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Zanzibar’s Infrastructure Surge: Numbers That Tell a Story of Transformation

ZANZIBAR – [9 January 2026]:


Zanzibar’s development narrative is being written in steel, asphalt, fiber optic cable, and port cranes. Across both Unguja and Pemba, the semi-autonomous islands are seeing unprecedented infrastructure investment, driven by a strategic blueprint that allocates billions of shillings to projects designed to connect communities, expand economic opportunity, and support future growth

At the heart of this push is the government’s $2.6 billion budget development plan for 2025–2026, a budget that dedicates substantial resources to infrastructure alongside human capital and economic transformation. Of this total, more than $486 million is earmarked specifically for water and electricity infrastructure ensuring reliable utilities for households and businesses alike.

The road network is another cornerstone of the islands’ transformation. With hundreds of kilometers of roads are planned for construction and rehabilitation in the current cycle, spanning urban connectors, rural access routes, and key tourist corridors that link airports, ports, and hospitality hubs.

Air travel infrastructure is also gaining new capacity. Major upgrades include the construction of Pemba Airport, expansion of terminal facilities at Abeid Amani Karume International Airport, and the launch of the Nungwi Airport project initiatives that will expand passenger handling and service delivery across the region.

 

Complementing these projects is a $250 million investment in a new passenger port at Maruhubi, designed to modernize sea transport and support both commercial and tourism traffic.

These figures are not abstract. They signal a fundamental shift in how Zanzibar builds its economy. Roads shorten travel times and lower transport costs. Ports enlarge the archipelago’s footprint in regional trade. Airports open new doors to global connectivity. Water and energy projects underpin quality of life and business productivity.

By investing robustly and strategically in infrastructure, Zanzibar is laying down the physical foundations of a future that is more connected, more competitive, and more resilient.

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