Mozambican President Daniel Chapo has used a state visit to China to press for deeper industrial and infrastructure cooperation, signalling that Maputo sees Beijing as a key partner in efforts to modernise its economy and reduce long-standing constraints in agriculture, logistics and manufacturing. During a stop in Changsha, the capital of Hunan Province, Chapo toured advanced factories in sectors including electric power, heavy machinery and agricultural processing, where he observed automated production lines, smart power systems and modern logistics equipment.
Chinese state media said Chapo even tested an electric reach stacker during a visit to Sany Group’s industrial park, underlining his interest in practical technologies that could be adapted for Mozambique’s development needs. The visit forms part of his April 16–22 state trip to China, his first since taking office, and comes at a time when Mozambique is seeking new funding and technical partnerships for large-scale structural projects.
Chapo said Mozambique wants to replicate some of the industrial capabilities he saw in China, especially in areas linked to farming, transport and energy. That reflects the reality of Mozambique’s economy, which remains heavily dependent on agriculture and rural livelihoods but continues to struggle with low productivity because of poor infrastructure, weak mechanisation and limited access to technology. Africanews reported that Chapo sees Chinese expertise as potentially useful not only for farming modernisation, but also for large construction projects such as roads, bridges and ports.
At a business forum during the visit, officials from both countries signed agreements covering sectors such as green energy and biomedicine. Chapo also said Mozambique’s own national development plans align with China’s next five-year strategy, and he framed the partnership as part of a broader South-South cooperation agenda that could deliver practical gains for both sides.
China has long been one of Mozambique’s most important economic partners, financing and building roads, public buildings, industrial facilities and transport links. Chapo’s visit appears aimed at moving that relationship further toward industrial transformation, with a stronger emphasis on manufacturing capacity, technology transfer and value addition rather than raw commodity dependence alone. That is partly an inference from the pattern of sites visited and the sectors highlighted during the trip.
Hosted by President Xi Jinping, the visit is expected to deepen bilateral ties and may pave the way for increased Chinese investment in the southeastern African country. For Mozambique, the message is clear: China is not only a diplomatic partner, but a model of industrial scaling that Chapo hopes can help accelerate his country’s modernisation drive.


















