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Zambia Resumes Expansion of Grain Exports to DRC Ahead of Anticipated 2026 Bumper Harvest

Zambia is reasserting its position as a regional grain supplier, with renewed efforts to expand exports to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) as the country anticipates another strong agricultural season in 2026. Backed by improved production, favorable weather conditions, and growing regional demand, Zambia’s grain sector is entering a decisive phase of commercial scaling one that connects surplus production to one of Africa’s largest consumer markets.

Zambia’s maize production has rebounded significantly following the drought-affected 2024 season. According to recent agricultural forecasts, maize output for the 2025/2026 marketing year is projected at approximately 3.6–3.7 million metric tonnes, marking a historic recovery.According to USDA and Zamstats, total grain supply is estimated at over 4.04 million metric tonnes, against national requirements of about 3.54 million metric tonnes, resulting in a surplus of over 500,000 metric tonnes.

This surplus positions Zambia to:

With consistent rainfall patterns and expanded cultivation, early projections suggest 2026 could sustain or exceed these production levels, reinforcing Zambia’s export readiness.

The Democratic Republic of the Congo remains Zambia’s most strategic export destination for grain due to its structural food deficit and rapidly growing population. A Population exceeding 100 million people, rapid urbanization increasing dependence on market-supplied food and limited domestic grain production capacity has been major key drivers.

The demographic pressure within the DRC creates a persistent demand gap for staple foods, particularly maize and mealie meal. Zambia, with its geographic proximity and surplus production, naturally fills this gap.

Zambia presents a contrasting demographic and economic profile that supports surplus generation:

This structure allows Zambia to:

The Zambia–DRC corridor is one of the most active informal and formal grain trade routes in Africa.

Current Trade Characteristics

The DRC is already a major trade partner, accounting for a notable share of Zambia’s regional exports and forming a critical part of its non-traditional export markets.

Agriculture remains a strategic pillar of Zambia’s diversification agenda:

As Zambia pushes toward industrialization of its food systems, grain exports to the DRC are evolving from:

“Surplus disposal” → “structured regional trade strategy”

The viability of sustained exports depends on logistics and infrastructure:

Key Enablers

Critical Gaps

Despite export expansion, Zambia continues to maintain a cautious policy stance:

This dual approach ensures:

The 2026 export expansion presents high-impact opportunities:

Aggregation & Storage

Value Addition

Logistics & Trade Structuring

Digital Transformation

Zambia’s expansion into the DRC market reflects a broader shift toward regional food systems integration.

With:

Zambia is increasingly emerging as:

Editorial Perspective

The anticipated 2026 bumper harvest is not just about increased output it is about what Zambia does with it.

The real opportunity lies in:

  • Structuring exports
  • Strengthening value chains
  • Embedding technology and infrastructure into agriculture

In doing so, Zambia moves beyond being a producer toward becoming a regional food systems leader.

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