Proposals for “Debt-for-Industrialisation Swaps” will dominate discussions at the 5th African Natural Resources and Energy Investment Summit (AFNIS 2026), as African leaders seek new financing tools to drive infrastructure and growth from mining and energy resources.
African ministers, mining executives, financiers and energy stakeholders will converge on Abuja from June 23 to 25, 2026, for the AFNIS 2026) billed.tp be opened by President Bola Ahmed. Drawing ministers, executives, and financiers from across the continent, leaders are expected to push for a new continental approach to resource management and industrial development during the Summit.
A major highlight of the summit, themed “One Africa. One Resource Vision,” will be the unveiling of the Mutual Assured Development (MADE) Framework during the third high-level ministerial and chief executive officers’ roundtable.
According to the organisers, the framework is designed to shift Africa’s resource management model “from competition to collective development” and lay the foundation for what they described as “a future of collective economic assurance.”
The initiative is being championed by the Africa Minerals Strategy Group (AMSG), an intergovernmental organisation established in January 2024 with 19 founding member states and 12 collaborating African countries.
“The narrative of African resource management is undergoing a fundamental shift from competition to collective development,” the organisers stated.
They added that AFNIS 2026 “moves past traditional dialogue to institutionalise a new era of economic interdependence.”
Nigeria’s minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dr Oladele Alake, currently chairs the AMSG, while H.E. Moses Micheal Engadu serves as secretary heneral of the organisation.
The organisers said the summit would bring together political leaders and private sector players “to lay the foundation for a strategic leap to a future of collective economic assurance.”
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is expected to declare the summit open, while ministers from across Africa are billed to participate in discussions on investment mobilisation, energy integration and industrial growth.
According to the organisers, AFNIS has already facilitated more than $500 million in deals through domestic capital mobilisation.
“AFNIS has evolved into a powerhouse for tangible economic impact,” the organisers said, noting that the platform has “already actioned over $500 million in deals.”
The summit will also feature a Technical and Investment Day dedicated to project readiness, financing mechanisms and technology-driven resource exploration.
Organisers said sessions would focus on “AI-driven exploration technology” and the structuring of “Debt-for-Industrialisation Swaps” aimed at supporting long-term industrial and infrastructure growth on the continent.
They added that specialised bilateral meeting rooms would enable investors to hold one-on-one discussions with governments and private sector participants “to secure mutual partnerships.”
“By integrating mining, oil and gas, and power through the lens of mutual development,
AFNIS 2026 is building the financial and regulatory architecture for a truly integrated African industrial future,” the statement added.
AFNIS, now in its fifth year, describes itself as Africa’s leading multi-sectoral platform for policy innovation, investment promotion and local value addition in the natural resources and energy sectors
Registration for the summit has opened on the organisers’ official website.
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