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Zambezi
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| Zambezi River Zambesi, Zambeze | |
|---|---|
The Zambezi at the junction of Namibia (upper left), Zambia (right), Zimbabwe (bottom) and Botswana (center left). Since this photo was taken, the Kazungula Bridge has been built across the river between Zambia and Botswana. | |
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| Nickname | Besi |
| Location | |
| Countries | |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Source | Main stem source. Zambezi Source National Forest |
| • location | Ikelenge District, North-Western Province, Zambia |
| • coordinates | 11°22′11″S 24°18′30″E / 11.36972°S 24.30833°E |
| • elevation | 1,500 m (4,900 ft) |
| 2nd source | Most distant source of the Zambezi-Lungwebungu system |
| • location | Moxico Municipality, Moxico Province, Angola |
| • coordinates | 12°40′34″S 18°24′47″E / 12.67611°S 18.41306°E |
| • elevation | 1,440 m (4,720 ft) |
| Mouth | Indian Ocean |
• location | Zambezia Province and Sofala Province, Mozambique |
• coordinates | 18°34′14″S 36°28′13″E / 18.57056°S 36.47028°E |
• elevation | 0 m (0 ft) |
| Length | 2,574 km (1,599 mi) |
| Basin size | 1,390,000 km2 (540,000 sq mi)[4][5] |
| Discharge | |
| • location | Zambezi Delta, Indian Ocean |
| • average | (Period: 1971–2000)4,296.5 m3/s (151,730 cu ft/s)[1] (Period: 1962–2002)4,134.7 m3/s (146,020 cu ft/s)[2] |
| Discharge | |
| • location | Marromeu, Mozambique (Basin size: 1,377,492 km2 (531,853 sq mi) |
| • average | (Period: 1998–2022)4,217 m3/s (148,900 cu ft/s)[3]
(Period: 1971–2000)4,256.1 m3/s (150,300 cu ft/s)[1] (Period: 1960–1962)3,424 m3/s (120,900 cu ft/s)[4][5] |
| • minimum | (Period: 1998–2022)1,378 m3/s (48,700 cu ft/s)[3] 920 m3/s (32,000 cu ft/s) |
| • maximum | (Period: 1998–2022)11,291 m3/s (398,700 cu ft/s)[3] 18,600 m3/s (660,000 cu ft/s) |
| Discharge | |
| • location | Cahora Bassa Dam (Basin size: 1,068,422.8 km2 (412,520.3 sq mi) |
| • average | (Period: 1971–2000)2,653.9 m3/s (93,720 cu ft/s)[1] |
| Discharge | |
| • location | Kariba Dam (Basin size: 679,495.9 km2 (262,354.8 sq mi) |
| • average | (Period: 1971–2000)1,313.6 m3/s (46,390 cu ft/s)[1] |
| Discharge | |
| • location | Victoria Falls (Basin size: 521,315.5 km2 (201,281.0 sq mi) |
| • average | (Period: 1971–2000)1,066 m3/s (37,600 cu ft/s)[1] |
| Basin features | |
| River system | Zambezi Basin |
| Tributaries | |
| • left | Kabompo, Kafue, Luangwa, Capoche, Shire |
| • right | Luena, Lungwebungu, Luanginga, Chobe, Gwayi, Sanyati, Panhane, Luenha |
The Zambezi (also spelled Zambeze and Zambesi) is the fourth-longest river in Africa, the longest east-flowing river in Africa and the largest flowing into the Indian Ocean from Africa. Its drainage basin covers 1,390,000 km2 (540,000 sq mi),[4][5] slightly less than half of the Nile's. The 2,574 km (1,599 mi) river rises in Zambia and flows through eastern Angola, along the north-eastern border of Namibia and the northern border of Botswana, then along the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe to Mozambique, where it crosses the country to empty into the Indian Ocean.[6][7]
The Zambezi's most noted feature is Victoria Falls. Its other falls include the Chavuma Falls[8] at the border between Zambia and Angola and Ngonye Falls near Sioma in western Zambia.[9]
The two main sources of hydroelectric power on the river are the Kariba Dam, which provides power to Zambia and Zimbabwe, and the Cahora Bassa Dam in Mozambique, which provides power to Mozambique and South Africa. Additionally, two smaller power stations are along the Zambezi River in Zambia, one at Victoria Falls and the other in Zengamina, near Kalene Hill in the Ikelenge District.[10][11]
Course
[edit]Origins
[edit]
The river rises in a black, marshy dambo in dense, undulating miombo woodland 50 km (31 mi) north of Mwinilunga and 20 km (12 mi) south of Ikelenge in the Ikelenge District of North-Western Province, Zambia, at about 1,524 metres (5,000 ft) above sea level.[12] The area around the source is a national monument, forest reserve, and important bird area.[13]
Eastward of the source, the watershed between the Congo and Zambezi Basins is a well-marked belt of high ground, running nearly east–west and falling abruptly to the north and south. This distinctly cuts off the basin of the Lualaba (the main branch of the upper Congo) from the Zambezi. In the neighborhood of the source, the watershed is not as clearly defined, but the two river systems do not connect.[14]
The region drained by the Zambezi is a vast, broken-edged plateau 900–1,200 m high, composed in the remote interior of metamorphic beds and fringed with the igneous rocks of the Victoria Falls. At Chupanga, on the lower Zambezi, thin strata of grey and yellow sandstones, with an occasional band of limestone, crop out on the bed of the river in the dry season, and these persist beyond Tete, where they are associated with extensive seams of coal. Coal is also found in the district just below Victoria Falls. Gold-bearing rocks occur in several places.[15]
Upper Zambezi
[edit]The river flows to the southwest into Angola for about 240 km (150 mi), then is joined by sizeable tributaries such as the Luena and the Chifumage flowing from highlands to the north-west.[14] It turns south and develops a floodplain, with extreme width variation between the dry and rainy seasons. It enters dense evergreen Cryptosepalum dry forest, though on its western side, Western Zambezian grasslands also occur. Where it re-enters Zambia, it is nearly 400 m (1,300 ft) wide in the rainy season and flows rapidly, with rapids ending in the Chavuma Falls, where the river flows through a rocky fissure. The river drops about 400 m (1,300 ft) in elevation from its source at 1,500 m (4,900 ft) to the Chavuma Falls at 1,100 m (3,600 ft), over a distance of about 400 km (250 mi). From this point to the Victoria Falls, the level of the basin is very uniform, dropping only by another 180 m (590 ft) across a distance of around 800 km (500 mi).[16][circular reference]
The first of its large tributaries to enter the Zambezi is the Kabompo River in the North-Western Province of Zambia. The savanna through which the river flows gives way to a wide floodplain, studded with Borassus fan palms. A little farther south is the confluence with the Lungwebungu River. This is the beginning of the Barotse Floodplain, the most notable feature of the upper Zambezi, but this northern part does not flood so much and includes islands of higher land in the middle.[17][citation needed]
About 30 km below the confluence of the Lungwebungu, the country becomes very flat, and the typical Barotse Floodplain landscape unfolds, with the flood reaching a width of 25 km in the rainy season. For more than 200 km downstream, the annual flood cycle dominates the natural environment and human life, society, and culture. About 80 km further down, the Luanginga, which with its tributaries drains a large area to the west, joins the Zambezi. A short distance higher up on the east, the main stream is joined in the rainy season by overflow of the Luampa/Luena system.[14]
A short distance downstream of the confluence with the Luanginga is Lealui, one of the capitals of the Lozi people, who populate the Zambian region of Barotseland in the Western Province. The chief of the Lozi maintains one of his two compounds at Lealui; the other is at Limulunga, which is on high ground and serves as the capital during the rainy season. The annual move from Lealui to Limulunga is a major event, celebrated as one of Zambia's best-known festivals, the Kuomboka.
After Lealui, the river turns south-southeast. From the east, it continues to receive numerous small streams, but on the west, it is without major tributaries for 240 km. Before this, the Ngonye Falls and subsequent rapids interrupt navigation. South of Ngonye Falls, the river briefly borders Namibia's Caprivi Strip.[14] Below the junction of the Cuando River and the Zambezi, the river bends almost due east. Here, the river is broad and shallow and flows slowly, but as it flows eastward towards the border of the great central plateau of Africa, it reaches a chasm into which the Victoria Falls plunge.
Middle Zambezi
[edit]
The Victoria Falls are considered the boundary between the upper and middle Zambezi. Below them, the river continues to flow due east for about 200 km (120 mi), cutting through perpendicular walls of basalt 20 to 60 m (66 to 197 ft) apart in hills 200 to 250 m (660 to 820 ft) high. The river flows swiftly through the Batoka Gorge, the current being continually interrupted by reefs. It has been described[18][citation needed] as one of the world's most spectacular whitewater trips, a tremendous challenge for kayakers and rafters alike. Beyond the gorge are a succession of rapids that end 240 km (150 mi) below Victoria Falls. Over this distance, the river drops 250 m (820 ft).
At this point, the river enters Lake Kariba, created in 1959 following the completion of the Kariba Dam. The lake is one of the largest man-made lakes in the world, and the hydroelectric power-generating facilities at the dam provide electricity to much of Zambia and Zimbabwe.
The Luangwa and Kafue rivers are the two largest left-hand tributaries of the Zambezi. The Kafue joins the main river in a quiet, deep stream about 180 m (590 ft) wide. From this point, the northward bend of the Zambezi is checked, and the stream continues due east. At the confluence of the Luangwa (15°37' S), it enters Mozambique.[19]
The middle Zambezi ends where the river enters Lake Cahora Bassa, formerly the site of dangerous rapids known as Kebrabassa; the lake was created in 1974 by the construction of the Cahora Bassa Dam.[20][citation needed]
Lower Zambezi
[edit]The lower Zambezi's 650 kilometres (400 mi) from Cahora Bassa to the Indian Ocean is navigable, although the river is shallow in many places during the dry season. This shallowness arises as the river enters a broad valley and spreads out over a large area. Only at one point, the Lupata Gorge, 320 kilometres (200 mi) from its mouth, is the river confined between high hills. Here, it is scarcely 200 metres (660 ft) wide. Elsewhere it is from 5 to 8 kilometres (3 to 5 mi) wide, flowing gently in many streams. The river bed is sandy, and the banks are low and reed-fringed. At places, however, and especially in the rainy season, the streams unite into one broad, fast-flowing river.[citation needed]
About 160 kilometres (99 mi) from the sea, the Zambezi receives the drainage of Lake Malawi through the Shire River. On approaching the Indian Ocean, the river splits up into a delta.[14] Each of the primary distributaries, Kongone, Luabo, and Timbwe, is obstructed by a sand bar. A more northerly branch, called the Chinde mouth, has a minimum depth at low water of 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) at the entrance and 4 metres (13 ft) further in, and is the branch used for navigation. About 100 kilometres (62 mi) further north is a river called the Quelimane, after the town at its mouth. This stream, which is silting up, receives the overflow of the Zambezi in the rainy season.[21][citation needed]

Discharge
[edit]Average, minimum and maximum discharge of the Zambezi River at Marromeu (Lower Zambezi). Period from 1998 to 2022.[3]
| Year | Discharge (m3/s) | Year | Discharge (m3/s) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Min | Mean | Max | Min | Mean | Max | ||
| 1998 | 1,141 | 3,335 | 11,183 | 2011 | 17 | 2,619 | 6,117 |
| 1999 | 600 | 4,259 | 11,084 | 2012 | 1,383 | 3,522 | 7,553 |
| 2000 | 338 | 3,041 | 6,696 | 2013 | 1,243 | 3,877 | 8,622 |
| 2001 | 112 | 9,151 | 39,802 | 2014 | 2,394 | 4,161 | 8,946 |
| 2002 | 631 | 2,536 | 4,910 | 2015 | 3,307 | 6,095 | 15,826 |
| 2003 | 329 | 2,536 | 8,952 | 2016 | 1,754 | 4,418 | 9,124 |
| 2004 | 79 | 2,013 | 4,824 | 2017 | 2,133 | 4,686 | 9,215 |
| 2005 | 888 | 3,030 | 7,973 | 2018 | 2,177 | 4,988 | 8,802 |
| 2006 | 1,549 | 3,651 | 7,575 | 2019 | 2,867 | 5,942 | 12,091 |
| 2007 | 2,208 | 4,636 | 14,141 | 2020 | 3,001 | 5,131 | 10,031 |
| 2008 | 2,881 | 6,949 | 31,975 | 2021 | 2,331 | 5,977 | 10,196 |
| 2009 | 154 | 2,648 | 5,930 | 2022 | 868 | 4,953 | 14,361 |
| 2010 | 58 | 2,284 | 6,342 | 17 | 4,217 | 39,802 | |
Delta
[edit]The delta of the Zambezi is today about half as broad as it was before the construction of the Kariba and Cahora Bassa dams controlled the seasonal variations in the flow rate of the river.[citation needed] Before the dams were built, seasonal flooding of the Zambezi had quite a different impact on the ecosystems of the delta from today, as it brought nutrient-rich fresh water down to the Indian Ocean coastal wetlands. The lower Zambezi experienced a small flood surge early in the dry season as rain in the Gwembe catchment and north-eastern Zimbabwe rushed through while rain in the upper Zambezi, Kafue, and Lake Malawi basins, and Luangwa to a lesser extent, is held back by swamps and floodplains.
The discharges of these systems contribute to a much larger flood in March or April, with a mean monthly maximum for April of 6,700 m3 (240,000 cu ft) per second at the delta. The record flood was more than three times as big, 22,500 m3 (790,000 cu ft) per second being recorded in 1958. By contrast, the discharge at the end of the dry season averaged just 500 m3 (18,000 cu ft) per second.[4]
In the 1960s and 1970s, the building of dams changed that pattern completely. Downstream, the mean monthly minimum–maximum was 500 to 6,000 m3 (18,000 to 212,000 cu ft) per second; now it is 1,000 to 3,900 m3 (35,000 to 138,000 cu ft) per second. Medium-level floods especially, of the kind to which the ecology of the lower Zambezi was adapted, happen less often and have a shorter duration. As with the Itezhi-Tezhi Dam's deleterious effects on the Kafue Flats, this has these effects:
- Fish, bird, and other wildlife feeding and breeding patterns were disrupted.
- Less grassland remains after flooding for grazing wildlife and cattle.
- Traditional farming and fishing patterns were disrupted.[22]
Ecology of the delta
[edit]

The Zambezi Delta has extensive seasonally and permanently flooded grasslands, savannas, and swamp forests. Together with the floodplains of the Buzi, Pungwe, and Save Rivers, the Zambezi's floodplains make up the World Wildlife Fund's Zambezian coastal flooded savanna ecoregion in Mozambique. The flooded savannas lie close to the Indian Ocean coast. Mangroves fringe the delta's shoreline.
Although the dams have stemmed some of the annual flooding of the lower Zambezi and caused the area of floodplain to be greatly reduced, they have not removed flooding completely. They cannot control extreme floods, and they have only made medium-level floods less frequent. When heavy rain in the lower Zambezi combines with significant runoff upstream, massive floods still happen, and the wetlands are still an important habitat. The shrinking of the wetlands, though, resulted in uncontrolled hunting of animals such as buffalo and waterbuck during the Mozambican Civil War.
Although the region has had a reduction in the populations of the large mammals, it is still home to some, including the reedbuck and migrating eland. Carnivores found here include lion (Panthera leo), leopard (Panthera pardus), cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus), spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta), and side-striped jackal (Canis adustus). The floodplains are a haven for migratory waterbirds, including pintails, garganey, African openbill (Anastomus lamelligerus), saddle-billed stork (Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis), wattled crane (Bugeranus carunculatus), and great white pelican (Pelecanus onocrotalus).[24]
Reptiles include Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus), Nile monitor lizard (Varanus niloticus), African rock python (Python sebae), the endemic Pungwe worm snake (Leptotyphlops pungwensis), and three other snakes that are nearly endemic - floodplain water snake (Lycodonomorphus whytei obscuriventris), dwarf wolf snake (Lycophidion nanus), and swamp viper (Proatheris).[24]
Several butterfly species are endemic.
Climate
[edit]The north of the Zambezi basin has a mean annual rainfall of 1100 to 1400 mm, which declines towards the south, reaching about half that figure in the south-west. The rain falls in a 4-to-6-month summer rainy season when the Intertropical Convergence Zone moves over the basin from the north between October and March.[25] Evaporation rates are high (1600 mm-2300 mm), and much water is lost this way in swamps and floodplains, especially in the south-west of the basin.[26]
Wildlife
[edit]

The river supports large populations of many animals. Hippopotamuses are abundant along most of the calm stretches of the river, as well as Nile crocodiles. Monitor lizards are found in many places. Birds are abundant, with species including heron, pelican, egret, lesser flamingo, and African fish eagle present in large numbers. Riverine woodland also supports many large animals, such as buffalo, zebras, giraffes, and elephants.[citation needed]
The Zambezi also supports several hundred species of fish, some of which are endemic to the river. Important species include cichlids, which are fished heavily for food, as well as catfish, tigerfish, yellowfish, and other large species. The bull shark is sometimes known as the Zambezi shark after the river, not to be mistaken with Glyphis freshwater shark genus that inhabit the river, as well.
Tributaries
[edit]Upper Zambezi: 507,200 km2, discharges 1044 m3/s at Victoria Falls, comprising:
- Northern Highlands catchment, 222,570 km2, 850 m3/s at Lukulu:
- Chifumage River: Angolan central plateau
- Luena River: Angolan central plateau
- Kabompo River: 72,200 km2, NW highlands of Zambia
- Lungwebungu River: 47,400 km2, Angolan central plateau
- Central Plains catchment, 284,630 km2, 196 m3/s (Victoria Falls–Lukulu):
- Luanginga River: 34,600 km2, Angolan central plateau
- Luampa River/Luena River, Zambia: 20,500 km2, eastern side of Zambezi
- Cuando /Linyanti/Chobe River: 133,200 km2, Angolan S plateau & Caprivi
Middle Zambezi cumulatively 1,050,000 km2, 2442 m3/s, measured at Cahora Bassa Gorge

- (Middle section by itself: 542,800 km2, discharges 1398 m3/s (C. Bassa–Victoria Falls)
- Gwembe Catchment, 156,600 km2, 232 m3/s (Kariba Gorge–Vic Falls):
- Gwayi River: 54,610 km2, NW Zimbabwe
- Sengwa River: 25,000 km2, North-central Zimbabwe
- Sanyati River: 43,500 km2, North-central Zimbabwe
- Kariba Gorge to C. Bassa catchment, 386200 km2, 1166 m3/s (C. Bassa–Kariba Gorge):
- Kafue River: 154,200 km2, 285 m3/s, West-central Zambia & Copperbelt
- Luangwa River: 151,400 km2, 547 m3/s, Luangwa Rift Valley & plateau NW of it
- Panhane River: 23,897 km2, North-central Zimbabwe plateau
Lower Zambezi cumulatively, 1,378,000 km2, 3424 m3/s, measured at Marromeu
- (Lower section by itself: 328,000 km2, 982 m3/s (Marromeu–C. Bassa))
- Luia River: 28,000 km2, Moravia-Angonia plateau, N of Zambezi
- Luenha River/Mazoe River: 54,144 km2, 152 m3/s, Manica plateau, NE Zimbabwe
- Shire River, 154,000 km2, 539 m3/s, Lake Malawi basin
- Zambezi Delta, 12,000 km2
Total Zambezi river basin: 1,390,000 km2, 3424 m3/s discharged into delta
Source: Beilfuss & Dos Santos (2001)[4] The Okavango Basin is not included in the figures because it only occasionally overflows to any extent into the Zambezi.
Because of the rainfall distribution, northern tributaries contribute much more water than southern ones; for example: The Northern Highlands catchment of the upper Zambezi contributes 25%, Kafue 8%, Luangwa and Shire Rivers 16% each, total 65% of Zambezi discharge. The large Cuando basin in the south-west, though, contributes only about 2 m3/s because most is lost through evaporation in its swamp systems. The 1940s and 1950s were particularly wet decades in the basin. Since 1975, it has been drier, the average discharge being only 70% of that for the years 1930 to 1958.[4]
Geological history
[edit]
Up to the Late Pliocene or Pleistocene (more than two million years ago), the upper Zambezi flowed south through what is now the Makgadikgadi Pan to the Limpopo River.[27] The change of the river course is the result of epeirogenic movements that lifted up the surface at the present-day water divide between both rivers.[28]
Meanwhile, 1,000 km (620 mi) east, a western tributary of the Shire River in the East African Rift's southern extension through Malawi eroded a deep valley on its western escarpment. At a slow rate, the middle Zambezi started cutting back the bed of its river towards the west, aided by grabens (rift valleys) forming along its course in an east–west axis. As it did so, it captured several south-flowing rivers such as the Luangwa and Kafue.
Eventually, the large lake trapped at Makgadikgadi (or a tributary of it) was captured by the middle Zambezi cutting back towards it, and emptied eastwards. The upper Zambezi was captured, as well. The middle Zambezi was about 300 m (980 ft) lower than the upper Zambezi, and a high waterfall formed at the edge of the basalt plateau across which the upper river flows. This was the first Victoria Falls, somewhere down the Batoka Gorge near where Lake Kariba is now.[29]
History
[edit]Etymology
[edit]The first European to come across the Zambezi River was Vasco da Gama in January 1498, who anchored at what he called Rio dos Bons Sinais (River of Good Omens), now the Quelimane or Quá-Qua, a small river on the northern end of the delta, which at that time was connected by navigable channels to the Zambezi River proper (the connection silted up by the 1830s). In a few of the oldest maps, the entire river is denoted as such. By the 16th century, a new name emerged, the Cuama River (sometimes "Quama" or "Zuama"). Cuama was the local name given by the dwellers of the Swahili coast for an outpost located on one of the southerly islands of the delta (near the Luabo channel). Most old nautical maps denote the Luabo entry as Cuama, the entire delta as the "rivers of Cuama", and the Zambezi proper as the "Cuama River".[citation needed]
In 1552, Portuguese chronicler João de Barros noted that the same Cuama River was called Zembere by the inland people of Monomatapa.[30] The Portuguese Dominican friar João dos Santos, visiting Monomatapa in 1597 reported it as Zambeze (Bantu languages frequently shifts between z and r) and inquired into the origins of the name; he was told it was named after a people.

"The River Cuama is by them called Zambeze; the head whereof is so farre within Land that none of them know it, but by tradition of their Progenitors say it comes from a Lake in the midst of the continent which yeelds also other great Rivers, divers ways visiting the Sea. They call it Zambeze, of a Nation of Cafres dwelling neere that Lake which are so called." —J. Santos Ethiopia Oriental, 1609[31]
Thus, the term "Zambezi" is after a people who live by a great lake to the north. The most likely candidates are the "M'biza", or Bisa people (in older texts given as Muisa, Movisa, Abisa, Ambios, and other variations), a Bantu people who live in what is now central-eastern Zambia, between the Zambezi River and Lake Bangweolo (at the time, before the Lunda invasion, the Bisa would have likely stretched further north, possibly to Lake Tanganyika). The Bisa had a reputation as great cloth traders throughout the region.[32]
In a curious note, Goese-born Portuguese trader Manuel Caetano Pereira, who traveled to the Bisa homelands in 1796, was surprised to be shown a second, separate river referred to as the "Zambezi".[33] This "other Zambezi" that puzzled Pereira is most likely what modern sources spell the Chambeshi River in northern Zambia.
The Monomatapa notion (reported by Santos) that the Zambezi was sourced from a great internal lake might be a reference to one of the African Great Lakes. One of the names reported by early explorers for Lake Malawi was "Lake Zambre" (probably a corruption of "Zambezi"), possibly because Lake Malawi is connected to the lower Zambezi via the Shire River. The Monomatapa story resonated with the old European notion, drawn from classical antiquity, that all the great African rivers—the Nile, the Senegal, the Congo, and the Zambezi—were all sourced from the same great internal lake. The Portuguese were also told that the Mozambican Espirito Santo "river" (actually an estuary formed by the Umbeluzi, Matola, and Tembe Rivers) was sourced from a lake (hence its outlet became known as Delagoa Bay). As a result, several old maps depict the Zambezi and the "Espirito Santo" Rivers converging deep in the interior, at the same lake.
However, the Bisa-derived etymology is not without dispute. In 1845, W.D. Cooley, examining Pereira's notes, concluded the term "Zambezi" derives not from the Bisa people, but rather from the Bantu term "mbege"/"mbeze" ("fish"), and consequently it probably means merely "river of fish".[34] David Livingstone, who reached the upper Zambezi in 1853, refers to it as "Zambesi", but also makes note of the local name "Leeambye" used by the Lozi people, which he says means "large river or river par excellence". Livingstone records other names for the Zambezi—Luambeji, Luambesi, Ambezi, Ojimbesi, and Zambesi—applied by different peoples along its course, and asserts they "all possess a similar signification and express the native idea of this magnificent stream being the main drain of the country".[35]
Other historical records show that the river was called Kasambabezi by the Tonga people, which means "only those who know the river can bath in it." a name which is still in use to this day.[36][37]
In Portuguese records, the "Cuama River" term disappeared and gave way to the term "Sena River" (Rio de Sena), a reference to the Swahili (and later Portuguese) upriver trade station at Sena. In 1752, the Zambezi Delta, under the name "Rivers of Sena" (Rios de Sena) formed a colonial administrative district of Portuguese Mozambique, but common usage of "Zambezi" led eventually to a royal decree in 1858 officially renaming the district "Zambézia".
Exploration
[edit]
The Zambezi region was known to medieval geographers as the Empire of Monomotapa, and the course of the river, as well as the position of lakes Ngami and Nyasa, were generally accurate in early maps. These were probably constructed from Arab information.[38]
The first European to visit the inland Zambezi River was the Portuguese degredado António Fernandes in 1511 and again in 1513, with the objective of reporting on commercial conditions and activities of the interior of Central Africa. The final report of these explorations revealed the importance of the ports of the upper Zambezi to the local trade system, in particular to East African gold trade.[39]
The first recorded exploration of the upper Zambezi was made by David Livingstone in his exploration from Bechuanaland between 1851 and 1853. Two or three years later, he descended the Zambezi to its mouth and in the course of this journey found the Victoria Falls. During 1858–60, accompanied by John Kirk, Livingstone ascended the river by the Kongone mouth as far as the falls, and also traced the course of its tributary the Shire and reached Lake Malawi.[38]
For the next 35 years, very little exploration of the river took place. Portuguese explorer Serpa Pinto examined some of the western tributaries of the river and made measurements of the Victoria Falls in 1878.[38] In 1884, Scottish-born Plymouth Brethren missionary Frederick Stanley Arnot traveled over the height of land between the watersheds of the Zambezi and the Congo and identified the source of the Zambezi.[40] He considered that the nearby high and cool Kalene Hill was a particularly suitable place for a mission.[41] Arnot was accompanied by Portuguese trader and army officer António da Silva Porto.[42]
In 1889, the Chinde channel north of the main mouths of the river was seen. Two expeditions led by Major A. St Hill Gibbons in 1895 to 1896 and 1898 to 1900 continued the work of exploration begun by Livingstone in the upper basin and central course of the river.[38]

Economy
[edit]The population of the Zambezi River Valley is estimated to be about 32 million.[citation needed] About 80% of the population of the valley is dependent on agriculture, and the upper river's floodplains provide good agricultural land.[43]
Communities by the river fish it extensively, and many people travel from far afield to fish. Some Zambian towns on roads leading to the river levy unofficial "fish taxes" on people taking Zambezi fish to other parts of the country. Game fishing, as well as fishing for food, is a significant activity on some parts of the river. Between Mongu and Livingstone, several safari lodges cater to tourists who want to fish for exotic species, and many also catch fish to sell to aquaria.[44][45]
The river valley is rich in mineral deposits and fossil fuels, and coal mining is important in places. The dams along its length also provide employment for many people near them, in maintaining the hydroelectric power stations and the dams themselves. Several parts of the river are also very popular tourist destinations. Victoria Falls receives over 100,000 visitors annually, with 141,929 visitors reported in 2015.[46] Mana Pools and Lake Kariba also draw substantial tourist numbers.[47][48]
Transport
[edit]
The river is frequently interrupted by rapids, so has never been an important long-distance transport route.[49] David Livingstone's Zambezi expedition attempted to open up the river to navigation by paddle steamer, but was defeated by the Cahora Bassa rapids.[50]
In the 1930s and 40s, a paddle-barge service operated on the stretch between the Katombora Rapids, about 50 km (31 mi) upstream from Livingstone, and the rapids just upstream from Katima Mulilo. Depending on the water level, boats could be paddled through—Lozi paddlers, a dozen or more in a boat, could deal with most of them—or they could be pulled along the shore or carried around the rapids, and teams of oxen pulled barges 5 km (3.1 mi) over land around the Ngonye Falls.[51]
Road, rail, and other crossings of the river, once few and far between, are proliferating. They are, in order from the river's source:
- Cazombo road bridge, Angola, bombed in the civil war and not yet reconstructed[52]
- Chinyingi suspension footbridge near the town of Zambezi, a 300 m (980 ft) footbridge built as a community project
- Lubosi Imwiko II Bridge linking the towns of Mongu and Kalabo, a 1,005 meter long concrete/steel road bridge including 38.5 km of embanked highway through Barotse Floodplain constructed between 2011 and 2016.[53][54] It is an extension of the Lusaka–Mongu Road, meant to be a connection between Lusaka and Angola.
- Sioma Bridge near the Ngonye Falls, anew 260 metres long road bridge (K 108 mln), opened in 2016 as part of the M10 Road (Sesheke - Senanga road).[55]
- Katima Mulilo road bridge, 900 m (3,000 ft), between Namibia and Sesheke in Zambia, opened 2004, completing the Trans–Caprivi Highway connecting Lusaka in Zambia with Walvis Bay on the Atlantic coast
- Kazungula Bridge, opened in 2021, connecting Zambia and Botswana
- Victoria Falls Bridge (road and rail), the first to be built, completed in April 1905 and initially intended as a link in Cecil Rhodes' scheme to build a railway from Cape Town to Cairo: 250 m (820 ft) long
- Kariba Dam carries the paved Kariba/Siavonga highway across the river

- Otto Beit Bridge at Chirundu, road, 382 m (1,253 ft), 1939
- Second Chirundu Bridge, road, 400 m (1,300 ft), 2002
- Tete Suspension Bridge, 1 km (1,000 m) road bridge
- Dona Ana Bridge, railway bridge in Mozambique
- Caia Bridge, opened in 2009
A number of small ferries cross the river in Angola, western Zambia, and Mozambique, notably between Mongu and Kalabo. Above Mongu in years following poor rainy seasons, the river can be forded at one or two places. In tourist areas, such as Victoria Falls and Kariba, short-distance tourist boats take visitors along the river.
Ecology
[edit]
Pollution
[edit]Sewage effluent is a major cause of water pollution around urban areas, as inadequate water-treatment facilities in all the major cities of the region release untreated sewage into the river. This has resulted in eutrophication of the river water and has facilitated the spread of diseases of poor hygiene such as cholera, typhus, and dysentery.[56]
Effects of dams
[edit]The construction of two major dams regulating the flow of the river has had a major effect on wildlife and human populations in the lower Zambezi region. When the Cahora Bassa Dam was completed in 1973, its managers allowed it to fill in a single flood season, going against recommendations to fill over at least two years. The drastic reduction in the flow of the river led to a 40% reduction in the coverage of mangroves, greatly increased erosion of the coastal region and a 60% reduction in the catch of prawns off the mouth because of the reduction in emplacement of silt and associated nutrients. Wetland ecosystems downstream of the dam shrank considerably. Wildlife in the delta was further threatened by uncontrolled hunting during the civil war in Mozambique.[57][58]
Conservation measures
[edit]The proposed Kavango–Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area was to cover parts of Zambia, Angola, Namibia, Zimbabwe, and Botswana, including the Okavango Delta in Botswana and Victoria Falls. Funding was boosted for cross-border conservation along the Zambezi in 2008. The project received a grant of €8 million from a German nongovernmental organisation. Part of the funds are to be used for research in areas covered by the project. However, Angola has warned that landmines from their civil war may impede the project.[59]
The river currently passes through Ngonye Falls National Park, Mosi-oa-Tunya National Park, and Lower Zambezi National Park (in Zambia), and the Zambezi National Park, Victoria Falls National Park, Matusadona National Park, Mana Pools National Park, and the Middle Zambezi Biosphere Reserve (in Zimbabwe).[60]
Fish stocks management
[edit]As of 2017, the situation of overfishing in the upper Zambezi and its tributaries was considered dire, in part because of weak enforcement of the respective fisheries acts and regulations. The fish stocks of Lake Liambezi in the eastern Caprivi Strip were found to be depleted, and surveys indicated a decline in the whole Zambezi-Kwando-Chobe River system. Illegal fishing (by foreign nationals employed by Namibians) and commercially minded individuals, exploited the resources to the detriment of local markets and the communities whose culture and economy depend on these resources.[61]
Namibian officials have consequently banned monofilament nets and imposed a closing period of about 3 months every year to allow the fish to breed. They also appointed village fish guards and the Kayasa Channel in the Impalila conservancy area was declared a fisheries reserve. The Namibian ministry also promotes aquaculture and plans to distribute thousands of fingerlings to registered small-scale fish farmers of the region.[61]
EUS outbreak
[edit]In September 2007, epizootic ulcerative syndrome (EUS) killed hundreds of sore-covered fish in the river. Zambia agriculture minister Ben Kapita asked experts to investigate the outbreak to probe the cause to find out if the disease can be transmitted to humans.[62]
Major towns
[edit]Along much of the river's length, the population is sparse, but important towns and cities along its course include:
- Katima Mulilo (Namibia)
- Livingstone, Mongu, Lukulu, Senanga and Sesheke (Zambia)
- Victoria Falls and Kariba (Zimbabwe)
- Songo and Tete (Mozambique)
- Cazombo (Angola)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e "Zambezi-Lake Malawi".
- ^ "The Zambezi River Basin - A Multi Sector Investment Opportunities - Volume 4-Modelling, Analysis and Input Data" (PDF). June 2010. Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
- ^ a b c d "River Discharge and Reservoir Storage Changes Using Satellite Microwave Radiometry". Archived from the original on 7 March 2023. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f "Richard Beilfuss & David dos Santos: Patterns of Hydrological Change in the Zambezi Delta, Monogram for the Sustainable Management of Cahora Bassa Dam and The Lower Zambezi Valley (2001). Estimated mean flow rate 3424 m³/s" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 December 2008. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
- ^ a b c International Network of Basin Organisations/Office International de L'eau: Archived 27 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine "Développer les Compétences pour mieux Gérer l'Eau: Fleuves Transfrontaliers Africains: Bilan Global." (2002). Estimated annual discharge 106 km3, equal to mean flow rate 3360 m3/s
- ^ "Zambezi River | river, Africa". Encyclopedia Britannica. Archived from the original on 2 May 2021. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
- ^ "Zambezi River Facts and Information". www.victoriafalls-guide.net. Archived from the original on 7 May 2023. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
- ^ "Chavuma Falls | waterfall, Zambia | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Archived from the original on 26 June 2022. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
- ^ "Zambia Tourism: Waterfalls". Zambia Tourism. Archived from the original on 7 April 2020. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
- ^ Pasanisi, Francesco; Tebano, Carlo; Zarlenga, Francesco (March 2016). "A Survey near Tambara along the Lower Zambezi River". Environments. 3 (1): 6. doi:10.3390/environments3010006.
- ^ "Zengamina Hydro Project | North West Zambia Development Trust". Archived from the original on 23 April 2022. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
- ^ "Dilapidated Zambezi Source Site Worry Ikelenge DC". muvitv.com. Muvi TV. Archived from the original on 4 September 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
- ^ "ZM002 Source of the Zambezi". birdlife.org. Birdlife International. Archived from the original on 4 September 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
- ^ a b c d e Dorling Kindersley, pp. 84–85
- ^ Ashton, Peter; Love, David; Mahachi, Harriet; Dirks, Paul. "An Overview of the Impacts of Mining and Mineral Processing Operations on Water Resources and Water Quality in the Zambezi, Limpopo AND Olifant Catchments in Southern Africa" (PDF). International Institute for Environment and Development. Mining, Minerals and Sustainable Development Project, Southern Africa. Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 November 2020. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
- ^ Page, Geology (25 November 2014). "Zambezi River". Geology Page. Archived from the original on 20 May 2021. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
- ^ "Zambezi River Facts and Information". www.victoriafalls-guide.net. Archived from the original on 7 May 2023. Retrieved 22 May 2021.
- ^ Edington, Sean (29 December 2020). "Is rafting on the Zambezi River below The Victoria Falls Dangerous?". SAFPAR. Archived from the original on 20 May 2021. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
- ^ Valkenburgh, Blaire Van; White, Paula A. (20 April 2021). "Figure 1: Map showing location of Luangwa Valley and Greater Kafue Ecosystem in Zambia". PeerJ. 9: e11313. doi:10.7717/peerj.11313/fig-1.
- ^ "GAZ Term "Zambezi River" (GAZ:00044898)". archive.gramene.org. Archived from the original on 20 May 2021. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
- ^ "Zambezi - Encyclopedia". theodora.com. Archived from the original on 20 May 2021. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
- ^ Knifton, Dulcie (July 2004). Revise AS Level Geography for Edexcel Specification B. Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-435-10154-1.
- ^ "Zambezi River Delta: Image of the Day". earthobservatory.nasa.gov. 29 August 2013. Archived from the original on 6 January 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
- ^ a b "Zambezian coastal flooded savanna". Terrestrial Ecoregions. World Wildlife Fund.
- ^ Chaudhary, Huma (3 March 2024). "Canoeing on the Zambezi River". The Travel Vibes. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
- ^ Richard Beilfuss & David dos Santos: Patterns of Hydrological Change in the Zambezi Delta, Mozambique. Archived 2 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine Working Paper No 2 Program for the Sustainable Management of Cahora Bassa Dam and The Lower Zambezi Valley (2001)
- ^ Goudie, A.S. (2005). "The drainage of Africa since the Cretaceous". Geomorphology. 67 (3–4): 437–456. Bibcode:2005Geomo..67..437G. doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2004.11.008.
- ^ Moore, A.E. (1999). "A reapprisal of epeirogenic flexure axes in southern Africa". South African Journal of Geology. 102 (4): 363–376.
- ^ AWF Four Corners Biodiversity Information Package No 2: Summary of Technical Reviews Archived 17 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 1 March 2007.
- ^ Barros, Da Asia, Dec. I, Lib. X, vol. 2, p.374)
- ^ Fr. J. dos Santos (1609), Ethiopia Oriental e varia historia de cousas Notaveis do Oriente, Pt. III. English translation is from Samuel Purchas's 1625 Haklyutus Posthumus, (1905) ed., Glasgow, vol. 10: p.220-21
- ^ The connection between Santos/Monomatapa "Zambezi" and the "M'biza" is suggested in Cooley (1845).
- ^ "Notícias dadas por Manoel Caetano Pereira, comerciante, que se entranhou pelo interior da África", as published in José Acúrsio das Neves (1830) Considerações Políticas e Comerciais sobre os Descobrimentos e Possessões na África e na Ásia. Lisbon: Imprensa Regia. p.373
- ^ W.D. Cooley (1845) "The Geography of N'yassi, or the Great Lake of Southern Africa, investigated, with an account of the overland route from the Quanza in Angola to the Zambezi in the government of Mozambique", Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, p.185-235.
- ^ David Livingstone (1857) Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa (p.208)
- ^ Mawere, Munyaradzi; Awuah-Nyamekye, Samuel (20 June 2015). Harnessing Cultural Capital for Sustainability: A Pan Africanist Perspective. Langaa RPCIG. ISBN 978-9956-762-50-7.
- ^ "Kasambabezi". 25 November 2017.
- ^ a b c d One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Cana, Frank (1911). "Zambezi". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 951–953.
- ^ Newitt, Malyn (2005). A History of Portuguese Overseas Expansion, 1400-1668. Routledge. p. 81. ISBN 0-203-32404-8.
- ^ Howard, Dr. J. Keir (2005). "Arnot, Frederick Stanley". Dictionary of African Christian Biography. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 14 December 2011.
- ^ Pritchett, James Anthony (2007). Friends for life, friends for death: cohorts and consciousness among the Lunda-Ndembu. University of Virginia Press. pp. 29–31. ISBN 978-0-8139-2624-7.
- ^ Fish, Bruce; Fish, Becky Durost (2001). Angola, 1880 to the present: slavery, exploitation, and revolt. Infobase Publishing. p. 30. ISBN 0-7910-6197-3.
- ^ Horta, Loro (20 May 2008). "The Zambezi Valley: China's First Agricultural Colony?". Retrieved 11 May 2024.
- ^ "The Zambezi River, Drained Bone Dry". International Rivers. 30 November 2017. Archived from the original on 20 May 2021. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
- ^ Mikva, Keren (30 June 2016). "12 Things You Didn't Know About the Economy of the Zambezi River - Page 4 of 14". Moguldom. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
- ^ [1] Archived 25 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine Republic of Zambia Ministry of Tourism and Arts 2015 Tourism Statistical Digest
- ^ "Hydroelectric Power: Advantages of Production and Usage". www.usgs.gov. Archived from the original on 20 May 2021. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
- ^ "Zimbabwe". InventTour. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
- ^ "The Zambezi River | Zimbabwe Field Guide". zimfieldguide.com. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
- ^ "David Livingstone - Zambezi Expedition, Missionary, Explorer | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
- ^ E. C. Mills: "Overlanding Cattle from Barotse to Angola" Archived 3 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine, The Northern Rhodesia Journal, Vol 1 No 2, pp 53–63 (1950). Accessed 16 December 2017.
- ^ Visible on Google Earth at latitude -11.906 longitude 22.831.
- ^ Visible on Google Earth at longitude 22.924 latitude -15.214.
- ^ "Mongu-Kalabo Road - Zambia's Engineering Marvel". zedcorner.com. 13 April 2016. Archived from the original on 2 March 2018. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
- ^ "President launches K108m Sioma Bridge – Zambia Daily Mail". daily-mail.co.zm. Archived from the original on 16 February 2018. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
- ^ Herbig, Friedo J. W. (1 January 2019). Meissner, Richard (ed.). "Talking dirty - effluent and sewage irreverence in South Africa: A conservation crime perspective". Cogent Social Sciences. 5 (1) 1701359. doi:10.1080/23311886.2019.1701359.
- ^ "Zambezi River Tourist Information". www.touristlink.com. Archived from the original on 28 January 2022. Retrieved 22 May 2021.
- ^ Isaacman, Allen; Sneddon, Chris (2000). "Toward a Social and Environmental History of the Building of Cahora Bassa Dam". Journal of Southern African Studies. 26 (4): 597–632. doi:10.1080/713683608. ISSN 0305-7070. JSTOR 2637563. S2CID 153574634.
- ^ "Sub-Saharan Africa news in brief: 13–25 March". Archived from the original on 21 May 2013. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
- ^ "Zambezi River 2017 | Lensman - Lennart Hessel Photography". Lensman. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
- ^ a b Kooper, Lugeretzia (23 June 2017). "Zambezi fishermen warned against overfishing". namibian.com.na. The Namibian. Archived from the original on 5 September 2017. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
- ^ "Zambia warns against fish killed by mysterious disease". Agence France-Presse. Archived from the original on 22 January 2009.
Further reading
[edit]- Bento C.M., Beilfuss R. (2003), Wattled Cranes, Waterbirds, and Wetland Conservation in the Zambezi Delta, Mozambique, report for the Biodiversity Foundation for Africa for the IUCN - Regional Office for Southern Africa: Zambezi Basin Wetlands Conservation and Resource Utilisation Project.
- Bourgeois S., Kocher T., Schelander P. (2003), Case study: Zambezi river basin, ETH Seminar: Science and Politics of International Freshwater Management 2003/04
- Davies B.R., Beilfuss R., Thoms M.C. (2000), "Cahora Bassa retrospective, 1974–1997: effects of flow regulation on the Lower Zambezi River," Verh. Internat. Verein. Limnologie, 27, 1–9
- Dunham KM (1994), The effect of drought on the large mammal populations of Zambezi riverine woodlands, Journal of Zoology, v. 234, p. 489–526
- Dorling Kindersley Publishing, Inc. (2004). World reference atlas. New York: Dorling Kindersley. ISBN 0-7566-0481-8
- Wynn S. (2002), "The Zambezi River - Wilderness and Tourism", International Journal of Wilderness, 8, 34.
- H. C. N. Ridley: "Early History of Road Transport in Northern Rhodesia", The Northern Rhodesia Journal, Vol 2 No 5 (1954)—Re Zambezi River Transport Service at Katombora.
- Funding boost for cross-border conservation project
External links
[edit]- Information and a map of the Zambezi's watershed
- Zambezi Expedition - Fighting Malaria on the "River of Life" Archived 7 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- "Home Page". Zambezi River Authority. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 23 September 2012.
- The Zambezi Society
- Map of Africa's river basins
- Bibliography on Water Resources and International Law Archived 9 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Peace Palace Library
- The Nature Conservancy's Great Rivers Partnership works to conserve the Zambezi River
Zambezi
View on GrokipediaThe Zambezi is a transboundary river in southern Africa, ranking as the continent's fourth-longest waterway at approximately 2,574 kilometres, originating from a marshy bog in Zambia's Northwestern Province at an elevation of about 1,300 metres and traversing or forming borders with six countries—Zambia, Angola, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique—before discharging into the Mozambique Channel of the Indian Ocean through a expansive delta spanning roughly 100 kilometres.[1][2][3]
The river's basin, the largest in southern Africa covering around 1.4 million square kilometres, sustains critical ecological functions including seasonal floodplains that foster biodiversity hotspots with species such as African elephants, hippopotamuses, and diverse fish populations, while economically underpinning hydropower from major dams like Kariba and Cahora Bassa, which generate electricity for regional grids, alongside irrigation for agriculture and tourism centred on landmarks like Victoria Falls—a UNESCO site where the river cascades over a 1.7-kilometre-wide chasm dropping up to 108 metres.[4][5][6]
Defining characteristics include its dramatic hydrology, with peak flows exceeding 7,000 cubic metres per second during floods that historically inundated up to 30,000 square kilometres of Barotse floodplain, though large dams have curtailed these dynamics, sparking controversies over downstream sediment deprivation, wetland degradation, and forced relocations of tens of thousands of riparian communities without adequate compensation, underscoring tensions in multinational water allocation amid climate variability.[7][8][6]
Physical Geography
Source and Upper Course
The Zambezi River originates from a small spring in a marshy wetland near Kalene Hill in the Mwinilunga District of northwestern Zambia, at coordinates approximately 11°10'S, 24°11'E and an elevation of about 1,500 meters above sea level.[9][7] The source lies on the Southern Equatorial Divide, separating waters flowing to the Congo Basin from those to the Zambezi system.[10] From its origin, the river initially flows northward for approximately 30 kilometers before turning southwest around Kalene Hill, a Karoo sandstone ridge, and entering eastern Angola for about 200 kilometers.[10] It then re-enters Zambia, where the upper course features a gentle gradient, with the river dropping roughly 400 meters over the first 350 kilometers to around 1,100 meters elevation near Kakengi.[11] In Zambia's Western Province, the Zambezi traverses the extensive Barotse Floodplain, a 180-kilometer-long and up to 30-kilometer-wide alluvial plain incised into Precambrian basement rocks and Kalahari Sands, which swells significantly during seasonal floods.[10] The river forms part of the Zambia-Namibia border along the Caprivi Strip, characterized by slow-flowing channels, islands, and lagoons supporting miombo woodlands and wetlands.[9] The upper course concludes with increasing gradient and rapids, including Ngonye Falls (also known as Sioma Falls), before reaching Victoria Falls, marking the transition to the middle course; the average gradient from Ngonye Falls to Victoria Falls over 340 kilometers is 0.00024.[10]Middle Course and Victoria Falls
The middle course of the Zambezi River follows the Barotse Floodplain, where the channel narrows after the broad, swampy expanse in western Zambia, transitioning to a steeper gradient as it flows southeast through narrower valleys.[12] This segment, spanning roughly 500 kilometers, marks the boundary between Zambia and Namibia's Caprivi Strip before veering east along the Zambia-Zimbabwe border, with the river's flow constrained by Precambrian basement rocks and increasing velocity due to topographic descent.[13] Hydrologically, discharge in this reach builds from upstream contributions, peaking during the rainy season (November to March) when floodwaters from the Angolan highlands and Barotse region elevate levels, though attenuation occurs over the floodplain delay of up to one month before reaching downstream gauges.[14] Victoria Falls, located at the end of this middle course, consists of the Zambezi plunging over a kilometer-wide basalt lip into a narrow gorge, forming the world's largest curtain of falling water by combined width and height.[15] The cataract spans 1,708 meters across at full flood, with a maximum height of 108 meters, though the drop varies sectionally from 80 to 108 meters into a fissure averaging 20-30 meters wide at the base.[15] [16] Geologically, the falls owe their form to the Zambezi's encounter with the Batoka basalt plateau, extruded during the Cretaceous around 130 million years ago, subsequently fractured by the East African Rift system's tensile stresses, enabling headward erosion that has retreated the lip upstream over millennia.[16] The indigenous Tonga name, Mosi-oa-Tunya ("The Smoke That Thunders"), reflects the perpetual mist and roar from 500-1,000 cubic meters per second of water in high flow, eroding the lip at rates of 1-2 meters per century via potholing and undercutting.[17] European awareness of the falls dates to Scottish explorer and missionary David Livingstone, who first viewed them on November 16, 1855, from an island in the Zambezi near the western bank, naming the feature Victoria Falls in honor of Queen Victoria.[18] Livingstone's accounts, published in Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa (1857), described the site's scale based on local Kololo guides' directions, though the falls had long been known to regional peoples for navigation hazards and spiritual significance.[18] Post-discovery, the site gained UNESCO World Heritage status in 1989 as Mosi-oa-Tunya / Victoria Falls for its geological and ecological value, with the gorge system—including the 120-kilometer Batoka Gorge downstream—exhibiting sequential erosion stages from tectonic uplift around 2 million years ago.[17] [16]Lower Course and Delta
The lower course of the Zambezi River commences upon its entry into Mozambique near Zumbo, after traversing the Zambia-Zimbabwe border region, and extends southeastward approximately 460 kilometers to the Indian Ocean. This segment passes through Tete Province, where the river is impounded by the Cahora Bassa Dam, completed in 1974, forming a reservoir roughly 270 kilometers long with a maximum depth exceeding 170 meters. Downstream, the river flows across a low-gradient coastal plain, characterized by meandering channels and expansive floodplains that experience seasonal inundation, though altered by upstream damming.[19][20] The Cahora Bassa reservoir has significantly modified the river's morphology, trapping sediments and reducing downstream transport by up to 90 percent, resulting in channel incision, bank erosion, and diminished aggradation in the lower reaches. This has led to narrower channels and reduced floodplain fertility, with hydrological models indicating a shift from depositional to erosional dynamics post-1974.[19][20] The Zambezi Delta, situated in Zambezia Province adjacent to Quelimane, constitutes a broad, flat alluvial plain covering approximately 1.2 million hectares of low-lying terrain, much of it below 5 meters elevation. Formed by historical sediment accumulation from the river's high discharge, the delta features multiple distributaries, including the primary Luabo and Chinde channels, divided by sandbars and interspersed with marshes and lagoons. Strong tidal influences, with ranges reaching 6.4 meters—the highest on the African continent—penetrate 40 to 50 kilometers inland, promoting saltwater intrusion and shaping estuarine environments. Reduced sediment influx due to upstream reservoirs has slowed delta progradation and increased vulnerability to erosion and sea-level rise.[21][22]Hydrology and Discharge
The hydrology of the Zambezi River is characterized by high seasonal and interannual variability driven by the basin's tropical savanna climate, with mean annual rainfall ranging from 500 mm in the southern arid zones to over 1,500 mm in the northern highlands, concentrated in a wet season from November to March.[23] Potential evapotranspiration exceeds rainfall annually at approximately 1,600 mm basin-wide, resulting in low runoff coefficients of 5-10%, where only a fraction of precipitation contributes to river flow due to infiltration, transpiration, and evaporation losses.[24] The river's flow regime reflects these patterns, with peak discharges occurring during flood pulses from March to May, when upstream tributaries swell from heavy rains, and base flows dropping sharply in the dry season from July to October, often to less than 10% of peak values.[25] Discharge measurements at key gauging stations illustrate this variability and the river's progression. At Chavuma in the upper reaches, the long-term mean annual discharge is 390 m³/s, increasing to 1,100 m³/s at Victoria Falls due to contributions from sub-basins like the Kabompo and Lungwebungu.[26] [27] Further downstream, major tributaries such as the Kafue (mean ~280 m³/s) and Luangwa add volume, yielding an estimated mean annual discharge of approximately 2,160 m³/s (equivalent to 70 km³/year) at the mouth in the Zambezi Delta, though interannual fluctuations can range from drought lows below 1,000 m³/s to flood highs exceeding 10,000 m³/s.[28] Annual means at Victoria Falls have varied from 400 m³/s in dry years to 2,300 m³/s in wet years, correlating with regional rainfall anomalies influenced by phenomena like El Niño-Southern Oscillation.[23]| Gauging Station | Long-Term Mean Annual Discharge (m³/s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Chavuma | 390 | Upper Zambezi, pre-major tributaries[26] |
| Victoria Falls | 1,100 | Post-upper basin contributions; high variability[26] [23] |
| Zambezi Mouth | ~2,160 | Total basin outflow; includes delta sedimentation effects[28] |
Geology and Climate
Geological Formation and History
The Zambezi River system traces its origins to the tectonic assembly of the Gondwana supercontinent during the late Neoproterozoic to Ordovician period, roughly 540 to 443 million years ago, when collisional forces elevated a central African plateau that defined its proto-headwaters.[31] This ancient drainage network, predating the current Zambezi configuration, has persisted for at least 280 million years, archiving successive phases of continental amalgamation and subsequent rifting that shaped southern Africa's landscape.[31] Precambrian basement rocks, exposed along the upper reaches and forming the South Equatorial Divide, provided the resistant substrate into which early incisions occurred, resisting erosion relative to surrounding Karoo sediments.[10] Gondwana's fragmentation initiated around 180 million years ago in the Early Jurassic, with rifting along the Mozambique Basin creating failed arms like the Lower Zambezi graben, which the modern river occupies in its lower course.[32] This phase redirected proto-Zambezi flows, incorporating segments from earlier systems such as a Cretaceous linkage with the Limpopo River that exploited crustal weaknesses to reach the Indian Ocean margin.[33] By the Early Cretaceous, over 12 kilometers of sediments had begun accumulating in the Zambezi Delta, marking the onset of sustained depositional history amid ongoing tectonic subsidence and sea-level fluctuations.[34] The river's segmentation—evident in shifts from quartzose sands in the upper Kalahari Plateau to basaltic inputs at the Karoo-Victoria Falls escarpment, then quartzo-feldspathic loads downstream—reflects polyphase drainage evolution driven by uplift, faulting, and piracy events predating full Gondwanan breakup. In the Cenozoic, Miocene to Pliocene uplifts along the East African Rift periphery and episodic doming further entrenched the Zambezi's course, with the Victoria Falls knickpoint emerging from differential erosion of Karoo basalts capping softer sandstones, forming a boundary in the river's concave-upward longitudinal profile.[13] This profile's dual segments underscore tectonic controls, including half-graben development and wrench faulting that modulated incision rates and sediment flux.[13] Paleogene and Neogene climatic aridity phases amplified headward erosion, while Quaternary floodplains preserved evidence of piracy from adjacent basins like the Okavango, stabilizing the modern path across tectonically quiescent Precambrian shields.[31] Overall, the Zambezi's geological record integrates orogenic inheritance from Gondwanan suturing with rift-related disruptions, yielding a resilient system resilient to repeated landscape reorganizations.[31]Climatic Patterns and Recent Variability
The Zambezi River Basin experiences a highly variable tropical climate characterized by distinct wet and dry seasons, with rainfall primarily driven by the seasonal migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Precipitation typically begins in September-November (SON), peaks during December-February (DJF), and ceases by March-May (MAM), resulting in annual totals ranging from 500 mm in the southern and western highlands to over 1,500 mm in the northern and eastern regions.[35] Temperatures exhibit a high daily range, averaging about 10°C during the rainy season and up to 20°C in the dry season, with mean annual values increasing from cooler highlands to warmer lowlands.[36] Spatial climatic gradients within the basin reflect topographic influences, with the northern tributaries receiving more consistent orographic rainfall compared to the drier southern extents. The basin's overall aridity increases southward, contributing to pronounced seasonal flow variability in the Zambezi River, where discharge can fluctuate by factors of 10 or more between wet and dry periods.[37] This variability is compounded by influences such as El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), which modulates interannual rainfall patterns, often leading to either enhanced wet seasons or deficits.[24] Observed trends since the late 20th century indicate a consistent warming across the basin, with temperature increases of approximately 1-2°C in many areas, aligning with broader Southern African patterns. Rainfall shows high interannual variability but no uniform long-term decline; however, some analyses detect shortening wet seasons and increased intensity of events, potentially linked to altered atmospheric circulation.[38][39] Recent decades have featured extreme events underscoring this variability, including severe droughts in 2015-2016 and 2019, which reduced inflows to Lake Kariba by over 50% in some years, and floods in 2000-2001 and 2020 that exceeded historical peaks in the lower basin. The 2019 drought, analyzed via satellite data, ranked among the most intense in the instrumental record upstream of Kariba Dam, though not unprecedented when considering paleoclimate proxies.[40][37] Such events highlight the basin's susceptibility to multi-year droughts and decadal floods, with empirical models suggesting that while natural oscillations like ENSO dominate short-term variability, gradual warming may amplify extremes without conclusively altering baseline precipitation totals.[41][24]Ecology
Terrestrial and Aquatic Biodiversity
The Zambezi River basin encompasses diverse ecosystems, including miombo woodlands (49% of the area), mopane woodlands (12%), montane forests, floodplains, and wetlands, which collectively support approximately 200 mammal species, 700 bird species, 290 reptile and amphibian species, and 6,000–7,000 vascular plant species.[42] [43] These habitats sustain high terrestrial biodiversity, with floodplains like the Barotse (8,650 km²) and Kafue Flats serving as critical refugia for grazing antelopes and migratory birds.[43] Terrestrial mammals include large herbivores such as African elephants (Loxodonta africana), Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer), and floodplain-adapted antelopes like black lechwe (Kobus leche smithemani), Kafue lechwe (K. l. kafuensis), and puku (K. vardonii), the latter three showing localized endemism tied to wetland dynamics.[42] [43] Predators like lions (Panthera leo), leopards (P. pardus), and African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) occupy savanna and riparian zones, while smaller mammals, including 26 bat species in the Barotse floodplains, exploit forested edges.[43] Avifauna comprises about 178 wetland-dependent species, with 9 globally threatened forms such as the wattled crane (Bugeranus carunculatus); riparian corridors host piscivores like the African fish eagle (Haliaeetus vocifer).[43] Vegetation features dominant genera like Pterocarpus, Acacia, and Combretum in woodlands, alongside geoxylic suffrutices (underground forests) in seasonally flooded Kalahari sands.[43] [44] Aquatic biodiversity centers on the river channel, tributaries, and associated wetlands, harboring 165–196 fish species (excluding Lake Malawi's ~500 endemic cichlids), with the upper Zambezi exhibiting the highest diversity at over 134 species.[42] [43] Victoria Falls forms a biogeographic barrier, restricting upstream-downstream overlap to ~30 species and fostering endemism (24 species or 17% of the total system).[45] [46] Key fishes include migratory Opsaridium sardines, predatory tigerfish (Hydrocynus vittatus), and catfishes like Synodontis (9 species, several upper-basin endemics).[47] Invertebrates feature 102 mollusc species (23 endemics basin-wide) and 217 odonates (12 endemics in headwaters), while semi-aquatic reptiles and amphibians total 197 species, richest in Barotse floodplains (70 reptiles, 34 amphibians).[43] Iconic aquatic megafauna, such as Nile crocodiles (Crocodylus niloticus) and common hippopotamuses (Hippopotamus amphibius), dominate riverine trophic webs, with the Zambezi Delta (14,092 km²) integrating estuarine fishes, mangroves, and seabirds.[43] [47]Key Wildlife Species and Habitats
The Zambezi River basin encompasses diverse habitats that sustain rich wildlife assemblages, including extensive floodplains, wetlands, riparian forests, savannas, and woodlands. In the upper reaches, low-gradient rivers alternate with broad floodplains and swamps, providing seasonal inundation critical for aquatic and semi-aquatic species.[12] The middle Zambezi Valley features riverine environments with associated wetlands and riparian vegetation dominated by trees such as Pterocarpus and Acacia, supporting a range of predators and herbivores.[48] Lower sections, including the Zambezi Delta, form biologically diverse tropical floodplains with mosaics of acacia savanna, palm stands, papyrus swamps, and mangroves, representing one of Africa's most productive wetland systems.[49][21] Key mammalian species include the African elephant (Loxodonta africana), which thrives in the basin's savanna woodlands and floodplains, with the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA) hosting the world's largest contiguous population.[50] Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius) form large pods in riverine and floodplain habitats, particularly in the middle and lower Zambezi, where they influence vegetation dynamics through grazing and trampling.[5] Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) populations remain stable in the upper Zambezi, occupying deep pools and river channels as apex predators.[51] Other notable mammals encompass African buffalo (Syncerus caffer), lions (Panthera leo), and African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus), which utilize the valley's grasslands and woodlands for hunting.[44] Avian diversity exceeds 600 species, with riparian and wetland habitats attracting waterbirds and raptors such as the African fish eagle (Haliaeetus vocifer), African skimmer (Rynchops flavirostris), and various herons and kingfishers.[52] Reptiles number around 290 species basin-wide, with Nile crocodiles and monitor lizards prevalent in aquatic habitats, while amphibians occupy floodplain edges.[53] The river supports over 130 fish species, including predatory tigerfish (Hydrocynus vittatus), vundu catfish (Heterobranchus longifilis), and bream, which inhabit channels, pools, and deltaic wetlands, forming the base of aquatic food webs.[46][54] These species assemblages reflect the basin's hydrological variability, with floodplains enabling nutrient cycling that bolsters productivity across trophic levels.[43]Tributaries and Watershed Dynamics
The Zambezi River basin covers approximately 1,370,000 km², extending across eight riparian countries in southern Africa: Angola, Botswana, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.[25] This transboundary watershed supports diverse hydrological processes, including seasonal rainfall-driven recharge primarily from October to April, which accounts for over 90% of annual precipitation and drives peak river flows.[29] Groundwater contributions from aquifers in the plateau regions supplement surface flows, though extraction for agriculture and mining has intensified in recent decades, altering local dynamics.[55] Major tributaries significantly influence the Zambezi's flow regime, with the Kafue and Luangwa rivers recognized as the largest by volume, joining downstream of the Kariba Dam and contributing substantially to post-dam discharge stability.[56] The Kabompo River enters from the north in the upper reaches, draining northwestern Zambia and adding to early flood pulses, while the Lungwebungu River from the south-west provides complementary inflows along the Barotse floodplain.[57] Further downstream, the Cuando River connects intermittently during high floods, linking the basin to the Okavango system and exemplifying dynamic wetland interconnections that expand the effective watershed during wet seasons.[22] In the lower basin, the Shire River, fed by Lake Malawi outflows, boosts volumes before the delta, with its regulated releases via dams affecting downstream sediment transport and flooding patterns.[29] Watershed dynamics exhibit high variability due to climatic gradients, with headwater rainfall in Angola and Zambia generating initial surges that propagate eastward, modulated by evaporation losses exceeding 1,500 mm annually in arid segments.[58] Transboundary flows necessitate coordinated management, as uneven infrastructure development—such as dams on the Kafue—has reduced natural flood peaks by up to 40% in affected reaches, impacting floodplain ecosystems and fisheries reliant on annual inundation.[59] Recent analyses indicate that climate variability, including prolonged dry spells since the 1990s, has decreased overall basin runoff by 10-15% in some models, exacerbating water scarcity in downstream areas while highlighting the role of tributary resilience in buffering mainstem declines.[55] Empirical gauging data from key confluences underscore these shifts, with tributary contributions varying from 20-50% of total discharge depending on seasonal and locational factors.[27]Human History
Etymology and Indigenous Knowledge
The name Zambezi originates from Bantu languages spoken by indigenous groups along its course, particularly the Tonga people's term Kasambabezi, which translates to "only those who know [the river] can bathe [in it]," reflecting the river's perilous currents, rapids, and wildlife hazards like crocodiles and hippopotamuses that demanded local expertise for safe navigation and use.[11] This etymology underscores the river's role as a formidable barrier and resource, with the Tonga—self-identifying as Bazlwizi or "River People"—possessing intimate hydrological knowledge passed down orally, including seasonal flood predictions based on indicators like bird migrations, wind patterns, and plant phenology to time fishing, crop planting in floodplains, and crossings.[60] Alternative regional names include the Lozi term Liambai or Yambezhi for the upper reaches in the Barotse Floodplain, where the river supports silvo-fisheries and cattle grazing adapted to annual inundations, and Luvale/Lunda variants like Yambeji, potentially linking to expressions denoting divine origin such as "Nzambi Enzi" (God Come), though these lack uniform scholarly consensus due to oral transmission variations.[11] Indigenous knowledge systems among Zambezi-adjacent tribes emphasize empirical observation of the river's dynamics over millennia, with Tonga communities in Zambia and Zimbabwe employing traditional ecological indicators—such as the flowering of specific riparian trees or frog choruses—to forecast rainfall variability and drought, enabling resilient agro-pastoral practices in valleys like Gwembe, where floodplain cultivation of millet and sorghum synchronizes with the river's pulse.[61] The Lozi people, dominant in western Zambia's Barotse region, integrate riverine lore into governance via the kuta system, regulating seasonal migrations (kuomboka) via dugout canoes during floods, a practice rooted in hydraulic engineering knowledge of channel shifts and sediment deposition without modern gauges.[60] Spiritual dimensions feature prominently, with Tonga attributing Victoria Falls' roar to Nyaminyami, a serpent river god embodying flood control and fertility, whose appeasement through rituals averted perceived calamities, contrasting with colonial dismissals of such beliefs as superstition despite their alignment with observed causal patterns like erosion-driven mist plumes.[62] Marginal groups like the Doma hunter-gatherers in Zimbabwe's Mana Pools demonstrate specialized foraging tactics, tracking game migrations tied to riverine grasslands and avoiding crocodile ambushes via footprint and water turbidity cues, preserving biodiversity insights amid pressures from Bantu agricultural expansion.[63] These knowledge systems, validated by long-term environmental adaptation rather than institutional validation, highlight causal realism in resource management, though documentation remains fragmented due to reliance on elders and limited ethnographic archiving prior to 20th-century disruptions like dam constructions.[64]European Exploration and Early Mapping
Portuguese mariners first encountered the Zambezi River's mouth during Vasco da Gama's voyage along the East African coast in 1498, though they did not ascend the river at that time.[65] Early maps, such as a French world map from 1546, depicted the Zambezi and Limpopo river mouths, likely drawing from Portuguese reconnaissance and Arab trade knowledge.[65] By the mid-16th century, Portuguese expeditions focused on the lower Zambezi for trade in gold, ivory, and slaves, establishing control over coastal entrepôts like Sofala and interfering in inland kingdoms.[66] In 1569, Portuguese captain Francisco Barreto commanded a military expedition up the Zambezi from the coast, comprising over 400 men with the objective of conquering the inland gold mines of the Monomotapa kingdom; the force suffered heavy losses from disease and conflict, failing to reach the interior. Subsequent Portuguese efforts included Manuel Barreto's 1667 sighting of the middle Zambezi, but inland penetration remained limited until Francisco José da Lacerda e Almeida's 1798 traversal into the Zambezi basin, where he reached the Kazembe kingdom near the upper river before succumbing to illness.[65][67] The 19th century brought more systematic exploration led by Scottish missionary David Livingstone, who between 1851 and 1853 traversed the upper Zambezi via missionary routes through Bechuanaland, becoming the first European to document its headwaters extensively.[1] In November 1855, Livingstone discovered Mosi-oa-Tunya, naming it Victoria Falls after Queen Victoria, during a journey aided by Makololo guides that traced the river's middle course. His 1852–1856 transcontinental trek from Luangwa to Quelimane further mapped segments of the Zambezi, revealing its potential for navigation despite rapids.[68] From 1858 to 1864, Livingstone directed a British government-funded Zambezi Expedition aboard the steamship MacRobert's Hope, tasked with surveying the river for commerce, cataloging resources, and promoting anti-slavery trade routes; the effort identified navigable sections but highlighted ecological challenges like malaria and shallow channels, leading to its withdrawal.[69][70] These expeditions produced detailed maps, such as those incorporated into Sá da Bandeira's 1867 chart of the Zambezi environs, advancing European geographical knowledge of the river's 2,574-kilometer course from source to sea.[71] Later Portuguese explorer Alexandre de Serpa Pinto surveyed western tributaries in 1878, refining hydrological data amid colonial rivalries.[1]Colonial Exploitation and Post-Independence Utilization
During the colonial era, the Zambezi River served primarily as a corridor for resource extraction rather than reliable navigation. Portuguese explorers established trading posts along the lower Zambezi from the 16th century, facilitating the export of ivory and slaves from the interior basin to coastal ports like Quelimane and Mozambique Island.[72] The slave trade intensified in the 19th century under Arab-Swahili and Portuguese influence, with captives transported downriver to meet demand in the Indian Ocean markets, contributing to depopulation and social disruption in the region.[73] Ivory exploitation followed similar routes, with elephant populations in the Zambezi valley heavily hunted; exports from East Central Africa peaked between 1840 and 1890 before collapsing due to overexploitation.[74] European navigation attempts underscored the river's limitations for commercial transport. David Livingstone's Zambezi Expedition (1858–1864), backed by the British government, aimed to open the river to paddle steamers for trade and missionary access but was thwarted by unnavigable rapids, including those at Cahora Bassa, leading to the mission's withdrawal in 1864.[69] British colonial interests under Cecil Rhodes focused on rail infrastructure instead; the Victoria Falls Bridge, completed in 1905, linked Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) to Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia), enabling copper exports from the Copperbelt while bypassing the river's cataracts.[75] This shift prioritized overland routes, limiting the Zambezi to local transport and hindering broader economic integration during British rule from the late 19th to mid-20th century. Post-independence, utilization centered on hydropower development to support industrial and urban growth. The Kariba Dam, constructed between 1955 and 1959 by the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, created Lake Kariba, Africa's largest man-made reservoir by volume at approximately 185 billion cubic meters, with installed capacity reaching 2,160 MW shared between Zambia and Zimbabwe after their 1964 and 1980 independences, respectively.[76] The Zambezi River Authority, established in 1987, manages operations, generating electricity that powers mining and manufacturing in the basin countries despite vulnerabilities to droughts.[77] In Mozambique, independent since 1975, the Cahora Bassa Dam, built by Portuguese engineers from 1969 to 1974, impounded Lake Cahora Bassa with a storage capacity of about 63 billion cubic meters and a generating capacity of 2,075 MW, initially exporting power to South Africa but disrupted by the 1977–1992 civil war until full rehabilitation in the 2000s.[20] These dams collectively store over 200 billion cubic meters of water, altering seasonal flows to prioritize energy production over historical flood-dependent agriculture and fisheries, though navigation remains confined to short segments due to persistent rapids and infrastructure focus on power export.[78]Economic Development
Hydropower Infrastructure: Benefits and Operations
The Zambezi River Basin hosts significant hydropower infrastructure, primarily centered on the Kariba Dam and Cahora Bassa Dam, which together contribute to approximately 5,000 MW of installed capacity across the basin.[29] The Kariba Dam, straddling the Zambia-Zimbabwe border and completed in 1959, features a total installed capacity of 2,130 MW, split between the North Bank Power Station (1,080 MW operated by Zambia's ZESCO) and the South Bank Power Station (1,050 MW operated by Zimbabwe).[79] [80] Cahora Bassa Dam in Mozambique, operational since 1974, provides 2,075 MW of capacity and generates around 13,000 GWh annually, with much of the output exported to South Africa via a 1,400 km high-voltage direct current line.[81] Additional facilities like the Itezhi-Tezhi Dam on the Kafue River tributary support operations with 120 MW capacity and a reservoir storage of 5,640 million cubic meters, aiding downstream power generation.[82] [83] Operations involve coordinated reservoir management by entities such as the Zambezi River Authority for Kariba, focusing on water storage, controlled releases for turbine generation, and seasonal flood mitigation.[84] Power plants utilize run-of-river and storage mechanisms, with turbines driven by water flow from reservoirs to produce electricity, often prioritized during high-flow periods from November to March.[81] For instance, in 2024, the Zambezi River Authority allocated 27 billion cubic meters of water for Kariba's power generation, balancing energy output with downstream needs.[85] Hydropower constitutes 85% of Zambia's installed capacity, underscoring integrated basin-wide operations that enhance grid stability through exports and interconnections.[86] Benefits include substantial electricity supply fostering economic development across southern Africa, with the basin's hydropower resources central to regional prosperity and energy security.[87] Kariba and Cahora Bassa enable export revenues, such as from Cahora Bassa's sales to South Africa, supporting infrastructure financing and industrial growth.[81] Flood control operations mitigate downstream risks, as demonstrated by Kariba's role in regulating peak flows since the 1960s, preventing potential economic losses from inundation.[88] The combined storage value of major dams like Kariba, Itezhi-Tezhi, and Cahora Bassa is estimated at around US$443 million, providing reliable baseload power and enabling irrigation expansion in coordinated scenarios.[89] These facilities reduce reliance on fossil fuels, offering low-cost renewable energy that powers mining, manufacturing, and households in water-abundant but grid-challenged regions.[90]Agriculture, Irrigation, and Navigation
Agriculture in the Zambezi River Basin (ZRB) predominantly features rain-fed cultivation on floodplains, supplemented by limited irrigation, with total economic output estimated at USD 6.5 billion in 2015 across the basin's riparian countries.[91] Major crops include maize, rice, sorghum, millet, cassava, and vegetables, grown by small-scale farmers who rely on seasonal floods for soil fertility, particularly in recession farming systems where planting occurs on moist soils post-flood retreat.[92] In Zambia's Barotse Floodplain, a key wetland expanse in the upper basin, communities cultivate rice and maize on approximately 550,000 hectares of inundated land annually, with flood dynamics enabling multiple cropping cycles but exposing yields to inter-annual variability from rainfall deficits.[93] Crop production contributes 35-85% of household food sources in basin livelihoods, rising with wealthier groups that integrate cash crops like cotton and tobacco, though droughts periodically reduce outputs by limiting inundation extent.[94] Irrigation schemes remain underdeveloped relative to potential, with the basin holding over 3 million hectares of irrigable land but only about 5% currently equipped as of assessments in the early 2010s, constraining productivity amid variable rainfall.[88] Existing projects include the Nkandabbwe Irrigation Scheme in Zambia, funded through bilateral mechanisms to support smallholder farming with costs totaling around USD 600,000 for multiple district initiatives since 1997.[95] Ambitious targets aim to triple irrigated area by 2025, focusing on community-managed systems in floodplains, while recent proposals under climate funds seek to develop 25,000 hectares of such schemes alongside conservation agriculture training for 20,000 farmers to enhance resilience.[91][96] In Mozambique's lower basin, irrigation draws from dams like Cahora Bassa to bolster rice and horticultural production, though implementation lags due to infrastructure and funding gaps, with high-potential zones covering 50,473 hectares identified for expansion.[97] Navigation on the Zambezi is confined to specific sections due to rapids, shallows, and falls like Victoria Falls blocking continuous passage, with ferries serving as primary local transport on accessible stretches.[98] The lower 650 kilometers from Cahora Bassa Dam to the Indian Ocean remain navigable by shallow-draft vessels, supporting international routes such as Kazungula and Luangwa-Kanyemba for cross-border cargo and passenger ferries, though dry-season low water depths often restrict larger operations to seasonal windows.[99] Upper basin segments, including Barotse channels, facilitate traditional canoe-based movement for communities but lack infrastructure for commercial shipping, limiting riverine trade to supplementary roles amid dominant road and rail networks.[98] Efforts to enhance connectivity, such as potential canal links, face hydrological barriers, rendering the river's transport utility modest compared to its hydropower and agricultural functions.[100]Resource Extraction and Industrial Uses
The Zambezi River Basin hosts significant mineral extraction activities, primarily focused on copper, gold, coal, and associated metals, which support regional economies through exports and industrial inputs. In Zambia, copper mining predominates in the northern and southern portions of the basin, with the Copperbelt region's operations indirectly influencing the river via the Kafue River tributary; Zambia produced approximately 763,000 metric tons of copper in 2022, much of it from basin-adjacent deposits. Exploration for copper, gold, and uranium has targeted southern Zambia near the Lower Zambezi, including sites prospected by Zambezi Resources since the mid-2000s, though large-scale open-pit developments like the proposed Kangwangwa mine were halted in 2023 due to regulatory reviews.[101][102][103] Gold extraction occurs extensively through artisanal small-scale mining and alluvial panning across the basin, particularly in Zambia, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique, employing destructive techniques such as horizontal tunnelling that affect riverbanks. An estimated 2 million people derive direct or indirect livelihoods from these activities, which target placer deposits in tributaries like the Sanyati River in Zimbabwe's Beatrice Gold Belt. In Zimbabwe, gold output from basin areas contributed to the country's total of 22.7 metric tons in 2022, often processed using mercury amalgamation.[104][105] Coal mining in Mozambique's Tete Province, within the middle Zambezi Basin, represents a major industrial-scale operation, with the Moatize coalfields yielding up to 40 million metric tons annually across four primary mines as of 2020, primarily for thermal power and export. The proposed Zambeze Mine in Changara district aims for 12 million metric tons per year of coking coal, supporting steel production. Additional resources include emeralds and cobalt in Zambia's basin areas, extracted for gem and battery industries.[106][107][108] Industrial uses of basin resources extend to water abstraction for mineral processing, where river and groundwater support leaching and flotation in copper and coal operations, alongside limited heavy mineral sands extraction from floodplains for titanium and zircon in Mozambique. These activities utilize the river's flow for cooling, tailings management, and transport, with coal barging proposed on the Zambezi to alleviate rail bottlenecks.[59][109][110]Environmental Impacts and Controversies
Dam-Induced Changes: Empirical Effects on Flow and Ecosystems
The Kariba Dam, completed in 1959 on the Zambia-Zimbabwe border, and the Cahora Bassa Dam, operational since 1974 in Mozambique, have regulated the Zambezi's flow by storing floodwaters and releasing controlled volumes for hydropower generation. These interventions have attenuated seasonal peaks, with post-dam records at downstream stations like Mutoko showing maximum annual discharges reduced by up to 50% compared to pre-1959 levels during wet years, while minimum dry-season flows increased due to operational releases.[111][112] Evaporation from the reservoirs accounts for over 11% of the river's mean annual runoff, exacerbating low-flow periods during droughts, as observed in the 2015-2016 and 2018-2019 events when combined storage fell below 20% capacity.[37] Sediment dynamics have shifted profoundly, with the dams trapping 80-95% of the incoming load—estimated at 40-50 million tonnes annually pre-dams—from the upper and middle basins, resulting in clearer outflows that promote channel incision and bank erosion downstream.[32][88] In the lower Zambezi, this has caused bed degradation of 1-2 meters in some reaches over decades, widening channels by 20-30% in zones below Cahora Bassa and reducing delta progradation, with net sediment delivery to the Indian Ocean dropping to under 1 million cubic meters per year.[113][19] Ecosystem responses include contracted floodplains and altered aquatic habitats, as regulated flows fail to replicate natural inundation pulses essential for wetland recharge and nutrient cycling; Barotse and Zambezi Delta flood extents have declined by 20-40% in non-release years, correlating with vegetation shifts from grasslands to shrubs and reduced soil fertility from sediment starvation.[20][114] Fish assemblages below Kariba exhibit dominance of lacustrine species over riverine migrants, with catches of migratory tigerfish and bream dropping 30-50% post-impoundment due to blocked spawning runs and hypoxic releases.[115] Delta mangroves and prawn fisheries have suffered from erosion and salinity intrusion, with shrimp yields falling 70% since the 1970s, underscoring cascading trophic disruptions from hydrological homogenization.[30][20]Pollution Sources and Human-Wildlife Conflicts
Mining activities represent a primary source of pollution in the Zambezi River basin, particularly through acid mine drainage and tailings releases containing heavy metals such as copper and nickel. On February 18, 2025, an embankment failure at a copper mining operation in Zambia discharged over 50 million liters of acidic wastewater into the Mwambashi River, a Zambezi tributary, with the sludge persisting in the river network and posing risks to downstream ecosystems via bioaccumulation in fish and sediments.[116][117] In the Kafue sub-basin, Konkola Copper Mines has discharged industrial effluents including biochemical substances and heavy metals, leading to elevated contaminant levels in water used for irrigation and drinking.[118] Coal mining contributes biological pollutants from wastewater associated with sanitation facilities at sites.[119] Untreated sewage and urban effluents exacerbate bacterial contamination, especially near population centers. Downstream of Victoria Falls, sewage outfalls from the town have resulted in fecal coliform levels exceeding safe thresholds, with Escherichia coli counts reaching 3.3 × 10⁴ per 100 ml up to 18.6 km downstream, indicating widespread E. coli pollution from human waste.[120] Industrial and domestic sewage in the basin also introduces pathogens and nutrients, contributing to waterborne disease risks in areas lacking adequate treatment infrastructure.[121] Agricultural runoff introduces fertilizers, pesticides, and sediments, promoting eutrophication and altering river chemistry in tributaries. In urban-adjacent farming zones, these non-point sources combine with point discharges to degrade water quality, though quantitative basin-wide data remains limited due to inconsistent monitoring.[122] Human-wildlife conflicts in the Zambezi basin arise from overlapping human settlements, agriculture, and fishing with habitats of large mammals, leading to property damage, livestock losses, and human fatalities. In Namibia's Zambezi region, incidents have escalated alarmingly, with the area recording the highest rates of conflicts, including deaths from attacks by elephants, hippopotamuses, and Nile crocodiles on people accessing riverine resources.[123][124] In Zambia's Livingstone district, urban expansion into Dambwa South since the early 2000s has intensified clashes, as elephants and other species from Mosi-oa-Tunya National Park raid crops and enter communities, driven by habitat fragmentation and seasonal migrations.[125] In Zimbabwe's Zambezi Valley, conflicts involve elephants damaging maize fields and hippos/crocodiles threatening fishers, with socioeconomic studies in Mbire district documenting annual crop losses equivalent to household food security shortfalls and retaliatory killings of wildlife.[126][127] Across the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area, which encompasses much of the basin, competition for water and grazing exacerbates tensions, with hippopotamuses and crocodiles posing lethal risks to river users while elephants trample infrastructure during dry-season concentrations.[50] Mitigation efforts, including community alerts and barriers, have reduced some incidents but face challenges from population growth and drought-induced wildlife movements.[128]Mining Proposals and Socioeconomic Trade-offs
Mining proposals in the Zambezi River basin have primarily centered on copper extraction in Zambia's Lower Zambezi National Park, with the Kangaluwi open-pit project proposed by Mwembeshi Resources Ltd. emerging as the most contentious since its initial licensing in 2010. The site, spanning approximately 210 square kilometers within the park, targeted an estimated 1.1 million tonnes of copper ore over a projected 12-year lifespan, with potential for acid mine drainage and tailings dam failures risking heavy metal contamination of the Zambezi River.[129] Proponents argued it would generate direct employment for 1,500 workers, contribute up to $200 million annually in export revenue, and fund local infrastructure like roads and schools, aligning with Zambia's need to diversify from traditional Copperbelt operations amid declining ore grades elsewhere.[130] However, the project faced sustained opposition from environmental groups and local stakeholders, culminating in the Zambia Environmental Management Agency (ZEMA) revoking its approval on August 28, 2023, due to the company's failure to submit required environmental compliance reports and conduct adequate public consultations.[131] [132] Socioeconomic trade-offs of such large-scale mining pit short-term fiscal gains against enduring ecological and livelihood costs, particularly in a basin supporting over 30 million people reliant on the river for fisheries yielding 200,000 tonnes annually, irrigation for 1.5 million hectares of farmland, and tourism generating $1 billion yearly across riparian states.[133] In Zambia, copper mining has historically boosted GDP—accounting for 70% of exports in 2022—but correlated with localized poverty persistence, as communities near operations experience wage suppression, influx-driven inflation, and limited technology transfer, with per capita income in mining districts lagging national averages by 20-30%.[134] Pollution risks amplify these disparities: potential sulfidic tailings from Kangaluwi could leach into aquifers, mirroring incidents at other Zambian sites where acid drainage has elevated soil copper levels by 500% within 5 kilometers, impairing crop yields and elevating respiratory illnesses in downwind villages.[135] Downstream, in Zimbabwe's Mana Pools and Mozambique's delta, contaminated sediments could disrupt prawn fisheries worth $50 million yearly and salinization of 500,000 hectares of arable land, disproportionately burdening subsistence farmers who derive 60% of income from riverine agriculture.[136] [137] Artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM), including alluvial gold panning along Zambezi tributaries in Zimbabwe and Zambia, presents parallel trade-offs on a decentralized scale, sustaining up to 2 million livelihoods through informal employment but exacting environmental tolls like mercury releases exceeding 100 tonnes annually basin-wide, causing bioaccumulation in fish and neurological disorders in 10-15% of exposed miners' families.[138] [139] While ASM yields $300-500 million in regional value, it undermines formal sector viability by preempting concessions and fostering conflicts over water access, as seen in Zimbabwe's Angwa River disputes where panners divert flows, reducing dry-season yields for 5,000 downstream irrigators by 40%.[140] Empirical assessments indicate that without stringent regulation—enforced in fewer than 20% of sites—net socioeconomic benefits erode due to health externalities costing $50-100 per capita annually in treatment and lost productivity, often outweighing royalties funneled to distant treasuries.[141] Conservation advocates emphasize ecotourism's superior multiplier effects, with Lower Zambezi safaris supporting 10,000 jobs at $20,000 per visitor in high-value segments, versus mining's volatile returns susceptible to global price swings, as evidenced by Zambia's 2020 copper revenue drop of 15% amid pandemic disruptions.[142] These dynamics underscore causal linkages where extractive prioritization favors elite capture over basin-wide resilience, with canceled projects like Kangaluwi highlighting public pressure's role in recalibrating toward sustainable alternatives.[143]Conservation and Management
International Agreements and Efforts
The Agreement on the Action Plan for the Environmentally Sound Management of the Common Zambezi River System (ZACPLAN), adopted on 28 May 1987 by the riparian states of Angola, Botswana, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, established a framework for coordinated environmental protection and sustainable resource use in the basin, including pollution control, ecosystem preservation, and integrated planning to mitigate degradation from development activities. This initiative, supported by the United Nations Environment Programme, emphasized joint monitoring and data exchange but faced implementation challenges due to limited funding and political coordination among member states.[144] A bilateral agreement between Zimbabwe and Zambia, signed on 28 July 1987, governs the utilization of the Zambezi River, particularly in shared sections like the Victoria Falls reach, mandating cooperation on hydropower, navigation, and environmental safeguards to prevent unilateral actions that could harm downstream flows or habitats. This pact has facilitated joint operations at facilities such as the Victoria Falls Power Station and informed subsequent transboundary efforts, though enforcement relies on ongoing diplomatic engagement amid varying national priorities. The Zambezi Watercourse Commission (ZAMCOM), established by an agreement signed on 13 July 2004 by the eight riparian states and entering into force on 16 March 2011 after ratification, serves as the primary international body for basin-wide management, with objectives to promote equitable and reasonable water utilization, efficient management, and sustainable development while conserving and protecting the watercourse ecosystem.[145] ZAMCOM's Council, comprising water ministers from member states, oversees implementation, including the 2018–2040 Strategic Plan for the Zambezi Watercourse, which prioritizes data sharing, climate-resilient infrastructure, and ecosystem restoration through initiatives like improved hydrological monitoring and transboundary groundwater assessments.[146] Recent efforts include a May 2023 transfrontier conservation agreement between Zimbabwe and Zambia designating the Lower Zambezi as a protected area, enhancing wildlife corridors, anti-poaching measures, and community involvement to address habitat fragmentation from border activities.[147] Internationally, the Global Environment Facility's 2024 project, "Strengthening Zambezi River Basin Management towards Climate Resilience," allocates resources for governance enhancements, community-based conservation, and adaptive strategies in aquatic ecosystems across the basin, building on ZAMCOM frameworks to counter drought-induced biodiversity losses.[148] Zambia's accession to the 1992 UN Water Convention on 10 September 2024 further bolsters regional cooperation by committing to transboundary impact assessments and information exchange, directly aiding Zambezi-specific drought responses.[149]Climate Adaptation and Drought Responses (2023-2025)
In 2023 and 2024, the Zambezi River Basin experienced one of its most severe droughts in decades, exacerbated by El Niño conditions, with river discharge falling to 20% of its long-term average by April 2024.[150][151] This led to critically low water levels in key reservoirs, including Lake Kariba reaching just 13.52% capacity by early April 2024, prompting widespread load-shedding and an energy crisis in Zambia and Zimbabwe.[152][153] Zambia and Zimbabwe declared national disasters in response, alongside neighboring countries, to mobilize resources for water scarcity and agricultural shortfalls affecting millions.[154] Adaptation efforts emphasized regional cooperation and infrastructure resilience, with the African Development Bank supporting the Programme for Integrated Development and Adaptation to Climate Change in the Zambezi (PIDACC-ZM), which targets enhanced community resilience to droughts through improved water management and economic shock mitigation across basin states.[155][156] In September 2024, Zambia acceded to the UN Water Convention to foster transboundary water cooperation, aiming to address recurrent droughts via shared data and joint planning with upstream and downstream nations.[149] Humanitarian responses included a UN flash appeal launched in May 2024 for Zambia, targeting life-saving aid for 3.3 million people through June 2025, focusing on food security and water access amid prolonged dry conditions forecasted until mid-2024.[157][158] Financial interventions bolstered immediate drought mitigation, such as the World Bank's $208 million grant to Zambia in July 2024 for social and economic recovery, including support for affected households and hydropower alternatives.[159] Local strategies incorporated indigenous knowledge, with communities in the basin, such as vhaVenda and baTonga groups, employing traditional practices like diversified cropping and water harvesting to cope with erratic rainfall patterns observed from 2023 onward.[160] By mid-2025, ongoing monitoring highlighted forests' role in sustaining Zambezi water supplies, prompting calls for conservation to buffer against future variability, though empirical data indicated persistent challenges in scaling these amid rising temperatures.[161] Digital tools for climate forecasting, piloted in 2023 by the International Water Management Institute, aided adaptive decision-making in agriculture and hydropower operations during the crisis.[162]Fish Management and Invasive Species Control
Fisheries in the Zambezi River basin face significant challenges from overexploitation, habitat alteration by dams, and invasive species, leading to declines in catch rates of up to 90% for key species in floodplains and loss of larger, high-value fish across the system.[163][164] Management efforts emphasize community-based approaches, including the establishment of fish protected areas (FPAs) such as Sikunga in Namibia, where fish assemblages show higher abundance and mean sizes of target cichlids (e.g., Oreochromis, Serranochromis) compared to adjacent non-protected zones.[165] These FPAs, often 12 km long channels, prioritize breeding stock protection, with communities enforcing no-take zones to sustain stocks amid transboundary pressures in the Kavango-Zambezi (KAZA) region spanning Namibia, Zambia, Botswana, Angola, and Zimbabwe.[166][167] Transboundary collaboration is central to strategies, as seen in initiatives like the Global Environment Facility's project launched in 2024 to enhance governance, climate adaptation, and community conservation for aquatic resources.[148] In Zambia's Lower Zambezi, projects since 2019 have integrated fishing communities into monitoring and enforcement, reducing illegal practices through local patrols and alternative livelihoods.[168] Namibia employs dual traditional and central authority oversight, while seasonal bans and gear restrictions (e.g., limiting gillnets) aim to rebuild populations of migratory species like tigerfish (Hydrocynus vittatus).[167] However, enforcement remains inconsistent due to poverty-driven artisanal fishing and weak cross-border coordination, with calls for integrated basin plans incorporating fisheries data.[169] Invasive species exacerbate declines, particularly the Australian redclaw crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus), introduced in Zambia since the 1990s and now spreading rapidly in the upper and middle Zambezi, where it competes with native crabs and preys on fish eggs, potentially disrupting food webs and fisheries yields.[170][171][172] Control measures include targeted harvesting campaigns, as in Lake Kariba (Zambezi system), where the crayfish threatens tilapia survival; Zimbabwean efforts in 2024 promoted commercial collection to mitigate ecological damage.[173] Introduced Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) further hybridizes with natives, altering genetics in mid-Zambezi artisanal catches, though specific eradication is limited by aquaculture promotion.[174] Broader prevention relies on monitoring aquaculture introductions, given risks to endemic species (17% of 134 total in the basin), but systematic basin-wide protocols lag, with invasives contributing to Barotse Plains depletions as noted by local establishments in 2025.[46][175] Empirical assessments underscore the need for evidence-based interventions, as crayfish feeding rates outpace natives under varying temperatures, amplifying invasion success.[176]Major Settlements
Key Urban Centers Along the River
The Zambezi River supports several urban centers that serve as administrative, commercial, and tourism hubs across its course through Zambia, Namibia, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique. These settlements leverage the river for transportation, water supply, trade, and hydropower-related activities, though many face challenges from flooding and limited infrastructure. Populations range from small towns to mid-sized cities, with growth driven by proximity to borders and natural attractions like Victoria Falls. In Zambia's Western Province, Mongu stands as a primary urban center near the Barotse Floodplain in the river's upper reaches, functioning as the provincial capital and a key node for local governance and agriculture; its district recorded a population of 197,816 in the 2022 census.[177] Further downstream, Livingstone emerges as a major gateway to Victoria Falls, with a 2022 census population of 177,393; established as a colonial-era rail terminus, it relies heavily on tourism, cross-border trade with Zimbabwe, and the Zambezi's hydropower potential via the nearby Victoria Falls power station.[177] Sesheke, a smaller border town opposite Namibia's Impalila Island, facilitates regional commerce but remains modest in scale compared to upstream centers. Across the Zambia-Zimbabwe border, Victoria Falls town in Zimbabwe, with a 2022 population of 35,199, centers on tourism infrastructure serving the adjacent waterfall, including hotels, adventure activities, and the Victoria Falls Bridge linking to Zambia; its economy ties directly to the river's dramatic cascade and seasonal flood dynamics.[178] Downriver at the Kariba Dam, the town of Kariba in Zimbabwe hosts a 2022 population of 27,600, primarily supporting fishing operations on Lake Kariba, dam maintenance, and tourism; constructed in the 1950s, it exemplifies river-induced urbanization focused on hydropower generation.[179] In Namibia's Caprivi Strip (now Zambezi Region), Katima Mulilo lies on the river's northeastern bend, recording 46,401 inhabitants in the 2023 census; as a tripoint near Botswana and Zambia, it functions as a trade and transport hub via the Zambezi's waterway and the Katima Mulilo Bridge, completed in 2004 to enhance regional connectivity.[180] The most significant urban center in Mozambique is Tete, situated mid-river opposite the Cahora Bassa Dam, with an estimated city population exceeding 300,000 as of recent projections; it drives coal mining, aluminum production at the Mozal smelter (linked via power from the dam), and trade across the Samora Machel Bridge, though rapid industrialization has strained water resources and urban planning.[181] Downstream settlements like Songo near Cahora Bassa remain smaller, oriented toward dam operations rather than broad urban development.Population Dynamics and Riverine Economies
The Zambezi River Basin sustains a population exceeding 55 million people across its eight riparian countries, with the majority residing in rural areas proximate to the river and its tributaries. Population density within the basin has increased from approximately 24 persons per square kilometer in 1998 to around 30 persons per square kilometer by the mid-2000s, driven by persistent high fertility rates—averaging 2-3% annually across riparian states—and inward migration to riverine floodplains for access to arable land and fisheries. In Angola, growth reached 2.8% in 2006, while Botswana and Namibia recorded lower rates of 1.3%; these dynamics amplify demands for domestic water, irrigation, and sanitation, exacerbating vulnerabilities to seasonal floods and droughts that periodically displace communities in low-lying areas like the Barotse Floodplain and Zambezi Delta.[182][183][184] Riverine livelihoods predominantly revolve around capture fisheries and flood-recession agriculture, which together support over 70% of basin residents through subsistence and small-scale commercial activities. Annual freshwater fish production in the basin, including key segments like the Kafue Flats (7,000 metric tons in the 1990s, with potential for 17,000 tons) and Zambezi Delta (minimum 10,000 tons), provides critical protein and cash income, with species such as tilapia and tigerfish targeted via seasonal netting and angling; however, yields fluctuate with hydrological regimes, declining during low-flow years post-dam regulation. Agriculture exploits nutrient-rich alluvial soils in floodplains, yielding staples like maize, sorghum, millet, and rice—cultivated on approximately 5.2 million hectares basin-wide annually—with irrigation covering about 183,000 hectares as of 2006, though expansion potential reaches over 1 million hectares under coordinated development scenarios.[183][98][115] Tourism emerges as a supplementary economic pillar, harnessing the river's wetlands and biodiversity for ecotourism, whitewater rafting, and wildlife viewing, particularly around Victoria Falls, where activities generated $38 million annually as of 2005; local communities in regions like Namibia's Zambezi area capture roughly 20% of tourism value through guiding and crafts, though broader employment remains seasonal and limited by infrastructure gaps. Overall, these sectors underpin poverty alleviation for rural households—where 75-85% depend on rain-fed or flood-dependent farming—but face constraints from variable flows, with recent initiatives like a $703 million investment plan targeting job creation for 2.3 million people, including enhancements in agro-tourism and sustainable fisheries to bolster resilience amid projected population doubling within decades.[183][185][186]| Riparian Country | Population Growth Rate (%) | Data Year | Notes on Riverine Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Angola | 2.8 | 2006 | High rural reliance on upper basin tributaries for ag |
| Botswana | 1.3 | 2006 | Chobe wetlands support fishing/tourism communities |
| Malawi | 2.2 | 2006 | Shire subbasin density >100/km², flood-dependent farming |
| Mozambique | 2.0 | 2006 | Delta fisheries/ag key for 85% rural pop |
| Namibia | 1.3 | 2006 | Caprivi strip livelihoods tied to seasonal floods |
| Zambia | 1.8 | 2006 | Barotse/Kafue floodplains host dense fishing settlements |
| Zimbabwe | 0.6 | 2006 | Kariba inshore fisheries employ thousands seasonally |

