Much of the recent coverage on this theme traces back to celebrations around the 35th anniversary of China-Namibia diplomatic relations (established March 22, 1990, the day after Namibia’s independence), and centers on a few consistent themes:
Trade and investment: China is described as Namibia’s largest source of foreign direct investment and second-largest trading partner, accounting for roughly 30% of Namibia’s total FDI. Bilateral trade exceeded $1.3 billion in 2023, marking a 16.5% year-on-year increase. The relationship has historically been commodity-driven — Namibia exports uranium, copper, beef, and seafood to China.
Flagship projects: The Husab Uranium Project — China’s largest single investment in Africa — and the Rossing Uranium Mine have contributed about 7% of Namibia’s GDP and created 6,000 high-paying jobs. Chinese companies have also acquired the Osino Gold Mine and Tsumeb Smelter, and are involved in a planned desalination plant with Namwater. Chinese firms have built infrastructure including the B1 highway rehabilitation connecting Namibia to South Africa, and the Hosea Kutako International Airport highway.
New opportunities: China’s recent move toward zero-tariff access for African exports, and a proposed China-Africa Economic Partnership for Shared Development Agreement (CADEPA), are being framed by commentators as chances for Namibia to expand agricultural exports (beef, mutton, grapes) and deepen industrial cooperation in green hydrogen and mineral beneficiation.
A note on balance: Much of this coverage — including embassy statements and Chinese state media — is promotional in tone. Independent Namibian commentary strikes a more cautious note, arguing the relationship remains largely raw-material export driven and urging Namibia to negotiate technology transfers and local value-addition rather than passively receive investment, and pointing out Namibia remains “underutilized” compared to peers like South Africa and Kenya in the China-Africa economic relationship.