ACT Test Centers and Dates in Zambia

Your search found 1 match. The following is the full list of ACT testing locations in Zambia among which you can pick one to take the exam. Please know that on the test day, test takers can use any 4-function, scientific, or graphing calculator. On the table below, you can also find all test dates through 2019.

ACT Testing Locations in Zambia

2019-2020 ACT Test Dates in Zambia

Test Date Registration Deadline
February 9, 2019 January 11, 2019
April 13, 2019 March 8, 2019
June 8, 2019 May 3, 2019
July 13, 2019 June 14, 2019
September 14, 2019 August 16, 2019
October 26, 2019 September 20, 2019
December 14, 2019 November 8, 2019
February 8, 2020 January 10, 2020
April 4, 2020 February 28, 2020
June 13, 2020 May 8, 2020
July 18, 2020 June 19, 2020

ACT Test Centers in Zambia

City Center Name Center Code
Lusaka American International School 869910

ACT Test Centers and Dates in Zambia

More about Zambia

ECONOMY: AGRICULTURE, LIVESTOCK AND FISHING

Agriculture still employs 65.7% of the active population (2006), although it participates only for 21.3% in the formation of national income, which immediately indicates the low profitability of the sector; the climatic conditions are generally favorable, but the cultivated area is still very small. Traditional agricultural activities predominate, practiced with scarcely productive methods and centered on cereals, in particular on corn, then on millet and sorghum; cassava also has a certain diffusion and some horticultural products. Commercial farming mainly supplies cotton, tobacco, peanuts, sunflowers, and sugar cane; the latter, recently introduced, has seen good development thanks to the construction of new irrigation works. § Forests cover more than 40% of the land area and supply 8 million m 3of timber per year (2005); a vast government reforestation plan is underway, especially for the species of greatest commercial value. § Despite the vast expanses of grass and permanent pasture, breeding is rather limited; however, the bovine herd, as well as that of poultry (rapidly expanding in peri-urban areas), shows a certain development, while the number of goats and pigs is small. § Fishing, which is a widely practiced activity, makes a fair contribution to food; both the Kafue and Luapula rivers and the Mweru, Kariba, Tanganyika and Bangweulu lakes are full of fish. Zambia.

ECONOMY: INDUSTRY AND MINERAL RESOURCES

The most important industrial activities continue to be metallurgical ones with numerous plants (in Ndola, Nkana, etc.) for the concentration and electrolytic refining of copper, as well as with various plants, generally located in Kabwe, which process zinc ores, lead, cadmium etc. In Ndola, in addition to the metallurgical complexes, there is an important oil refinery (under repair in 2008), which processes the crude oil coming by pipeline from the distant Tanzanian port of Dar es Salaam; there are also cement factories, tire factories, mechanical and chemical complexes, etc. There are numerous establishments used for the processing of agricultural products: sugar refineries, oil mills, breweries, tobacco factories, milling complexes, textile factories, etc. The manufacturing sectors play a discreet role compared to other national realities of the continent. § The mining landscape of Zambia is broad, but it is copper that dominates it; the country was, in 2007, among the top ten producing countries of this metal on a world scale. The exploitation of the Copperbelt, which geographically represents the continuation of the Zairean veins of the Shaba, hosts the main deposits (Luanshya, Mafulira, Chambishi etc.). In addition to copper, zinc, manganese, tin, lead and, among the energy minerals, coal in modest quantities are extracted (Maamba basin, in the Zambezi valley), while gold, silver, selenium and above all cobalt come from the refining of copper as by-products. The main mining areas make use of important power plants; in fact, the production of energy, mostly of water origin, is considerable, with large plants in Mulunghusi, at the Victoria Falls, on the Lunsemfwa river; Zambia exports electricity to neighboring countries (Democratic Republic of Congo and Zimbabwe).