… He said Kenya has invested Sh5.16 trillion infrastructure pipeline, Sh38.7 trillion annual mobile money flows Sh438.6 trillion African Continental Free Trade Area market and KSh9.03 quadrillion combined preferential market access.The President urged Belgian manufacturers to inves …
… in Midrand, Johannesburg on Thursday, alongside South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, President Ruto said the two nations, as “economic anchors” of Eastern and Southern Africa, must take the lead in building integrated value chains under the African Continental Free Trade Area …
… The leaders also committed to leveraging the African Continental Free Trade Area and regional trade frameworks to unlock new opportunities for businesses, investors, and manufacturers across the continent. …
… The leaders highlighted progress in addressing trade imbalances, strengthening regional value chains and advancing implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). …
… e should not behave like some big countries in the world that punish other countries because of disparities in tariffs.”The South African leader said the decision was informed by the need to support farmers and encourage greater trade under the African Continental Free Trade Area …
… Mudavadi underscored the importance of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), describing it as a critical framework for boosting intra-African trade and developing regional value chains in sectors such as agriculture and pharmaceuticals. …
… African crude could have been refined within Africa and distributed through continental supply systems under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) framework. …
… The agreement is expected to pave the way for enhanced cooperation between the two of Africa’s leading economies, while supporting efforts under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to boost intra-African trade and reduce barriers that limit the growth of agricultural …
… The conference further emphasized the importance of regional markets within Africa, especially under the African Continental Free Trade Area, as an opportunity for Kenyan products to access wider markets and boost trade competitiveness.Youth empowerment emerged as a central theme …
… Measurement remains the invisible infrastructure of modern economies,” she said.Experts further noted that regional trade competitiveness under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) depends on harmonised standards and consistent measurements. …
A major logistical gap in Africa has continued to hinder intra-African trade even with the establishment of the African Continental Free Trade Area, with cargo from Kenya to Ghana taking between 45 and 60 days compared to five or six days for shipments to Dubai.
A major logistical gap in Africa has continued to hinder intra-African trade even with the establishment of the African Continental Free Trade Area, with cargo from Kenya to Ghana taking between 45 and 60 days compared to five or six days for shipments to Dubai.
Kenya's real estate sector is shifting toward satellite towns and infrastructure-driven developments as urbanization and a middle-class growth fuel demand. Nairobi faces an accumulated housing deficit of over 2 million units, with formal supply of roughly 50,000 units annually against estimated demand of 200,000 units.
East African nations have inaugurated the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) Soil Health and Fertiliser Hub in Nairobi to coordinate regional efforts in improving soil health, increasing fertiliser access, and strengthening agricultural productivity amid land degradation and food insecurity. The launch follows the Africa Fertiliser and Soil Health Summit in May 2024, where African Heads of State endorsed the Nairobi Declaration committing countries to restoring degraded soils and increasing fertiliser production.
Chief Justice Martha Koome has called for Africa's justice systems to become more accessible, inclusive, responsive and people-centred. Speaking at the opening of the 3rd Africa Chief Justices' Alternative Dispute Resolution Forum in Nairobi, she highlighted an Afrobarometer survey showing that only half of citizens across 38 African countries surveyed expressed confidence in obtaining justice through courts, and noted that many Africans continue to seek justice through traditional and community-based mechanisms.
Kenya is intensifying efforts to become a regional manufacturing and industrial hub by inviting global investors to participate in local production, technology transfer, and skills development. The Industry Principal Secretary said Kenya is positioning itself for industrial growth anchored on manufacturing, value addition, and regional trade at the opening of the AICMEC 2026 expo.
President William Ruto told a business roundtable in Brussels that Africa should be viewed as an opportunity to harness rather than a problem to manage, citing the continent's natural resources, clean energy potential, arable land, and young population as key to global solutions on food, energy, climate, and democracy. He positioned Kenya as a critical hub and gateway for Africa, announced the launch of a Kenya-Benelux Chamber of Commerce, and called for tripling Kenya-Belgium trade to USD 1 billion.
The Africa Financial Summit, hosting 1,250 policymakers, central bankers, investors and fintech disruptors, is heading to Luanda in November for the first time, reflecting Africa's search for a financial system capable of funding its own ambitions. Angola's economic modernisation and diversification beyond oil, alongside projects like the $1.2 billion Lobito Corridor linking Angola, Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, illustrate the type of cross-border investment shaping Africa's economic future.
President William Ruto called on European investors to establish manufacturing industries in Kenya rather than exporting raw materials for processing elsewhere, citing clean energy availability and EU trade benefits. He made the remarks at a Kenya-Belgium Business Roundtable in Brussels while launching the Kenya-Benelux Chamber of Commerce.
President William Ruto has called on European investors, particularly Belgian manufacturers, to establish industries in Kenya for local mineral processing using clean geothermal energy, citing Europe's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and Kenya's duty-free access under the EU-Kenya Economic Partnership Agreement as competitive advantages.
President William Ruto launched the Kenya–Benelux Chamber of Commerce in Brussels, urging European investors to use Kenya as a gateway to Africa and highlighting the country's renewable energy capacity, skilled workforce, and strategic location. Ruto encouraged European firms to invest in local manufacturing and value addition rather than extracting raw materials, and discussed strengthening trade links between the ports of Antwerp-Bruges and Mombasa.
President William Ruto told European investors at the Kenya-Belgium Business Roundtable in Brussels that Africa should be seen as a solution to global challenges like food security, energy transition, and climate change, citing the continent's arable land, renewable energy resources, and youthful population. Ruto urged Belgian manufacturers to invest in value addition in Africa rather than exporting raw materials for processing elsewhere.
President William Ruto has challenged African businesses to focus on trading within Africa rather than overseas, stating the continent is becoming a major frontier for trade and investment. Addressing a Kenya-South Africa Business Forum in Johannesburg alongside South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, Ruto said the two nations must lead in building integrated value chains under the African Continental Free Trade Area, noting bilateral trade between Kenya and South Africa reached about $680 million in 2025.
President William Ruto pledged to deepen economic, diplomatic, and strategic ties with South Africa during a State Visit to Pretoria, saying the two nations are key players in elevating Africa's voice on the global stage and positioning themselves as drivers of Africa's transformation.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa rejected claims of xenophobia during President William Ruto's state visit to Pretoria, instead framing migration as a continental challenge requiring African-led solutions and deeper economic integration. Ramaphosa acknowledged migration was placing pressure on communities and public services but stressed the issue was not unique to South Africa and required collective action from African governments.
Kenya and South Africa have agreed to remove trade barriers to increase Kenyan tea exports to South Africa, reversing South Africa's consideration of restrictions imposed in response to Kenyan tariffs on South African steel. The decision aims to strengthen trade ties and support small-scale farmers under the African Continental Free Trade Area.
Prime Cabinet Secretary Mudavadi addressed Sungkyunkwan University in Seoul, calling for renewed Global South solidarity and stronger multilateral cooperation, and warning that rising unilateralism and weaponisation of economic tools are straining multilateralism as countries rethink their diplomatic and economic strategies.
The ongoing Middle East conflict is revealing Africa's heavy reliance on imported refined petroleum products from the Gulf, with East Africa sourcing nearly 80 per cent of its refined petroleum from Middle Eastern suppliers. Supply disruptions have already triggered fuel station queues, rising prices, and increased transport and electricity costs across African cities, threatening economic stability and social cohesion.
Agriculture Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe will travel to South Africa on June 4 for high-level discussions aimed at removing non-tariff barriers to agricultural trade and signing a Memorandum of Cooperation covering agricultural trade, research, technology transfer, value addition, food security and investment.
At Kenya's ninth KIPPRA conference in Mombasa, over 700 delegates from public and private sectors, academia, and civil society called for Kenya to invest in infrastructure, cold storage, and logistics to accelerate inclusive economic growth and reduce post-harvest losses across agriculture, manufacturing, and the digital economy.
Experts at World Metrology Day 2026 commemoration warned that unreliable measurement systems in everyday products like bread, meat, and fuel lead to unfair trade, weak policies, and loss of public trust. Trusted, accurate measurements are essential for sound governance, market fairness, and strengthening economies across health, agriculture, energy, and consumer protection sectors.
Presidents William Ruto and Kassym-Jomart Tokayev agreed to translate trade and investment ties into concrete commercial partnerships during a business forum, laying out a roadmap for cooperation in trade, energy, logistics and technology.
The Institute of Certified Public Accountants (ICPAK) has urged accountants to act as public finance stewards and restore transparency and trust in auditing public institutions. ICPAK Chairperson Elizabeth Kalunda told the 43rd Annual Seminar in Mombasa that Kenyans demand governance, financial transparency, and institutional trust, and that accountants must help achieve better governance, accountability, and efficient public expenditure.
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement, which integrates 54 African markets into a single market of 1.4 billion people with a combined GDP of over $3.4 trillion, has potential to reduce fragmentation and improve market access, though implementation remains key. Kenya's strategy focuses on integrating the region into the wider African market, with 40 per cent of its exports already going to other African nations, while emphasizing export-ready enterprises, digital trade platforms, and infrastructure connectivity.
An editorial argues that Africa's partnerships with external actors—focused on financing, infrastructure, resources, and trade—risk deepening dependency unless the continent develops industry-ready skills to drive its own industrialisation and fulfil the vision of the African Continental Free Trade Area and Agenda 2063.
The two-day Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi, co-hosted by President William Ruto and President Emmanuel Macron, closed with €23 billion in pledges (€14 billion from French firms and €9 billion from African companies) targeting energy, technology, and agriculture, alongside eleven Kenya-France memoranda on infrastructure and services—though the event was marked by street protests and tear gas outside the venue.
India–Africa development cooperation, rooted in shared colonial history and developmental goals, has succeeded through human resource development and capacity building via programmes like the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation initiative. After a decade-long hiatus since the last India–Africa Forum Summit in 2015, the partnership requires recalibration to align with Africa's current priorities and changing global context.
Konza Technopolis hosted the first IPDAYS forum in Nairobi, bringing together startups, investors, and policymakers from Tunisia, Egypt, and Kenya to drive cross-border collaboration. The forum featured matchmaking sessions, investor pitches, policy briefings, and training workshops to accelerate market entry and strengthen innovation partnerships across Africa.
Kenya is positioning itself as a gateway for North African startups seeking expansion into Sub-Saharan Africa following the IPDAYS Nairobi x Silicon Savannah Startup Fair 2026, which brought together innovators, investors and policymakers from Kenya, Tunisia and Egypt. The forum attracted more than 60 Kenyan startups and six Tunisian startups for investment talks, networking, and discussions on regional market expansion and cross-border growth.
The Africa Forward Summit 2026 Declaration, adopted in Nairobi, outlines expanded commitments on agricultural transformation, food security, and resilient health systems, with African and French leaders pledging to strengthen agricultural value chains through agro-processing, cold storage, and trade under the AfCFTA, while empowering youth, women, and smallholder farmers through improved finance access and digital tools.
An opinion piece argues that despite Africa's youth population projected to rise by 132 million this decade, the continent's political and economic systems have systematically withheld the investments needed to create dignified work, describing this as a crisis of accumulation rooted in political choices rather than technical constraints.