ZimTrade’s Beira Trade Mission Unlocks Strategic Avenues for Zimbabwe’s Export-Led Growth

Zimbabwe’s quest for export diversification and regional trade expansion is entering a decisive phase, as ZimTrade gears up to lead a focused outward trade mission to Beira, Mozambique, from 1 to 3 July 2025. The mission, informed by findings from a March 2025 market scan, is more than a mere business trip. It is a targeted response to real-time regional demand, anchored in intelligence, strategy, and opportunity.

Mozambique’s port city of Beira is not just a logistical hub. It is a gateway to Central and Southern Africa, offering Zimbabwean businesses a direct route to scale, growth, and relevance in a rapidly integrating regional market. The data is persuasive. In 2023 alone, Zimbabwe exported US$5.5 million worth of steel and US$1.4 million worth of timber to Mozambique, a reflection of the country’s fast-growing construction sector. Cereal exports and horticultural produce, such as tea, coffee, avocados, pineapples, and macadamias, also continue to find a welcoming market next door.

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What sets this mission apart is its foundation in tested strategy. Following a successful memorandum of understanding signed in May 2023 between ZimTrade, the Zimbabwe Investment and Development Agency (ZIDA), and Mozambique’s APIEX, this trip represents a well-coordinated push to deepen market integration. Knowledge sharing, business matchmaking, and institutional collaboration lie at the heart of this trilateral commitment. The Beira mission is not speculative, it’s calculated and responsive.

ZimTrade CEO Allan Majuru explained that Mozambican buyers are actively seeking reliable Zimbabwean suppliers, especially for building materials, processed foods, and agricultural inputs. “We saw both immediate trade potential and long-term partnership opportunities that our exporters can capitalize on,” he said. And the participation of companies from a cross-section of sectors, ranging from PPEs and leather products to agro-processing and construction, points to a deliberate effort to present a diversified Zimbabwean export portfolio.

This approach aligns with Zimbabwe’s broader trade policy direction. It aims to increase value addition, reduce over-reliance on a few commodities, and grow export receipts. Trade missions like the one to Beira are fast becoming catalytic tools in this agenda. They allow local firms, particularly SMEs, to learn, connect, and adapt to evolving regional market needs.

The mission will kick off with a Trade and Investment Conference that brings together stakeholders from government, business, and trade promotion agencies. This engagement opens the door for meaningful dialogue on policy alignment, business climate harmonization, and innovation in regional value chains. It will also provide the platform for exporters to better understand Mozambican consumer preferences, regulatory environments, and distribution channels.

Beyond trade volumes, the mission seeks to build trust and visibility for Zimbabwean brands in Mozambique. It’s a long-term play, one that recognizes the competitive edge Zimbabwe holds in proximity, cultural linkages, and shared membership in SADC. The two countries enjoy a trade agreement signed in 2005 that allows duty-free access for products with 25 percent local content, a vital advantage for Zimbabwean producers.

Mozambique is Zimbabwe’s fourth-largest export market. Trade data from Trade Map indicates a 12 percent increase in exports from US$354 million in 2019 to US$398 million in 2023. In this context, the Beira mission is not just about exploring demand. It’s about sustaining momentum, establishing footholds, and scaling up.

As the delegation of Zimbabwean exporters heads to Beira, they do so with more than products to sell. They carry with them a national ambition to build an export-driven economy, to cement regional relevance, and to position Zimbabwe as a competitive player in Africa’s evolving trade narrative. What unfolds in Beira could be a blueprint for future missions and a signal that Zimbabwe’s trade diplomacy is becoming smarter, sharper, and more focused on results.

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