Conference to Convene Global Leaders on Building Trust, Infrastructure, Inclusion, and Policy for a Borderless Economy
ABUJA, Nigeria, 02 February 2026-/African Media Agency (AMA)/-Preparations are underway for the 2026 RegTech Africa Conference & Expo (RACE 2026), Africa’s flagship platform on regulatory technology, digital innovation, and policy reform, scheduled to hold from 20–22 May 2026 at the State House Banquet Hall, Presidential Villa, Abuja.
The Conference will be held under the Patronage of the Office of the Vice President, Federal Republic of Nigeria, in partnership with the Presidential Committee on Economic and Financial Inclusion (PreCEFI), and in collaboration with the Inter-Governmental Action Group Against Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA)—underscoring its strategic importance to Nigeria’s and Africa’s economic transformation agenda.
Anchored on the theme “Building Trust, Infrastructure, Inclusion, and Policy for a Borderless Economy,” RACE 2026 will convene regulators, policymakers, technology leaders, innovators, investors, and development partners to shape the future of Africa’s digital and regulatory landscape in an era of accelerating cross-border trade and financial integration.
As Africa advances the promise of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA)—a single market of over 1.4 billion people and a projected value of US$3.4 trillion—the Conference will address one of the continent’s most pressing challenges: how to align technology, regulation, and policy to enable seamless, trusted, and inclusive economic activity across borders.
“RACE 2026 is positioned as a strategic policy and innovation platform—where technology-enabled regulation becomes a catalyst for trust, inclusion, and sustainable economic growth across Africa,” Cyril Okoroigwe, Chair Organising Committee.
A Platform for Regulatory Innovation and Economic Empowerment
The Conference will spotlight how RegTech, SupTech, artificial intelligence, digital identity, interoperable payment systems, cybersecurity, and data-driven compliance solutions can reduce friction, lower risk, and unlock opportunities for governments, businesses, startups, and citizens.
Key outcomes will focus on:
Building trust through technology-enabled regulation and smarter supervision
Strengthening digital infrastructure for interoperable payments, identity, and data exchange
Driving inclusion for SMEs, startups, women, and underserved populations
Modernising policy frameworks to support innovation while safeguarding financial integrity
High-Level Engagement and Global Participation
RACE 2026 will feature 50+ world-class speakers, 10 thematic tracks, and over 1,000 in-person and virtual participants from across Africa and the global financial and technology ecosystem. The hybrid event will include ministerial dialogues, regulators’ CEO forums, innovation showcases, and curated B2B and B2G networking sessions.
A major highlight will be the Global Startup World Cup – Regional Challenge, positioning Abuja as a launchpad for Africa’s most promising technology startups to compete on the global stage.
Speaking on the partnership, Dr. Nurudeen Abubakar Zauro, Technical Adviser to the President / Executive Secretary, Presidential Committee on Economic and Financial Inclusion (PreCEFI):
“The 2026 RegTech Africa Conference & Expo aligns strongly with Nigeria’s commitment to economic and financial inclusion. By bringing together regulators, innovators, and policymakers, the Conference provides a critical platform to harness technology and smart regulation as tools for trust-building, inclusion, and sustainable economic growth—both within Nigeria and across Africa.”
Call to Action: Registration and Partnerships
Attendance at the 2026 RegTech Africa Conference & Expo is strictly by registration, which is mandatory for all participants. Early registration is strongly encouraged due to limited capacity and high-level security protocols at the venue.
Organizations interested in partnerships, sponsorships, exhibitions, or strategic participation are invited to engage with the Organising Committee.
Through strategic media engagement and the #BorderlessAfriconomy and #RACE2026 campaigns, the Conference aims to reshape global narratives—presenting Africa not as a high-risk market, but as a policy-aware, innovation-ready, and investment-attractive continent.
The 2026 RegTech Africa Conference & Expo is expected to play a defining role in advancing Africa’s journey toward borderless economic empowerment, where trust, technology, and policy work together to deliver shared prosperity.
Event Details: Venue: State House Banquet Hall, Presidential Villa, Abuja Date: 20–22 May 2026 Format: Hybrid (In-person & Virtual) Website: www.regtechafricaconference.com
London, United Kingdom, 6 November 2025 -/African Media Agency(AMA)/ Former President of the African Development Bank (AfDB), Dr. Donald Kaberuka has called for Africa to strengthen and integrate its financial and governance institutions to safeguard the continent’s future in a rapidly fragmenting global order.
Delivering the 2025 Babacar Ndiaye Lecture on the sidelines of the World Bank Group/IMF Annual Meetings in Washington DC, Kaberuka warned that “the world is not waiting for Africa; therefore, Africa must not wait for the world,” and urged African nations to take ownership of their development agenda through resilient, homegrown institutions.
Reflecting on global power shifts, Kaberuka pointed to the return of mercantilism; rising narrow national interests; the end of the aid era; weakened global institutions; and the erosion of multilateralism as the five trends that are reshaping the global economy. For Africa, that means turning inward, while leading the charge for a renewed global architecture. “We can no longer rely on post-war institutions that were never designed to address Africa’s challenges,” he said. “Strong nations are built on strong, homegrown institutions; not on borrowed ideas or conditional generosity.”
Kaberuka emphasized that Africa’s development requires an ecosystem approach, where institutions across sectors – finance, trade, peace and security, health, and governance – operate in coordinated harmony rather than isolation. “Like an orchestra, African financial institutions on their own will not get to the end point. It has to be part of an ecosystem of African financial institutions and not simply financial institutions. They have to operate together in a symphony,” he urged.
Africa Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), Kaberuka said, must be commended for exemplifying this model through its support for the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), the regional economic communities and other initiatives and institutions of the continent.
Kaberuka, who is also the Chairman and Managing Partner of SouthBridge, a financial advisory and investment firm, further argued that Africa must lead in reshaping global governance to reflect 21st-century realities and replace the post-World War II institutions such as the Bretton Woods system which were primarily designed for the reconstruction of Europe and Japan and not for the needs of emerging African economies. “We can no longer outsource our future to institutions that were never meant to serve us,” he said, calling for the continent to take a more assertive role in creating new multilateral frameworks that champion African priorities.
Kaberuka stressed that as the world moves from globalization to fragmentation, Africa’s ability to define and defend its interests will depend on the strength, coordination, and legitimacy of its own institutions. Pointing to over $1.1 trillion held by African pension and sovereign wealth funds, he called for new models to mobilize and connect this capital with global investment flows. “It is not only about mobilizing African capital,” he said. “It is about defining how that capital is deployed for Africa, by Africa.”
Earlier, in his welcome remarks, Dr George Elombi, Executive Vice President, Corporate Governance and Legal Services and incoming President of Afreximbank called for urgent action to strengthen Africa’s financial sovereignty through the completion of the continent’s financial architecture. Elombi said the time has come to move decisively toward the establishment of the African Monetary Fund and the African Central Bank as “full operational pillars of our sovereignty.”
He outlined some imperatives for African financial institutions going forward. These include mobilising domestic capital by deepening investment in African assets, ensuring regulatory clarity to uphold investor confidence and fully operationising the AfCFTA. He also called for expanding counter-cyclical capacity and encouraging collaboration with the African diaspora to boost investment and co-create solutions. “This, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, is the roadmap to an Africa that controls its own narrative and owns its own destiny. An Africa that does not wait to be defined by others, but defines itself through vision, resolve, and unity of action,” he emphasised.
Elombi, who has taken over as the 4th President of the pan-African Multilateral Development Bank following his selection by the board at the general shareholders meeting in June, reaffirmed Afreximbank’s preferred creditor status as an essential safeguard for Africa’s ability to finance its own development. Cautioning against narratives that question the credibility of African institutions, he noted that such criticism often arises “not because we fail, but because we succeed.” Afreximbank, he noted, has disbursed over $155bn in the past decade, including $18.7bn in 2024 alone. “These are not just numbers,” he said. “They represent jobs, freedom, and hope. They are living proof of what Africa can accomplish when trust is matched by capacity.” Elombi argued that the real challenge facing the continent is not risk, but perception. “Africa is not merely bankable; Africa is dependable,” he said.
Elombi also paid tribute to Dr. Babacar Ndiaye, the fifth president of the AfDB and one of the founders of Afreximbank, describing him as a man “whose vision turned words into action.” Ndiaye, he said, believed that Africa’s progress depended on institutions built, financed, and led by Africans, a conviction that gave rise to Afreximbank, Shelter Afrique Development Bank, and the African Business Roundtable. “Dr. Ndiaye understood that true independence means having the capacity to stand on our own and to shape our own future, no matter how the world around us changes,” he said. Elombi reaffirmed Afreximbank’s commitment to Ndiaye’s legacy, stressing that the agenda must continue “until the task of development is significantly achieved”.
During a fireside chat jointly moderated by Anver Versi, editor of New African magazine and Omar Ben Yedder Group Publisher and Managing Director, IC Publications, Dr. Misheck Mutize, Lead Expert, Country Support on Rating Agencies, Africa Union stressed the importance of preserving the preferred creditor status of Africa’s development finance institutions. He explained that the preferred creditor status is a long-standing principle enjoyed by traditional multilaterals like the IMF and World Bank which allows such institutions to lend counter-cyclically, continuing to support economies even in times of crisis. For Africa’s regional and continental financial institutions, he said, this principle is not a privilege but a right embedded in their founding treaties, as they too were established by member states to bridge financing gaps and fund essential infrastructure and development projects.
Dr. Mutize cautioned, however, that the validity of PCS for African multilaterals has come under increasing scrutiny from international credit rating agencies, especially following a few sovereign defaults on the continent. He rejected the notion that African development banks must offer concessional loans to qualify for PCS, arguing instead that these institutions perform a unique public mission – blending developmental purpose with financial sustainability. “The preferred creditor status lies at the core of Africa’s financing ecosystem,” he said. “It ensures our institutions can continue to lend when others retreat, sustain development momentum, and access global capital on fair terms.”
For her part, Professor Lisa Sachs, Director of the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment, advocated for reforms to the global financial system, which she said was “completely perverse and fundamentally broken.” She stressed that Africa’s development requires long-term, affordable finance, which is currently constrained by a global risk assessment framework that misrepresents Africa’s creditworthiness and growth potential. “The IMF acknowledges that Africa is the fastest-growing region in the world,” she said, “yet at the same time advises African governments not to borrow and invest. That contradiction shows how broken the system is.” Sachs said new international partners such as those in Asia and the Global South, who recognise Africa’s promise and are willing to build equitable financial partnerships that align with the continent’s development ambitions, offer a hopeful alternative for the continent.
Adding his voice, Professor Kako Nubukpo, formerly Dean of the Faculty of Economics and Management at the University of Lome stressed that shifting global perceptions of Africa’s risk “must begin with us,” and called for stronger governance and transparency to rebuild confidence. “We need to improve the perception that the rest of the world has of risk in Africa,” he said, warning against “a dangerous discourse that seems to prioritise mediocrity.”
He further emphasised the need for genuine financial sovereignty, noting that “you can’t ask permission from the financial market to build a hospital.” True independence, he argued, will come only when African leaders “show vision, the ability to lead, and the courage to evaluate what we are doing.”
This year’s Babacar Ndiaye Lecture was the 9th in the series held in honour of the late Ndiaye, who was the driving spirit behind the establishment of Afreximbank and other key pan-African institutions. It was held under the theme “Leveraging Global Africa’s Capital for Development: The Imperative for Stronger African Financial Institutions amid Geo-economic Shifts” and was attended by policy makers and business leaders from the continent and the United States where it was held.
African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) is a Pan-African multilateral financial institution mandated to finance and promote intra- and extra-African trade. For over 30 years, the Bank has been deploying innovative structures to deliver financing solutions that support the transformation of the structure of Africa’s trade, accelerating industrialisation and intra-regional trade, thereby boosting economic expansion in Africa. A stalwart supporter of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA), Afreximbank has launched a Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) that was adopted by the African Union (AU) as the payment and settlement platform to underpin the implementation of the AfCFTA. Working with the AfCFTA Secretariat and the AU, the Bank has set up a US$10 billion Adjustment Fund to support countries effectively participating in the AfCFTA. At the end of December 2024, Afreximbank’s total assets and contingencies stood at over US$40.1 billion, and its shareholder funds amounted to US$7.2 billion. Afreximbank has investment grade ratings assigned by GCR (international scale) (A), Moody’s (Baa2), China Chengxin International Credit Rating Co., Ltd (CCXI) (AAA), Japan Credit Rating Agency (JCR) (A-) and Fitch (BBB-). Afreximbank has evolved into a group entity comprising the Bank, its equity impact fund subsidiary called the Fund for Export Development Africa (FEDA), and its insurance management subsidiary, AfrexInsure (together, “the Group”). The Bank is headquartered in Cairo, Egypt.
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Communications and Events Manager (Media Relations)
The Ghanaian government has shown tremendous support for the upcoming summit, including issuing an official endorsement by the Office of the President. “It is with great pleasure that the Government of Ghana formally confirms its endorsement of the 14th Africa Fintech Summit, scheduled to take place in Accra from 8 to 10 October, 2025. As a nation committed to fostering digital innovation and economic growth, we are proud to play host to this pivotal event. We eagerly anticipate a highly productive and impactful Summit that will foster meaningful collaborations, showcase cutting-edge advancements, and drive the future of Fintech across Africa,” a part of the statement issued by Julius Debrah, Chief of Staff, Office of the President, Republic of Ghana, reads.
Speaking about the president’s endorsement and upcoming keynote address at the summit, Zekarias Amsalu, Co-Founder & Managing Director of Africa Fintech Summit, said, “We are honored to welcome His Excellency President Mahama as our Presidential keynote speaker for the 14th Africa Fintech Summit in Accra, Ghana on 09 October 2025. His Excellency’s participation and presidential keynote comes at such a pivotal time where Ghana is transforming its 24 hours digital economy with several presidential initiatives, showcasing Ghana is ready for the digital future and is open to welcome global fintech & investment partners. The keynote address will provide an excellent opportunity for the Fintech ecosystem to align its strategy and growth trajectory right with and find ways to support the digital transformation of Ghana.”
Now in its 14th edition, the Africa Fintech Summit will bring together over 1,500 in-person and 3,000 virtual attendees from 65 countries, including startups, investors, regulators, and innovators. Programming includes:
Alpha Expo Micro Accelerator & Pitch Competition for Early-Stage Startups
Networking Receptions, Excellence in Fintech Award Ceremony, Happy Hour, VIP Dinners & Ecosystem Tours in & around Accra
Curated Conference Tourism Travel
Since its launch in 2018, AFTS has helped facilitate over $300 million in funding for African early stage fintech startups and contributes an estimated $3 million per event in conference tourism impact to host economies every year.
AFTS (https://africafintechsummit.com) is the premier global initiative dedicated to the African fintech ecosystem. AFTS is traditionally hosted in Washington, D.C., each April during the World Bank/IFC annual meeting week and in a different African city every October/November. The summit is being held in a hybrid format, in person in the selected Venue and live virtual delegates from around the world.
AFTS had a theme of the Africanization of Global Tech in 2023 showcasing how African Fintech startups are expanding globally and resolving global pain points in other markets, followed by a theme of ‘Fintech in Every Industry” in 2024. Recognizing that the globe is now closely intertwined and African fintech startups are expanding in and bringing their ‘battle-tested’ innovation to other continents, the theme for 2025 is From Africa to The World. In this respect, AFTS will highlight African Fintech success stories and innovations within and outside of the continent including global expansion and what this meant for global stakeholders, regulators, policy makers, investors and the African fintech ecosystem.
UN Climate Chief highlights potential for millions of new jobs, secure energy, rising living standards
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, 15 September 2025 -/African Media Agency (AMA)/UN News- African governments are being encouraged to present their new national climate plans as opportunities to supercharge economies and boost living standards across the continent, as deadlines approach for all countries in the Paris Agreement to submit these plans.
“Strong new national climate plans are blueprints for stronger economies, more jobs and rising living standards, across all African nations. Strong plans open the door to new industries, large-scale investment, more affordable clean energy accessible to all, and more resilient infrastructure, as climate disasters hit African nations harder each year,” said UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell.
“Africa is not just on the frontlines of climate impacts; it is also at the forefront of solutions. Right across the continent, we are already seeing massive potential and innovations which cut planet-heating pollution and build more climate-resilient economies. Strong new national climate plans are the key to converting that potential into real-economy outcomes at scale, including the millions of new jobs they create,” Stiell added.
The United Nations is calling on all countries to submit their new plans, formally called Nationally Determined Contributions, or NDCs, as soon as possible ahead of key milestones, including the UN Secretary General’s September Climate Summit and November COP30 in Brazil. September will be an important milestone, but submissions will continue in the run-up to COP30, with each plan helping to limit global heating to 1.5 degrees Celsius and protect all peoples, while also unlocking jobs, growth, and economic benefits at home.
While particular responsibility rests with the largest economies, whose choices determine the global trajectory of emissions, it is essential that every nation puts forward its most ambitious plan, both to strengthen humanity’s collective response and to drive each nation’s own prosperity and security.
Examples from Across Africa
In South Africa, the NDC process is framed around a just transition that protects workers and communities while scaling renewables to strengthen energy security. International partnerships are signalling momentum, bringing together governments, public financiers, and private investors to support South Africa’s shift from coal to clean energy – growing from USD 8.5 to 11.6 billion.
Nigeria is advancing a whole-of-government and society approach, linking climate action to job creation, poverty reduction, and improved energy access. Over 85 million people still lack electricity, making decentralised renewables critical. Large-scale solar is expected to generate 33,905 direct green jobs by 2030, the micro-solar sector is already employing youth as “energy officers,” the Great Green Wall has restored more than 5 million hectares, and the country’s extensive mangroves provide carbon storage and flood protection. With a population projected to surpass 400 million by 2050 and GDP already over USD 470 billion, Nigeria has unparalleled potential to be a powerful leader in Africa’s green transition. Its upcoming climate plan is being designed as a national investment strategy to generate millions of green jobs by 2035 and secure a strong share of the USD 2.2 trillion global clean energy market. The transformation is already underway: over 170 solar mini-grids are already operational, bringing reliable electricity to nearly 6 million people, while young entrepreneurs are driving innovation in recycling, clean transport, and sustainable agriculture.
Morocco has emerged as a regional leader in renewable energy, with the Ouarzazate solar complex among the largest in the world. It stands as a positive example of how national ambition can deliver clean power at scale.
Recent milestone UN climate events, including Climate Week in Ethiopia and the Adaptation Expo in Zambia, have showcased innovative and practical new climate solutions emerging right across African nations, helping them to be scaled up and replicated across the continent and globally.
Africa Leading the Way
Momentum for strong climate action by and for African nations is building following the Africa Climate Summit in Addis Ababa last week, where leaders called for climate action to be treated as a driver of development and investment; and the Nairobi Declaration agreed by African leaders at the Africa Climate Summit in Nairobi in September 2023, which highlighted the continent’s role as a driver of global solutions. Countries are being urged to turn political signals into concrete plans that deliver for people and economies, echoing Simon Stiell’s message that delivery is the essential driver of climate justice and economic opportunity.
Through initiatives like the African Continental Free Trade Area, African nations can build resilient regional supply chains, export green goods and services, and foster shared prosperity across borders.
Climate finance remains central and a vital enabler of stronger climate actions by vulnerable and developing countries. Climate finance is not charity but an investment in shared prosperity, essential to convert climate ambitions into real-economy outcomes, strengthen global supply chains which all economies rely on, and ensure the vast benefits are spread much more widely across all nations in Africa and the developing world.
The COP29 UN Climate Conference in Azerbaijan last year reached a new global agreement to triple climate finance to USD 300 billion per year. This must be delivered in full, and a new Finance Roadmap expected at COP30 in Brazil this November will be key to scaling climate finance to USD 1.3 trillion annually by 2035.
NDCs are the central mechanism under the Paris Agreement through which countries outline plans to reduce emissions and build resilience. Done well, NDCs serve as investment roadmaps that attract capital, create jobs, lower health costs, and deliver affordable, secure clean energy. Under the Paris Agreement, countries are required to submit new NDCs every five years. The third round of NDCs are due in 2025 and will detail countries’ intended climate actions through 2035.
The British government says it is suspending free trade negotiations with Israel and has leveled new sanctions targeting West Bank settlements as it criticizes Israel’s military actions in Gaza. Tuesday’s actions came a day after the UK, France and Canada condemned Israel’s handling of the war in Gaza and its actions in the occupied West Bank.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy said the UK’s existing trade agreement is in effect but the government can’t continue discussions with an Israeli government pursuing what he called egregious policies in the West Bank and Gaza. Lammy said the persistent cycle of violence by extremist Israeli settlers in the West Bank demanded action.
“We are unwavering in our commitment to your security and to your future, to countering the very real threat from Iran, the scourge of terrorism and the evils of anti-Semitism. But the conduct of the war in Gaza is damaging our relationship with your government,” Lammy said.
The announcement came after British Prime Minister Keir Starmer ramped up his criticism of Israel on Tuesday, saying the level of suffering by children in Gaza was “utterly intolerable” and repeated his call for a ceasefire.
Mounting pressure as humanitarian crisis worsens
International pressure has been building on Israel following a nearly three-month blockade of supplies into Gaza that led to famine warnings.
The United States, a staunch ally of Israel, has also voiced concerns over the growing hunger crisis.
While Israel allowed trucks with baby food and desperately needed supplies to begin rolling into Gaza on Monday, U.N. humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher described the volume of aid a “drop in the ocean of what is urgently needed.”
Israel initially received widespread international support to root out Hamas militants following the group’s surprise attack that killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, on Oct. 7, 2023, and took 251 captives.
But patience with Israel is wearing thin after more than 53,000 Palestinian deaths, mostly women and children. This number is the official count published by Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count.
Israel’s latest onslaught has killed more than 300 people in recent days, local health officials said.
Africa CEO Forum 2025: Navigating Energy, AI, and Infrastructure for Africa’s Future
Held on May 12–13, 2025, in Abidjan, the 12th edition of the Africa CEO Forum brought together over 2,800 leaders, including six African heads of state, to deliberate on the continent’s development trajectory. Key discussions centered on energy strategies, technological advancements, and infrastructure development.
Nuclear Energy: A Strategic Pillar for Africa’s Development
At the Africa CEO Forum 2025, nuclear energy emerged as a focal point in discussions about Africa’s energy future. Loyiso Tyabashe, CEO of South Africa’s Nuclear Energy Corporation (Necsa), emphasized the necessity of integrating nuclear power with renewable sources to ensure a stable and affordable energy supply.
“Nuclear provides baseload power essential for industrialization,” Tyabashe stated. He highlighted the cost-effectiveness of nuclear energy, citing South Africa’s experience with its two nuclear units in Cape Town as among the cheapest electricity sources. Moreover, he underscored the environmental responsibility of nuclear power in reducing carbon emissions.
Addressing concerns about radioactive waste, Tyabashe assured that Necsa has maintained comprehensive records of all waste since the operation of its research reactor in 1965 and power reactor in 1984. “We can account for all the waste we’ve produced,” he affirmed.
The potential of Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) was also discussed. Tyabashe noted that SMRs promise quicker deployment and lower capital costs, making them suitable for countries with smaller power grids. “It’s not a one-size-fits-all; we need to match generation technology to each country’s grid stability,” he explained.
Looking ahead, Necsa plans to develop nuclear fuel from raw uranium, leveraging South Africa’s and the continent’s uranium resources. Additionally, the corporation aims to build SMRs and explore multiple applications of research reactors, including power generation and isotope production for medical use.
The forum’s discussions reflected a growing consensus on the role of nuclear energy in Africa’s sustainable development. A poll conducted during the event indicated that 73% of attendees viewed nuclear as a viable energy solution for the continent.
As artificial intelligence (AI) reshapes global economies, Africa seeks to establish its own regulatory pathways. At the forum, experts debated models suitable for the continent, balancing innovation with sovereignty and local realities.
Franck Kié, founder of the Cyber Africa Forum, highlighted the progress made: “Several countries, including Benin and Rwanda, have adopted national AI strategies. The African Union also initiated a continental approach in 2024.”
Catherine Muraga from Microsoft Africa Development Center emphasized inclusivity: “We’re developing tools in Kiswahili, Amharic, Yoruba… to ensure no one is excluded. Africa has nearly 2,000 languages.” She stressed that responsible AI involves integrating security and privacy from the design phase.
The consensus underscored the urgency for Africa to accelerate its governance and investments in AI to avoid dependency on foreign technological decisions.
Infrastructure: The Backbone of Africa’s Industrialization
Infrastructure development remains pivotal for Africa’s industrial growth. At the forum, discussions centered on enhancing logistics, energy access, and connectivity to transform value chains.
Mohammed Diop, Deputy CEO Africa for AGL, pointed out the challenges: “In Africa, up to 30-40% of products are lost at the farm gate. We’re working on projects in Senegal and other countries to establish specialized warehouses near farms to reduce agricultural losses.”
Private sector initiatives, like AGL’s annual investment of €600 million in Africa, showcase the commitment to infrastructure improvement. However, energy remains a significant hurdle. In response, Schneider Electric signed strategic agreements with 3MD Energy and SmartEnergy to develop local industrial electrification solutions, integrating local production and digitalization.
These partnerships aim to secure energy access and generate employment, aligning with the objectives of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to boost intra-African trade. For sustainable industrialization, states must streamline regulations, attract financing, and connect remote areas, ensuring that Africa fully leverages its resources.
As the elections for the presidency of the African Development Bank (AfDB) approach, scheduled for May 29 in Abidjan, one of the notable candidates is Sidi Ould Tah, former Mauritanian minister and former Director General of the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa (BADEA).
With extensive experience in public finance and development, Ould Tah has presented a vision to strengthen the AfDB’s role in the growth and development of the African continent.
A Career Dedicated to Africa’s Development
Sidi Ould Tah’s career has been built around several key roles in both African and international institutions. Holding a PhD in Economics from the University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, he has worked with the Islamic Development Bank, the Arab Authority for Agricultural Investment and Development, and as Mauritania’s Minister of Economy and Finance. In 2015, he was appointed Director General of BADEA, where he oversaw significant transformation, increasing the bank’s assets from $4 billion to nearly $7 billion.
His tenure at BADEA is marked by a special focus on Africa’s economic integration and long-term development strategies aligned with the African Union’s Agenda 2063. These experiences, he explains, give him a unique understanding of the challenges and opportunities the continent faces.
Sidi Ould Tah’s Vision for the AfDB
In a recent interview, Ould Tah outlined his key priorities in the event of his election to the presidency of the African Development Bank. His vision is based on four main areas:
Increasing Funding Mobilization: Ould Tah emphasizes the importance of optimizing financial resources. His goal is to multiply the impact of every dollar invested, turning it into ten dollars for Africa’s development.
Reforming Africa’s Financial Architecture: He advocates for better coordination between African financial institutions to increase effectiveness and synergies in development efforts.
Harnessing Africa’s Demographic Dividend: Ould Tah sees the continent’s youth as a major asset. He believes that leveraging the potential of Africa’s young people will be a key driver of economic prosperity.
Building Resilient Infrastructure: A central element of his plan is to invest in sustainable infrastructure projects that can withstand the challenges of climate change while creating long-term economic value.
The Importance of Infrastructure and Economic Integration
Ould Tah also highlighted the crucial role of infrastructure development in facilitating economic integration across the continent. He referred to the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) as a key step toward reducing intra-African trade barriers but noted that infrastructure gaps, particularly in transportation and energy, continue to hinder the full realization of AfCFTA’s potential.
“Today, to move a container from Mombasa in Kenya to Dakar in Senegal, the only possible route is maritime. We need to develop land corridors and explore other forms of transport such as waterways,” he said. He also advocated for increased electrification across the continent to support industrial growth.
Addressing Climate and Security Challenges
Climate change is also one of Ould Tah’s priorities. While some skeptics doubt the feasibility of green industrialization in Africa, Ould Tah believes that the continent can succeed by adopting an energy mix, combining renewable energy sources and conventional energy to meet its needs.
“We must use all available energy resources to support economic growth,” he asserted, emphasizing that Africa is the continent contributing the least to global greenhouse gas emissions, thus presenting a unique opportunity to reconcile industrialization and sustainable development.
Finally, Ould Tah considers security and development to be closely linked. He insists that the AfDB’s efforts must take into account the stability of fragile states and work to create conditions conducive to peace, in order to strengthen the foundations for sustainable development.
“Security and development are inseparable. To reduce the risks of conflict and instability, the AfDB must focus on creating solid foundations for sustainable development, especially in fragile countries,” he explained.
A Decisive Election for the Future of the AfDB
With five candidates in the running for the presidency of the African Development Bank, the competition is expected to be particularly fierce this year. In addition to Sidi Ould Tah, the other candidates are: Amadou Hott, Senegal’s Minister of Economy, Planning, and Cooperation, and former AfDB official; Samuel Munzele Maimbo, Zambian expert in development and infrastructure financing; Abbas Mahamat Tolli, Governor of the Central Bank of Chad; and finally, Bajabulile Swazi Tshabalala, a key figure in the South African financial sector and former Deputy Director-General of the African Development Bank.
The results of this election will mark a decisive step for the future of the African Development Bank, a key institution in the continent’s development efforts.
LAGOS, Nigeria, 13 May 2025 /African Media Agency (AMA)/- In just under two weeks, the global spotlight will turn to Lagos, Nigeria, as the RegTech Africa Conference & Awards 2025 convenes at the prestigious Oriental Hotel on May 22–23. Under the theme “Unlocking Africa’s Cross-Border Payments, Trade, and Investment Opportunities through Public-Private Partnerships,” this landmark event is set to catalyze transformative dialogue and action across the continent.
Organized by RegTech Africa, the conference will gather over 1,000 participants, including high-level policymakers, regulatory authorities, fintech innovators, investors, and thought leaders from across Africa and beyond. The aim is to forge strategic partnerships and develop actionable solutions that address the continent’s most pressing economic challenges.
With a stellar lineup of distinguished speakers, the event feature prominent figures, like Muhammad Sani Abdullahi, Deputy Governor, Economic Policy Directorate, Central Bank of Nigeria, ably represented by Musa Jimoh, Director of Payments System Policy at the Central Bank of Nigeria; Abdulrasheed Bawa, former Executive Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission; Lorien Gamaroff, Co-founder & CEO of Centbee; Richy Emah, Regional BDD – North/West Africa, Sumsub; Edwin Woryonwon Harris Jr., Director General of GIABA; and Dr. Nurudeen Abubakar Zauro, Technical Adviser to the President on Economic and Financial Inclusion.
Strategic Partnerships Driving Innovation
The conference is bolstered by an impressive lineup of global and indigenous partners, including the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sumsub, EMTECH, Regfyl, Opay, SANEF, NDIC, and NCC, underscoring a collective commitment to advancing Africa’s regulatory technology landscape. These partnerships underscore a shared commitment to advancing Africa’s trade, payments, and investment ecosystem through innovative solutions and unified regulatory frameworks.
Key Highlights:
Dynamic Panel Discussions: Engage with experts on topics such as cross-border payment systems, regulatory harmonization, investment frameworks, and the role of RegTech in driving financial inclusion.
Innovative Exhibitions: Experience cutting-edge RegTech solutions that are transforming compliance, payments, and trade ecosystems across Africa.
Networking Opportunities: Connect with influential decision-makers, innovators, and investors to build meaningful partnerships.
RegTech Africa Awards 2025: Celebrate excellence and innovation in regulatory technology and public-private partnership-driven initiatives across the continent.
As Africa advances towards deeper economic integration through the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), the conference aims to address persistent challenges such as fragmented payment systems, regulatory complexities, and limited investment flows. By fostering collaboration between the public and private sectors, the event seeks to unlock scalable solutions that bridge infrastructural, regulatory, and technological gaps.
“Collaboration between the public and private sectors is no longer optional—it’s essential,” said Cyril Okoroigwe, Chair of the Organizing Committee. “The Conference is a call to action for all stakeholders to come together, break down barriers, and unleash Africa’s full potential through innovative solutions, unified regulatory frameworks, and transformative investments. This is a unique opportunity to be part of a defining moment in Africa’s journey toward integration and prosperity.”
RegTech Africa is a leading organization dedicated to fostering innovation in regulatory technologies across the continent. By creating platforms for dialogue, collaboration, and innovation, RegTech Africa drives initiatives that accelerate economic growth and financial inclusion in Africa.
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) has seen a major expansion in participation, with nearly 30 countries now engaged under the Guided Trade Initiative.
This was disclosed by Cynthia Nyasimbe Esonam, Senior Advisor to the AfCFTA Secretary General at a high-level webinar hosted by Anderson Networks.
Ms. Esonam outlined the strides made since the agreement’s launch, describing the initiative as “Africa’s opportunity to integrate itself and build one single market of 1.3 billion people.”
She highlighted that 23 countries have gazetted their tariffs and opened borders for intra-African trade under the AfCFTA regime. “That means their customs officers have the new tariffs in their system, and these countries can now import and export using AfCFTA certificates of origin,” she explained.
Signed in 2018 and entered into force in 2019, the AfCFTA aims to boost intra-African trade, which currently stands at just 15–17%, far below other regional blocs. Esonam noted that the agreement’s comprehensive legal architecture goes beyond trade in goods and services to include protocols on investment, competition, digital trade, and for the first time, women and youth in trade.
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“For the first time in the world, we have a binding agreement that ensures women and youth, especially informal cross-border traders, can participate effectively,” she stated.
She also shed light on the digital trade protocol, which harmonizes continental rules on innovation, emerging technologies, and e-commerce. “We are not just moving goods. We’re harmonizing our systems and creating a unified economic space across sectors,” she emphasized.
While progress in liberalizing trade in services has lagged behind goods, Esonam confirmed that five key service sectors—finance, transport, communications, tourism, and business—are undergoing regulatory alignment. She expressed optimism that the frameworks will be finalized by the end of 2025.
The event also featured expert insights from representatives of Anderson offices across Africa, including Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, and Ghana. Speakers discussed tax strategies, regulatory reforms, and business readiness in light of AfCFTA opportunities.
Ms. Esonam closed by urging the private sector to prepare strategically to benefit from the unfolding trade revolution. “The AfCFTA is not just a treaty, it’s a chance for our businesses to thrive, scale, and transform the continent.” she said.
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) has seen a major expansion in participation, with nearly 30 countries now engaged under the Guided Trade Initiative.
This was disclosed by Cynthia Nyasimbe Esonam, Senior Advisor to the AfCFTA Secretary General at a high-level webinar hosted by Anderson Networks.
Ms. Esonam outlined the strides made since the agreement’s launch, describing the initiative as “Africa’s opportunity to integrate itself and build one single market of 1.3 billion people.”
She highlighted that 23 countries have gazetted their tariffs and opened borders for intra-African trade under the AfCFTA regime. “That means their customs officers have the new tariffs in their system, and these countries can now import and export using AfCFTA certificates of origin,” she explained.
Signed in 2018 and entered into force in 2019, the AfCFTA aims to boost intra-African trade, which currently stands at just 15–17%, far below other regional blocs. Esonam noted that the agreement’s comprehensive legal architecture goes beyond trade in goods and services to include protocols on investment, competition, digital trade, and for the first time, women and youth in trade.
– Advertisement –
“For the first time in the world, we have a binding agreement that ensures women and youth, especially informal cross-border traders, can participate effectively,” she stated.
She also shed light on the digital trade protocol, which harmonizes continental rules on innovation, emerging technologies, and e-commerce. “We are not just moving goods. We’re harmonizing our systems and creating a unified economic space across sectors,” she emphasized.
While progress in liberalizing trade in services has lagged behind goods, Esonam confirmed that five key service sectors—finance, transport, communications, tourism, and business—are undergoing regulatory alignment. She expressed optimism that the frameworks will be finalized by the end of 2025.
The event also featured expert insights from representatives of Anderson offices across Africa, including Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, and Ghana. Speakers discussed tax strategies, regulatory reforms, and business readiness in light of AfCFTA opportunities.
Ms. Esonam closed by urging the private sector to prepare strategically to benefit from the unfolding trade revolution. “The AfCFTA is not just a treaty, it’s a chance for our businesses to thrive, scale, and transform the continent.” she said.