Ethiopia’s flagship airport project near Bishoftu has gained fresh momentum after high-level talks in Rome signalled growing Italian interest in supporting its financing structure.
The development marks another important step for what is already being positioned as the most ambitious airport project on the African continent, at a time when construction is moving from planning into execution and aviation capacity in Addis Ababa is tightening.
The latest signal came during discussions in mid-March 2026 between Ethiopian Finance Minister Ahmed Shide and Italy’s Minister of Economy and Finance Giancarlo Giorgetti. Italy’s position does not yet represent a final funding commitment, but it does suggest a willingness to support key elements of the project through a broader financing framework now under negotiation. Technical talks are expected to define how Italian banks and financial institutions could participate alongside other lenders.
The Bishoftu development is planned as a transformational aviation project. Once completed, around 2030, it is expected to handle roughly 110 million passengers per year, supported by four to five parallel runways and major cargo infrastructure. Its initial phases are designed for about 60 million passengers annually, offering relief to Addis Ababa Bole International Airport, which is forecast to reach capacity within the next few years.
Construction has already begun. Ethiopian Airlines and the federal government formally broke ground in January 2026 on a project estimated at approximately $12.5 billion.
The scheme extends well beyond core airport infrastructure. In addition to runways and terminals, it includes an integrated airport city model featuring logistics hubs, maintenance facilities, hotels and commercial zones intended to support long-term economic activity around the site.
Italy’s potential role fits into a wider reshaping of Ethiopia’s international financing relationships. Beyond aviation, Rome has also reached bilateral agreements with Addis Ababa on debt restructuring under the G20 Common Framework and has reaffirmed support for other major infrastructure projects, including the Koysha Hydropower Project.
For a development of this scale, Italy’s engagement carries significance on several levels. First, it sends a signal of growing European confidence in African transport infrastructure, which could help draw in additional lenders from both the continent and further afield. Second, it supports risk diversification by spreading financial exposure across Italian banks, multilateral institutions and commercial lenders, reducing reliance on a single funding source or region. Third, it strengthens the diplomatic and economic relationship between Italy and Ethiopia, extending cooperation beyond conventional trade into long-term connectivity and infrastructure development.
From an aviation and logistics perspective, Bishoftu represents a major strategic bet on Ethiopia’s future role in global transport. Analysts see several potential implications.
The first is capacity relief. As Bole International Airport approaches its operational limits, Bishoftu could take on volumes comparable to some of the world’s largest hubs, reinforcing Ethiopia’s position as a transit point linking Africa with Europe, the Middle East, Asia and the Americas.
The second is cargo growth. Dedicated freight infrastructure is expected to create stronger corridors for time-sensitive exports and imports across sub-Saharan Africa.
The third is wider economic stimulation. The airport city model could accelerate the development of industrial zones, logistics parks and service clusters, creating employment while deepening Ethiopia’s integration into global supply chains.
For now, the immediate focus is on the technical negotiations surrounding Italy’s potential financing role. The outcome of those discussions is likely to influence how quickly and how confidently other European and global partners decide to engage.
As the structure of the funding package takes shape, airlines, freight forwarders, investors and public institutions will be watching closely. In a global economy where connectivity increasingly defines competitiveness, Ethiopia’s ability to build a credible, diversified funding ecosystem for Bishoftu may ultimately determine whether the project succeeds in reshaping Africa’s aviation landscape.





















