The Africa Hour

Africa Policy Research Institute

A Pan-African show that discusses public policy issues from diverse viewpoints, and breaks down analysis into a context that is easily digestible by listeners. The podcast explores different themes and examines their manifestations in African countries.

  1. May 7

    The DRC Has the Cobalt, Why Isn't It Building the Batteries Yet?

    Across Africa, countries hold the minerals that underpin modern industry. But turning these into higher value products depends on something less visible: the technical expertise, training systems, and institutional linkages that turn raw materials into complex products. In this episode of The Africa Hour, we explore the topic of skills through one of the most demanding manufacturing processes today: batteries. From chemistry and engineering to software and quality control, battery production requires a tightly coordinated system of capabilities. Using the Democratic Republic of Congo as a central case, we examine what it would take to build those capabilities locally, and where the current gaps lie. We also look outward, to China, where skills systems have been built deliberately over time, linking education, training, and industry at scale. Guests: Geruad Neema is a China-Africa relations expert, focusing on natural resources governance and the impact of great power competition on African countries. He is also the Africa editor for the China-Global South Project. He has led research on China’s copper and cobalt supply chains in the DRC and also advised government agencies and think tanks on China-Africa mining relations.  Prof. Kaniki Tumba is an academic at the School of Chemical and Minerals Engineering, North-West University, and an Associate Editor for the South African Journal of Chemical Engineering. He is lead at the South African Circular Minerals and Metals Initiative, and a Research Director at the African Center of Excellence for Advanced Battery Research. His research focuses on chemical engineering thermodynamics, mineral processing, and renewable energy storage. Prof. Hercule Kalele is the Head of the Department of Petrochemistry and Refining at the University of Kinshasa and the Technical Director at the Congolese Battery Council. In his current role, he oversees the implementation of the battery and electric vehicle value chain within the DRC. A Professor of Chemistry and Electrochemistry, he holds a doctorate in Chemistry and Materials Physics with a specialisation in active materials for batteries and electric supercapacitors.  Further readings: A Battery Industry in the Central African Copperbelt? Regional and Geopolitical Dimensions by Patience Mususa and Michel S. Lutandula for APRI  Africa's Development Dynamics 2024 by OECD  Blue Metal Blues: Cobalt, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and China by SAIIA How can Africa make the most of its transition minerals? by Just Minerals Africa  Identification of Skills Gaps in South Africa by the Department of Higher Education and Training (South Africa) Incentives for SMEs to Invest in Skills: Lessons From European Good Practices by OECD Learning Outcomes of African Engineering Students in a Chinese Context: A Qualitative Study by Jiabin Zhu On China, Minerals, and Power Competition by Christian G.N. Byamungu for CSIS Special economic zones – an instrument for industrialization and the development of skills in Central Africa by ECA

    59 min
  2. Apr 1

    Why Is Southern Africa’s Steel Manufacturing Declining If It Has Chrome and Iron?

    Southern Africa holds some of the world’s most important minerals for steelmaking. South Africa alone dominates global chrome reserves and remains a major producer of iron ore, manganese, and vanadium. Yet despite this resource base and a once-strong industrial foundation, steel manufacturing in the region is in decline. In this second episode of The Africa Hour Season 2, we explore manufacturing: what it really means to make things locally – competitively and at scale. In conversation with experts from policy, academia, industry, and organised labour, we unpack the structural challenges shaping the chrome and steel sectors in both South Africa and Zimbabwe. From rising electricity costs and unreliable power supply to weak domestic demand, global overcapacity, and increasing imports, the pressures are deeply interconnected. We then turn to the question of green manufacturing, examining what it would take to produce steel in a way that is both competitive and climate responsible, and how energy systems and evolving global regulations are redefining the terms of industrial competitiveness. Guests: Lufuno Munzhelele is Principal Analyst at the South African Iron & Steel Institute, specialising in steel markets, trade policy, and industrial sustainability. She provides market intelligence and policy analysis shaping the sector’s development. With over a decade of experience in trade investigations and industrial policy advisory, she has worked with industry, government, and development finance institutions to strengthen local steel value chains and competitiveness. She holds a Master of Commerce in Development Economics. Kuda Manjonjo is a Just Transition Advisor at PowerShift Africa, with experience spanning civil society engagement, community organising, and academia. His work focuses on monitoring and evaluation, research, and advocacy. He holds degrees in Labour and Globalization, Political Science from the University of Zimbabwe, and Labour and Economic Sociology from the University of the Witwatersrand, and is currently pursuing a PhD. Leanne Govindsamy is a human rights and environmental lawyer with 16 years of experience across law, policy reform, litigation, research, and advocacy. She previously led the Corporate Accountability and Transparency programme at the Centre for Environmental Rights and helped establish the Fair Finance Coalition Southern Africa and the Fair Steel Coalition. Her past roles include a clerkship at the Constitutional Court of South Africa, legal practice at Cheadle Thompson and Haysom, and Head of Legal and Investigations at Corruption Watch. She holds an LLM from the University of Notre Dame, as well as an LLB and a Master’s in Anthropology from the University of the Witwatersrand. Wouter Bam is an Assistant Professor at the University of British Columbia. He previously held an Associate Professorship at Stellenbosch University. His research focuses on industrial policy, particularly mineral-based development in Africa. He holds a joint PhD from KU Leuven and Stellenbosch University, a master’s from the University of Cambridge, and a BEng from Stellenbosch University. Tengo Tengela is Trade and Industry Policy Coordinator within the COSATU Policy Unit. He previously worked at the NUMSA Policy and Research Institute and as a Parliamentary Officer with the NEHAWU Parliamentary Office. He represents organised labour in social dialogue institutions, including NEDLAC’s Trade and Industry and Fiscal and Monetary Policy Chambers. Further readings: Inside the Manhize Blueprint: How Zimbabwe is Betting on The Steel Industry to drive Industrialization  by PowerShift Africa A Just Steel Transition by Leanne Govindsamy for the Centre for Environmental Rights  ArcelorMittal South Africa to cease long steel production by April by Reuters  Greening China’s ‘brown steel’ investments in Zimbabwe by Kuda Manjonjo Beneficiation might not be a silver bullet by W. Bam W.  & K. de Bruyne

    56 min
  3. Feb 5

    Why Isn't Zambia the World’s Copper Cable Factory?

    Copper powers everyday life, from phone chargers and power grids to electric cars and data centres. Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo are central to the global copper supply, yet most of the value generated from that copper is captured far from where it is mined. In this opening episode of Season Two of The Africa Hour, we introduce the concept of mineral value chains and explain why value is distributed unevenly along them. Tracing copper’s journey from the Copperbelt to global markets, the episode shows how different stages of the value chain are located in different places, and why extraction alone delivers far less economic benefit than the activities that come after it. Drawing on voices from industry, policy, and journalism, the episode lays the groundwork for the season ahead. It explores a simple but powerful question: can Africa stop exporting opportunity and start building its future with the minerals the world depends on? Guests: William Clowes is a journalist for Bloomberg, based in Johannesburg, where he covers Africa’s metals and mining sector. He is currently the Africa metals and mining correspondent and previously reported from the Democratic Republic of Congo and Nigeria. Read William’s latest reporting for Bloomberg here.  Gilbert Makore is the Africa Regional Director at the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) International Secretariat, where he oversees the organisation’s work across 29 African countries. He joined the EITI in April 2020 and is based in Oslo, Norway. Prior to this, he was based in Nairobi, Kenya, where he worked with Oxfam as East Africa Extractives Advisor and Interim Country Director. Gilbert has also held senior roles with organisations including Pact, Publish What You Pay, and the Zimbabwe Environmental Law Association, working across extractives governance, transparency, and accountability. Sokwani Chilembo is the Chief Executive Officer of the Zambia Chamber of Mines. A mechanical engineering graduate of the University of Birmingham, he has held senior roles across mining, manufacturing, regulation, and industry leadership in Zambia. He began his career in the copper mining sector before moving into management roles in mining services, soft commodity trading, and the FMCG sector with Zambian Breweries. Sokwani is also the former President of the Mining Industry Association of Southern Africa (association of SADC chambers of mines) and has served on the African Mining Indaba Advisory Board’s Governmental and Policy Committee.  Further readings: Industrialisation in Africa: Leading countries and reasons for their success, by Theophilus Acheampong, Prince Asare Vitenu-Sackey for APRI: https://afripoli.org/industrialisation-in-africa-leading-countries-and-reasons-for-their-success  From ore to more: Mineral partnerships for African industrialisation by Sarah Logan and Theophilus Acheampong for ECFR: https://ecfr.eu/publication/from-ore-to-more-mineral-partnerships-for-african-industrialisation/?utm_source=chatgpt.com  Value addition for who? Challenges to local participation in downstream critical mineral ventures in Zambia by K.C Barron et al. for The Extractive Industries and Society: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214790X24001503#bib0047  Leveraging Zambia’s Energy Transition Minerals: Roadmap for Economic Transformation by The World Bank: https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2025/07/01/leveraging-zambia-afe-energy-transition-minerals-roadmap-for-economic-transformation  Positioning Zambia for a copper-plus future by Allegra Saggese, Benjamin Shawa and Shahrukh Wani for the International Growth Centre: https://www.theigc.org/publications/positioning-zambia-copper-plus-future  Back to basics: How is copper produced? By Mining For Zambia: https://miningforzambia.com/back-to-basics-how-is-copper-produced/

    55 min
  4. Episode 12: How Is Egypt Digitizing the Bottleneck Which Is the Suez Canal?

    06/06/2024

    Episode 12: How Is Egypt Digitizing the Bottleneck Which Is the Suez Canal?

    Before we dive into this episode, we want to say a huge thank you to our listeners who have been tuning in for the past year. This episode concludes The Africa Hour’s first season on digitalization on the African continent. It was a wonderful experience and APRI hopes to be back soon with a new season and fresh, informative, and critical policy content.  Egypt is keen on foreign capital, and is creating special economic zones to attract investors. One such zone is along the man-made Suez Canal -  one of the most important maritime trade routes globally. Even the tiniest of problems in the Canal can significantly derail operation for the thousands of shipping vessels that pass through the channel every year. Authorities are leveraging this crucial corridor, and in 2015, created a special trade zone around the Canal to boost local production of automotives, chemicals, construction materials and so on. As the zone slowly develops a decade after though, can authorities use technology to pull investors in faster? And can the zone become a green hydrogen production hub to help clean up the very-polluting shipping sector? Guests Mohamed Ibrahim Hafez is a prolific expert and advisor in Special Economic Zones (SEZs) and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). He has advised countries in the Middle East and Africa - including Egypt - on strategies and policies to boost investment and elevate SEZ ecosystems. Presently, he is a researcher at the Center for Policy, Citizenship and Society at Nottingham Trent University. He was formerly a policy advisor at the General Authority for Investment and Free Zones in Egypt (GAFI) and is also a fellow of the Asia Global Institute, in addition to being a Chevening Scholar. Naira Hatem Is the Africa Race to Zero connector with the Climate Champions Team. She is an expert in environment policy issues in Egypt and across the MENA region, and has contributed to research projects on energy transitions in Africa Professor Akram Soliman Elselmy is a veteran academic and engineer, who has researched and trained across the MENA region and further afield in the UKand the US. He is currently the Dean of the College of Engineering and Technology at the esteemed Arab Academy for Science, Technology & Maritime Transport, and formerly led the Port Training Institute (PTI). Prof. Elselmy is also the chairman of the organizing Committee of "MARLOG" - the International Conference on Maritime Transport and Logistics. Further Readings How the Suez Canal Economic Zone is aiding Egypt's economic resurgence https://www.fdiintelligence.com/content/locations/middle-east-africa/egypt/how-the-suez-canal-economic-zone-is-aiding-egypt-s-economic-resurgence-76816 The Suez Canal: Forthcoming Strategic and Geopolitical Challenges: https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-031-15670-0_1 Unlocking Economic Potential: Transforming Egypt's Ports into Global Hubs: https://www.arabfinance.com/News/newdetails/9578 Suez Canal Economic Zone: from a transit area to an innovation hub in Egypt: https://www.sr-m.it/index.php?ctrl=Events&mod=events&action=info_events&slug=suez-canal-economic-zone-from-a-transit-area-to-an-innovation-hub-in-egypt&lang=en Supporting the development of the Suez Canal Economic Zone: https://www.oecd.org/mena/competitiveness/suez-canal-economic-zone.htm Second Phase of Suez Canal Economic Zone Digitalization Launched: https://energycapitalpower.com/2nd-phase-suez-canal-digitalization-ebrd/

    50 min
  5. Episode 11: How Can Namibia Capitalize on Digital Nomad Visas?

    04/25/2024

    Episode 11: How Can Namibia Capitalize on Digital Nomad Visas?

    Since the Covid-19 pandemic hit, remote working has become an important part of business cultures across the world, including in Africa. Namibia, with its deserts and beaches, wants to capitalize on that opportunity, and attract ‘digital nomads’ to spend needed foreign exchange in the country, using a new visa category it launched back in 2022. But, two years on, the numbers of digital nomads who’ve passed through the program remains low. So what does Namibia need to do to compete for the global remote working community that boasts a market of more than 30 million people? Guests *Andreas Kresnel is a leading immigration expert on southern Africa, and is the founder of IBN Immigration Solutions. Based in South Africa, Andreas has worked on immigration issues in the region for more than a decade, opening two international IBN offices in Windhoek and Kenya in that time. He is the author of 3 books, including The Corporate Immigration Guide to southern Africa. Find Andreas' quick take on the Namibia's nomad visa here *Lazarus Amukeshe is an award-winning business and investigative journalist with The Namibian, one of the country's biggest newspapers. He has covered developments on Namibia's nomad visa scheme since its 2022 launch. Lazarus was the 2023 Editors Forum Journalist of the Year in addition to being the best Business/Finance journalist. His latest reports are here.  *Prithwiraj (Raj) Choudhury is the Lumry Family Associate Professor at the Harvard Business School where he prolifically researches the future of work, particularly the changing geography of work. Raj has also analysed the productivity of remote working and nomad visas. He is an Associate Editor at Management Science and is on Forbes' Future of Work-50 list (2023). Read Raj's take on why nomad visas can boost local economies here. Further Readings: Namibia’s Nomad Visa https://nipdb.com/nomadvisa/  A guide to Namibia’s digital nomad visa https://digitalnomadsinafrica.com/destinations/namibia-digital-nomad-guide/  Namibia approves first nine nomad visa applications https://www.namibian.com.na/namibia-approves-first-digital-nomads/  Namibia welcomes first digital nomads https://neweralive.na/posts/namibia-welcomes-first-digital-nomads  Digital nomad visas are on the rise in Africa https://techcentral.co.za/digital-nomad-visas-africa-south-africa/233185/  Africa Woos Tech Talent As Remote Work Visa Trend Grows Worldwide: https://weetracker.com/2023/09/26/africa-woos-tech-talent/  This spectacular African country now has a digital nomad visa https://www.timeout.com/news/this-spectacular-african-country-now-has-a-digital-nomad-visa-101922

    40 min
  6. Episode 10: Is Ethiopia Ready for the Artificial Intelligence Era?

    02/22/2024

    Episode 10: Is Ethiopia Ready for the Artificial Intelligence Era?

    Ethiopia is marketing itself as the leading artificial intelligence (AI) player in Africa. The country is not just mouthing off though – it has some credits to back its claim. Some parts of Sophia the robot were developed right in Addis Ababa. Several Ethiopian startups are also using AI to develop products like language apps focused on local languages. Ethiopia is covering its base on the policy side too, with a new artificial intelligence institute, and a national AI policy in the making. But does this east African country have what it takes to be the AI powerhouse while avoiding ethical problems?  Guests Hruy Tsegaye is a leading AI voice in Ethiopia. He is a co-founder at iCog Labs, the first private AI/Robotics company in East Africa - and the CEO of Mindplex, a decentralized media platform. Hruy is also a prolific AI researcher, and has published multiple articles on the state of AI in Africa. You can find some of his pieces on how decentralised AI can help solve development problems here. Abdullahi Tsanni is a science journalist currently reporting for the prestigious MIT Tech Review in Boston. His work, which covers a wide range of issues across technology, science and health, has appeared in publications like STAT News, Nature, and The British Medical Journal. His recent report on the startups leading the race in programming AI specifically for African languages like Amharic is here. Finally, Dr Taye Girma is the Deputy Director General at the Ethiopian Artificial Intelligence Institute, and is one of the brains behind the upcoming national AI policy. The Institute is one of the first such government departments in Africa, and is working on how AI can help boost the health, finance, transportation and agriculture sectors. Dr Girma is one of the founders of the Institute, and is at the center of AI research and practice in Ethiopia. He is also a professor of Computer Engineering with a focus on AI at the Addis Ababa Science and Technology University. Further Readings Nation Strengthening AI Technology to Modernize, Enhance Efficiency: Institute Director-General: https://www.ena.et/web/eng/w/eng_3633464 Whose Job Will AI Replace? Here's Why a Clerk in Ethiopia Has More to Fear Than One in California: https://theconversation.com/whose-job-will-ai-replace-heres-why-a-clerk-in-ethiopia-has-more-to-fear-than-one-in-california-216735 Grand Challenges Ethiopia: Catalyzing Equitable AI Use to Improve Global Health: https://www2.fundsforngos.org/latest-funds-for-ngos/grand-challenges-ethiopia-catalyzing-equitable-ai-use-to-improve-global-health/  The AI Startup Outperforming Google Translate in Ethiopian Languages: https://restofworld.org/2023/3-minutes-with-asmelash-teka-hadgu/  Ethiopian Artificial Intelligence Institutes Discusses Intellectual Property Rights for its Products: https://www.aii.et/ethiopian-artificial-intelligence-institutes-discuss-about-the-intellectual-property-rights-for-the-products-developed-by-the-institute/  African Union (AU) Continental AI Strategy for Africa: https://www.nepad.org/news/african-union-artificial-intelligence-continental-strategy-africa A Sceptical Approach to the Future of AI and Emerging Technologies in Today’s Africa:https://medium.com/@Hruy.T/a-sceptical-approach-to-the-future-of-ai-and-emerging-technologies-in-todays-africa-d03abb04b8bf The Future of AI Statistics in Africa - Is the Continent Really Ready?: https://www.isi-web.org/article/future-ai-statistics-africa-continent-ready#:~:text=digital%20solutions%20into%20their%20statistical,steps%20to%20formulate%20AI%20policies

    46 min
  7. Episode 9: Will Tiny Cabo Verde Succeed in Becoming West Africa’s Tech Giant?

    01/18/2024

    Episode 9: Will Tiny Cabo Verde Succeed in Becoming West Africa’s Tech Giant?

    Cabo Verde has always been, to many on the African continent, a small slice of beach resorts perfect for a holiday get away. Tourism is one of the key revenue earners for this small west African country, along with manufacturing and the services industry. But since 2019, the Cape Verdean government has been pushing a new digital plan that aims to position the country as a major tech hub in the sub region, rivaling countries like Nigeria and Ghana, West Africa’s tech heavyweights. But Cabo Verde, in addition to having fewer natural resources and a smaller economy, has a huge brain drain problem, with more of its population outside the country than inside it. So how will the country achieve its goal? Will targeting youths for tech training and building a fancy technology park with state of the art facilities to host start-up companies deliver the momentum the country needs? Guests: Uyoyo Edosio is a Principal Innovation and technology expert at the African Development Bank (AfDB) where she manages a multi-million dollar portfolio focused on digital innovation and education. She's MIT-trained, and has advised governments on their digital strategies, on the continent, and well beyond. Uyoyo is currently the program lead for the Cape Verde Technology Park Project at AfDB. In one of her most recent opinion pieces, Uyoyo lays out how African governments can tweak regulations to enable entrepreneurs to test products or services without the usual bureaucracy. Pedro Lopes is the Cabo Verdean Secretary of State of the Digital Economy. Before that, he was the country's Secretary of State for Innovation and Technical Training, the youngest-serving government official at the time. Pedro is also a former YALI fellow and is credited with receiving several awards, including being named on the MIPAD Most Influential People of African Descent under 40. He also organized the first-ever Tedx in Praia. In 2018, Pedro was profiled by Forbes Magazine.   Further Readings: Official Page - Cape Verde Tech Park: https://www.techpark.cv/  AfDB Cape Verde Park Project Overview: https://projectsportal.afdb.org/dataportal/VProject/show/P-CV-GB0-004  IOM Facts and Figures, Cape Verde: https://www.iom.int/node/106721/facts-and-figures  AfDB Agrees Loan For Cape Verde Technology Park: https://www.constructafrica.com/news/afdb-agrees-loan-cape-verde-technology-park  Cape Verde Receives 15 Million Lean for Two Data Centers: https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/cape-verde-receives-15-million-loan-for-two-data-centers/  African Development Bank Partners With Cabo Verde to Boost Climate-Resilient Technology Park: ​​https://thefintechtimes.com/african-development-bank-partners-with-cabo-verde-to-boost-climate-resilient-technology-park/  A Guide to Cabo Verde’s Digital Economy - US Department of Commerce https://www.trade.gov/country-commercial-guides/cabo-verde-digital-economy Testing the Brain Gain theory - Micro evidence from Cape Verde - IZA Institute of Labor Economics https://www.iza.org/publications/dp/5048/testing-the-brain-gain-hypothesis-micro-evidence-from-cape-verde

    55 min

About

A Pan-African show that discusses public policy issues from diverse viewpoints, and breaks down analysis into a context that is easily digestible by listeners. The podcast explores different themes and examines their manifestations in African countries.

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