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Last updated: 2 May 2026
The Zambia EIA Regulations 2026, formally cited as Statutory Instrument No. 3 of 2026, the Environmental Management (Environmental Impact Assessment) Regulations, 2026, took effect on 9 January 2026 and represent the most significant overhaul of Zambia’s environmental impact assessment framework in over a decade. The new rules reclassify the projects that trigger a mandatory EIA, introduce compulsory registration of EIA experts with the Zambia Environmental Management Agency (ZEMA), reduce certain assessment fees, shorten review timelines, and sharpen the penalties for non-compliance. For project developers, mining companies, energy operators, infrastructure contractors, EIA consultants and community organisations alike, the compliance window is already open, and the enforcement stakes have never been higher.
Before diving into the detail, here are the seven headline changes that every regulated entity should understand immediately.
What to do this month: audit every active and planned project against the First Schedule, confirm that your EIA consultants are registered (or have applied to register) with ZEMA, and update internal approval workflows to reflect the new timelines and fee schedules.
SI No. 3 of 2026 derives its authority from the Environmental Management Act, which empowers the Minister responsible for the environment to make regulations governing environmental impact assessments in Zambia. The Regulations replace the prior EIA framework and now serve as the principal instrument governing when an assessment is required, how it must be conducted, who may conduct it, and what consequences follow from non-compliance.
The full statutory text is published on the ZEMA website and on ZambiaLII, where it carries the official African Kanoon Network (AKN) reference dated 9 January 2026. The Regulations are structured around several core elements: the First Schedule (listing project categories requiring an EIA), the provisions on expert registration, the procedural rules governing ZEMA’s screening and review functions, and the enforcement and penalty regime.
In practice, the Regulations apply to every person or entity, public or private, domestic or foreign, that proposes to implement a project falling within the First Schedule in Zambia. ZEMA is the sole authority responsible for screening applications, reviewing EIA reports, imposing conditions, and monitoring ongoing compliance.
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Legal citation | Statutory Instrument No. 3 of 2026, Environmental Management (Environmental Impact Assessment) Regulations, 2026 |
| Parent Act | Environmental Management Act (Cap. 204 of the Laws of Zambia) |
| Effective date | 9 January 2026 |
| Issuing authority | Minister responsible for the environment |
| Regulatory body (approvals) | Zambia Environmental Management Agency (ZEMA) |
The centrepiece of the Environmental Impact Assessment Zambia 2026 framework is the First Schedule, which categorises projects by type and scale and determines whether a full EIA, a simplified assessment, or a screening exercise is required. The reclassification introduced by SI No. 3 of 2026 means that several project types that previously fell outside (or on the margins of) mandatory assessment now unambiguously require one.
The First Schedule captures a wide range of sectors. Industry observers expect the practical impact to be felt most acutely in mining, energy generation and major infrastructure construction:
| Project Type | EIA Required? | Review Route and Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Large-scale mining (open-pit, underground, mineral processing) | Yes, full EIA mandatory | Full EIA report + public hearing; ZEMA review within the compressed statutory period |
| Major energy projects (power plants, large-scale solar/wind farms, petroleum exploration) | Yes, full EIA mandatory | Full EIA report + scoping and public consultation; ZEMA decision under shortened timeline |
| Major infrastructure (highways, dams, large-scale irrigation, airports) | Yes, full EIA mandatory | Full EIA report + community engagement; compressed ZEMA review |
| Smaller-scale developments (minor road works, small commercial buildings) | Screening determination by ZEMA | Initial screening application; ZEMA may require a full EIA, a project brief, or exempt the project |
For any proposed project that does not clearly fall within the First Schedule, the developer must submit a project brief to ZEMA for screening. ZEMA then determines, based on the nature, scale and location of the project, whether a full EIA is required. This screening function is critical: failing to submit for screening where the project could plausibly trigger an EIA exposes the developer to enforcement action.
The 2026 Regulations also address project modifications and extensions. Where a project that has already received EIA approval undergoes a material change, in scope, scale, design or location, the proponent must notify ZEMA and may be required to commission a supplementary or entirely new assessment. This provision is particularly relevant for mining operations that expand into new concession areas or infrastructure projects that extend their physical footprint beyond the originally assessed corridor.
One of the most consequential changes introduced by the Zambia EIA Regulations 2026 is the mandatory registration of EIA experts. Prior to SI No. 3 of 2026, there was no formal accreditation requirement for consultants preparing EIA reports in Zambia. The new regime closes that gap.
Under the Regulations, any individual who prepares, verifies or certifies an EIA report must be registered with ZEMA. Registration requires the submission of prescribed documents, including academic qualifications, a detailed curriculum vitae demonstrating relevant experience, evidence of continuing professional development (CPD), and payment of the applicable registration fee. ZEMA maintains a register of approved EIA experts and has the authority to refuse, suspend or revoke registration where a consultant fails to meet the required competency standards or acts in breach of professional obligations.
The Zambia Institute of Environmental Management (ZIEM) has welcomed the registration requirement, noting that it will strengthen the quality and reliability of EIA outputs across the sector.
ZEMA’s January 2026 announcements confirmed that the new Regulations reduce a number of EIA-related fees, a move reported by News Diggers! and Zambia Monitor as part of a broader push to cut the cost and duration of environmental assessments and encourage sustainable development investment. The fee reductions apply across several categories of assessment, including project briefs, full EIA reports and environmental audit fees.
Alongside the fee adjustments, the Regulations compress ZEMA’s statutory review timelines. The revised process follows a defined sequence:
The practical effect of the compressed timelines, early indications suggest, will be faster decision cycles for well-prepared applications, but stricter enforcement where submissions are incomplete or non-compliant, since ZEMA will have less discretion to extend review periods.
Understanding who bears what obligation under SI No. 3 of 2026 is essential for allocating compliance responsibilities within project teams. The following table summarises the principal duties and associated enforcement risks for each regulated entity type.
| Entity | Primary Obligations Under SI No. 3 of 2026 | Typical Enforcement Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Project proponent / developer | Commission a full EIA (by a registered expert) where required; submit an Environmental Management Plan and Report (EMPR); implement all mitigation measures as conditions of approval; finance and facilitate post-approval monitoring | Stop-work orders, administrative fines, refusal or revocation of project licence, potential criminal liability for directors |
| Registered EIA expert / consultant | Prepare and/or verify the EIA report in accordance with ZEMA terms of reference; maintain valid ZEMA registration and CPD; certify the accuracy and completeness of all assessment data | Professional sanction (suspension or revocation of registration), rejection of submitted reports, reputational damage, potential personal liability for false certification |
| ZEMA (Regulator) | Screen project briefs; issue terms of reference; review EIA reports within statutory timelines; impose conditions; monitor and enforce compliance post-approval | Judicial review of decisions by affected parties, political and parliamentary scrutiny, enforcement resource constraints |
Developers and consultants should note that the Regulations make compliance a shared responsibility. A proponent cannot avoid liability by delegating assessment duties to a consultant, both parties carry independent obligations and face independent consequences for failure.
The penalty regime under the 2026 Regulations is materially stricter than its predecessor. The Regulations grant ZEMA expanded powers to issue stop-work orders, impose administrative fines, and refer serious contraventions for criminal prosecution. The likely practical effect will be a sharper deterrent for non-compliance across the project lifecycle.
Key enforcement triggers under the new framework include:
For developers and their boards, the immediate mitigation strategy is straightforward: conduct an internal compliance audit of all active projects, confirm that approval conditions are being met, verify that all engaged EIA consultants hold valid ZEMA registration, and establish stop-work protocols that are triggered automatically if a compliance gap is identified.
Zambia’s mining sector faces particularly acute compliance demands under the 2026 Regulations. Mining pollution in Zambia has been a longstanding concern, from acid mine drainage contaminating surface and groundwater resources to tailings dam failures and inadequate closure planning. The new framework directly addresses these risks by requiring comprehensive baseline studies, ongoing groundwater monitoring obligations, and detailed decommissioning and closure plans as conditions of EIA approval.
Industry observers expect that ZEMA will apply heightened scrutiny to mining EIAs, particularly in the Copperbelt and North-Western provinces where cumulative environmental impacts from decades of extraction are well documented. The likely practical effect of the reclassified First Schedule is that exploration-stage projects, previously subject only to screening, will now more frequently trigger full EIA requirements.
For groundwater-dependent projects, including mining operations that dewater aquifers, large-scale irrigation schemes, and municipal water supply developments, the Regulations reinforce the obligation to conduct hydrogeological baseline assessments, install monitoring boreholes, and report groundwater quality data to ZEMA on a regular schedule. Failure to do so now carries explicit enforcement consequences rather than relying solely on general duty-of-care provisions.
Recommended contractual measures for reducing legal exposure include: inserting EIA compliance warranties in joint-venture and offtake agreements, requiring indemnities from EIA consultants for negligent assessment work, and stipulating closure bonding arrangements that are reviewed annually against ZEMA’s conditions.
The Zambia EIA Regulations 2026 strengthen the procedural rights of communities and civil society organisations in the assessment process. The Regulations impose clearer notice obligations on project proponents and ZEMA, including defined timelines within which affected communities must be informed of a proposed project, given access to the EIA report, and afforded an opportunity to make submissions.
For community organisations and NGOs seeking to hold developers and ZEMA accountable, the 2026 framework creates several procedural levers:
Strategic environmental litigation in Zambia is an emerging field, and the 2026 Regulations provide a more robust procedural foundation for public-interest challenges than prior law allowed.
The following numbered checklist is designed as a prioritised action plan for project proponents, EIA consultants and legal advisers operating under SI No. 3 of 2026.
For a downloadable PDF version of this checklist, formatted for use within internal compliance systems, visit the resource section of this page or find a Zambia environmental lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory for tailored guidance.
The Zambia EIA Regulations 2026 are not a future obligation, they are in force now. Every developer, consultant and community organisation operating in or affected by major projects in Zambia must align their practices to SI No. 3 of 2026 without delay. The three most important actions to take immediately are:
For specialist legal advice on EIA compliance in Zambia, enforcement defence or strategic environmental litigation, search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for qualified practitioners in Zambia’s environmental law sector.
This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should seek independent legal counsel on specific compliance obligations arising under SI No. 3 of 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mehluli Malisa Batakathi at Malisa & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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