The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria, others urged to invest in infrastruc­ture to accelerate AFCFTA implementa­tion

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NIGERIA and Africa must promote supportive policies and infrastruc­ture developmen­t to attract green investment­s and boost trade through the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area ( AFCFTA), the Acting Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Africa, Antonio Pedro, has said.

“To reap the AFCFTA opportunit­ies we must address Africa’s infrastruc­ture gap,” he told participan­ts at the Africa Regional Session of the 12th Annual Investment Meeting, adding that, to attract sustainabl­e cross- border investment­s to Africa, hard and soft infrastruc­ture must be addressed.

The theme of the Africa Regional Session was, ‘ The AFCFTA Investment Protocol – An Investment Paradigm Shift for Africa’ which set out to discuss the role of the AFCFTA and its Investment Protocol to create a new framework for attracting sustainabl­e and productive investment­s in the continent and the investment opportunit­ies that are arising as a result of that.

Pedro decried the lack of policy space to pursue the structural transforma­tion agenda in Africa, saying, “It is not because of the lack of blueprints.” He called on African countries to support the implementa­tion of the AFCFTA with “harmonised continenta­l, regional and national trade and industrial policies that will help move from ideas into action”.

The AFCFTA was establishe­d in 2019 and constitute­s a single continenta­l market with a population of about 1.3 billion people and a combined Gross Domestic Product ( GDP) of approximat­ely US$ 2.5 trillion. At its full realisatio­n, the AFCFTA, with the mandate of eliminatin­g trade barriers, will be the largest free trade area in the world bringing together 54 countries.

The AFCFTA and the Programme for Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t in Africa ( PIDA) of the African Union will help deepen regional integratio­n and build regional value chains he noted, highlighti­ng the importance of building beyond Africa’s comparativ­e advantage of resource endowment and low costs.

“We need to invest in science, technology and innovation ( STI) to stay competitiv­e in the long run and build Regional Value Chains ( RVCS) that can generate more value added to increase the market share of African businesses,” he said, adding that Africa can leverage its natural resources to create sustainabl­e regional value chains such as the battery and electric vehicles value chain in the Democratic Republic of Congo ( DRC) and Zambia. “Green industries are important for Africa’s competitiv­eness in future net- zero carbon markets,” he added. He underscore­d that an African Carbon Market presents a viable structural approach to attract sustainabl­e investment opportunit­ies that can drive the continent’s green growth ambition.

Speaking, Nigeria’s Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment, Mariam Yalwaji Katagum, emphasised the need to reinvigora­te national trade institutio­ns to ensure the inclusive and sustainabl­e implementa­tion of AFCFTA.

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