for which issuer next adapts this Zambia debt-for-energy approach to their own markets.
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